Decoding the New Wage Code: What It Means for Salary Structures and Gratuity Liabilities

Decoding the New Wage Code: What It Means for Salary Structures and Gratuity Liabilities

Jul 02, 2026

The New Wage Code has changed the way companies across India now build a salary slip. For a long time, firms split pay into a small basic figure and many separate allowances. That habit kept costs low, yet it also kept worker benefits low. The Code on Wages now fixes a clear rule for how pay must be arranged. At Mithras Consultants, we explain these salary structures to our clients, because each change steadily reshapes future liabilities. 

 

Pay Component Old Typical Share New Required Share Counts as Wages Effect on Liability
Basic pay 30% to 40% of pay At least 50% of pay Yes Raises gratuity base
Dearness allowance Often small Part of the 50% Yes Raises gratuity base
House rent allowance Large share Within the other 50% No No direct rise
Special allowance Often very large Capped by the rule No, until excess Adds back if over 50%
Provident Fund base Kept low Now higher Yes Larger monthly cost

What Is the New Wage Code in India?

The New Wage Code, formally the Code on Wages, 2019, sets one common meaning for the word wages. The government brought it into force on 21 November 2025, with full rules expected around 1 April 2026. Under this code, wages mean basic pay, dearness allowance, and retaining allowance taken together.

Most other allowances stay outside that meaning, but only up to a fixed limit. This one definition now flows into Provident Fund, gratuity, bonus, and leave encashment. A common rule across all of them removes years of uneven practice.

How Does the New Wage Code Change Salary Structures?

The biggest effect of the New Wage Code falls on how companies design their salary structures. The rule says excluded allowances cannot cross 50% of total pay in any month. When they do cross that line, the extra amount counts as wages by law. Your total Cost to Company stays the same, yet the split inside it changes. We at Mithras Consultants help payroll teams test each structure against this 50% limit.

The practical effects of this shift show up in a few clear places:

  1. Basic pay rises to meet the 50% benchmark
  2. Take-home pay may dip as Provident Fund grows
  3. Gratuity and bonus bases climb with higher basic
  4. Older salary annexures need a fresh review

Which Pay Components Count as Wages Now?

Under the Wage Code, three parts always count as wages for benefit calculations. These are basic pay, dearness allowance, and retaining allowance, where one applies. Several common heads stay outside this meaning, which keeps the structure flexible for employers.

House rent allowance, conveyance, and overtime usually sit in the excluded group. Yet if those excluded heads together pass 50% of pay, the excess becomes wages. The table below shows both groups in a quick and clear form.

Pay Component Counts as Wages Typical Share 50% Rule Effect Benefit Impact
Basic pay Yes, always At least 50% Sets the core base Raises gratuity base
Dearness allowance Yes, always Part of wages Sets the core base Raises gratuity base
House rent allowance No, if within cap Within other 50% Added back if over Lifts base when excess
Special allowance No, if within cap Often very large Added back if over Lifts base when excess
Employer Provident Fund No, excluded Employer cost Always outside No direct effect

 

How Does the New Wage Code Affect Gratuity Liabilities?

Gratuity follows last drawn wages, so a higher base raises the payout for each leaving employee. The New Wage Code lifts that base, which directly increases your Gratuity Liabilities on the books. Provident Fund contributions rise in the same way, since both share the wider wage base. A proper Actuarial Valuation measures this true cost before the accounts are closed. Firms such as Mithras Consultants prepare such reports with full disclosures, often within 2 working days.

The gratuity effect of the change appears in these few clear ways:

  • Higher basic raises the gratuity payout at exit
  • Past-service liability may need a fresh provision
  • Provident Fund cost rises alongside gratuity
  • Annual valuation keeps the balance sheet accurate

If you would like a precise view of how the New Wage Code reshapes your salary structures and gratuity liabilities, the team at Mithras Consultants is glad to guide your finance department through each step.

Conclusion

The New Wage Code is best read as a move towards fair, clear, and uniform pay design. For employees, a higher base builds stronger savings, even if take-home pay shifts a little. For employers, the rule asks for honest salary structures and timely valuation of every liability. Mithras Consultants has supported many organisations through such financial change, and steady preparation always serves a business well. Pay design and gratuity now move together, and reading both early is simply sound management.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the new definition of wages under the Wage Code? 

Wages now mean basic pay, dearness allowance, and retaining allowance. Excluded allowances above 50% of pay are added back as wages.

Will my take-home salary fall under the New Wage Code? 

Possibly. If your basic was below 50% of Cost to Company, Provident Fund deductions rise on the higher base.

Does the New Wage Code increase gratuity liabilities? 

Yes. A higher base lifts the wage base, so gratuity provisions and payouts rise, including for service before 21 November 2025.

Which allowances are excluded from wages in the Wage Code? 

House rent allowance, conveyance, overtime, and special allowance usually stay outside, unless together they cross 50% of pay.

When does the New Wage Code apply to salary structures? 

The code took effect on 21 November 2025, with full rules and salary resets expected around April 2026.