23/01/2026
Re-Engineering Employment Agreements After the New Labour Codes
I
ndia’s new Labour Codes have quietly but decisively changed the risk landscape for employers.
While most conversations focus on registrations and filings, one area has moved into the danger zone for companies across sectors: employment agreements and HR policies.
Outdated appointment letters, generic contracts, and legacy HR manuals—often drafted under repealed laws—are now being tested during inspections and litigation. Increasingly, courts and authorities are examining whether: wage structures align with statutory definitions, contracts contradict Standing Orders, employees are correctly classified, and HR policies actually exist, align, and are acknowledged.
From a business perspective, this is no longer about technical compliance. Poorly aligned employment documentation today exposes companies to penalties, invalid terminations, reinstatement orders, back wages, and prolonged disputes.
The organisations that are getting this right are doing a few things differently: Moving to consolidated, Labour Code–aligned employment agreements Segregating contracts for workmen, non-workmen, and senior management Aligning agreements with Standing Orders and sector realities Issuing inspection-ready HR policy packs Eliminating clauses courts routinely strike down.
In today’s regulatory environment, employment documentation is no longer an HR formality. It is strategic governance and risk management.
📌 Well-drafted agreements and aligned HR policies are not a cost—they are an investment in certainty and stability.