If your employer cut money from your pay without a lawful reason, or paid your wages late, you can file a claim before a labour authority and ask for the money back plus compensation. This is a free, worker-friendly process, and since 21 November 2025 it protects every employee, not just lower earners.
The rule most people search for is Section 15 of the Payment of Wages Act 1936, the provision that created the special authority for deduction and delay claims. This guide explains both the old and new law, so you know your rights whether your problem is recent or older.
The Payment of Wages Act 1936, including the famous Section 15 authority, was repealed on 21 November 2025 when the Code on Wages 2019 came into force across India. The Code now governs deductions and delayed wages for the whole country.
For deductions or delays on or after 21 November 2025, file under the Code on Wages 2019. For older problems, the Payment of Wages Act time limits may still matter, so do not assume an old claim is dead; ask the labour office which law applies to your dates. The Code keeps the worker-friendly remedies and in key ways makes them stronger.
I once sat with a security guard whose contractor “fined” him a full week's pay for being five minutes late. He thought nothing could be done. In fact that kind of deduction is tightly capped, and a simple written claim got most of it back.
An employer cannot take money from your wages for any reason it likes. Only certain deductions are allowed, and even those have limits. Under the old Section 7 and the new Section 18 of the Code on Wages 2019, the permitted deductions are a fixed list:
Anything outside this list is an unauthorised deduction. Common illegal examples: a flat “penalty” with no fine procedure, money cut for poor performance, or a “deposit” held back with no legal basis.
There is also a hard ceiling on how much can be cut in any wage period. Total deductions normally cannot exceed 50 percent of your wages for that period. Under the older Payment of Wages Act, this limit could rise to 75 percent where co-operative society deductions were involved. The Code on Wages 2019 keeps the core 50 percent protection so that you always take home a meaningful share of your pay.
This is the biggest recent change, and it helps a lot of workers.
The old Payment of Wages Act only covered employees drawing wages below a notified ceiling (most recently around ₹24,000 a month, set by a 2017 notification). If you earned more, you fell outside it.
The Code on Wages 2019 removes that wage ceiling. The right to be paid in full and on time, and to challenge illegal deductions, now applies to all employees, organised and unorganised, regardless of salary. For disputes on or after 21 November 2025, do not let anyone tell you that you earn “too much” to file.
The process is designed to be used without a lawyer.
You do not have to file alone. The application can be made by you personally, a legal practitioner, an official of a registered trade union acting for you, or an Inspector (called an Inspector-cum-Facilitator under the Code). A group of employees with the same complaint can also file together.
Do not sit on a wage problem. There is a limitation period.
In both laws, the authority can admit a late application if you show sufficient cause for the delay, such as serious illness or being misled by the employer. But “sufficient cause” is at the authority's discretion, so file as early as you can rather than relying on it.
If the authority agrees with you, it can direct your employer to refund the deducted amount or pay the delayed wages, plus compensation.
Because exact figures can change with notifications and rules, always ask the authority for the current limits when you file.
If the order goes against you, there is an appeal.
You can also raise a labour dispute online through the central government's SAMADHAN portal at samadhan.labour.gov.in. It lets a worker register a grievance that is routed to the right conciliation or authority machinery, which helps if you are unsure which office to approach. SAMADHAN is a complaint and conciliation channel; for a binding money order, your matter still goes before the wage-claim authority.
To use information rights to support your case, see The RTI Playbook. A simple RTI to a government employer can confirm sanctioned pay scales and attendance records that strengthen a deduction claim.
The wage-claim authority is a low-cost, worker-friendly forum and you do not need a lawyer to file. Some states may have small prescribed charges, so confirm with your local labour office. The system is meant to make recovery accessible to ordinary workers.
For deductions or delays on or after 21 November 2025, yes. The Code on Wages 2019 removed the old wage ceiling, so deduction and timely-payment protections now cover all employees regardless of salary. For older problems the ₹24,000 ceiling may still matter, so check your dates.
Only within strict rules. A fine is allowed only for listed acts, only after a chance to explain, and only up to a small capped percentage of wages. A flat penalty with no procedure, or a cut for poor performance, is an unauthorised deduction you can challenge.
For an unauthorised deduction the authority can award compensation up to ten times the amount wrongly cut, on top of refunding it. Under the Code on Wages 2019, compensation up to ten times the determined claim can be ordered. Ask the authority for the exact current limits.
You normally have three years under the Code on Wages 2019 (12 months under the old Act). If you miss the window, the authority can still admit your claim if you show sufficient cause, such as illness or being misled. File as early as you can.
A wrongful deduction is not something you have to accept. The law gives you a clear, low-cost way to get your money back, and now it covers more workers than ever.