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Retrenchment Compensation Under Industrial Relations Code

If you complete one year of continuous service and your employer cuts your post, the Industrial Relations Code, 2020 entitles you to compensation of fifteen days average pay for every completed year of service, plus one month written notice or pay in lieu of it. Since 21 November 2025 this Code, not the old Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, governs retrenchment across India.

Quick answer: Retrenchment means your employer ends your job for any reason that is not a punishment, voluntary retirement, superannuation, end of a fixed-term contract, or continued ill-health. Under section 70 you must get one month notice or pay in lieu, plus fifteen days average pay per completed year, and the Government must be told. A separate re-skilling fund adds fifteen days wages.

What retrenchment is

Retrenchment is the employer ending the service of a worker for any reason at all, except as a punishment by disciplinary action. The Industrial Relations Code, 2020 defines it in section 2 and carves out several things that are NOT retrenchment: voluntary retirement, retirement on reaching the age of superannuation, non-renewal or completion of a fixed-term contract, and termination on the ground of continued ill-health. Being sacked for misconduct is dismissal, not retrenchment, and carries no retrenchment compensation.

Step-by-step: claiming your retrenchment dues

  1. Confirm you have at least one year of continuous service under the same employer (section 66). Less than a year means section 70 compensation does not apply.
  2. Check the written notice. It must give one month and state the reasons, or you must be paid wages in lieu of that one month.
  3. Calculate compensation: fifteen days average pay multiplied by each completed year, counting any part over six months as a full year.
  4. Ask in writing for the re-skilling fund credit of fifteen days wages, due within forty-five days of retrenchment.
  5. If the employer has 300 or more workers, verify that prior Government permission was actually obtained; without it the retrenchment is illegal.
  6. If dues are unpaid or the retrenchment looks unlawful, raise a dispute with the conciliation officer; an individual worker can approach the Industrial Tribunal after forty-five days, within three years of the retrenchment.

Documents required

Common mistakes

Worked example Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak worked for 6 years and 8 months at a logistics firm employing 120 workers. The firm closed one division and retrenched him. His average pay worked out to Rs 1,200 a day. Completed years counted: 6, and the extra 8 months counts as a full year, so 7 years. Compensation: 15 x 7 x Rs 1,200 = Rs 1,26,000. He also received one month wages in lieu of notice and, separately, 15 days wages (Rs 18,000) credited under the re-skilling fund within 45 days. Because the firm had fewer than 300 workers, no prior Government permission was needed, only notice to the appropriate Government.

RTI angle

If your employer is a public sector undertaking, a Government department, or a body substantially financed by Government, you can file an RTI to get the file noting on your retrenchment, the seniority list used for last-in-first-out, the permission application under Chapter X (if any), and proof that notice was served on the appropriate Government. Use the AI RTI Drafter to frame a tight application, and if the reply is denied or delayed, the First Appeal Builder drafts your appeal under section 19(1).

FAQ

Q. How much retrenchment compensation am I entitled to?

Fifteen days average pay for every completed year of continuous service, with any part beyond six months counted as a full year, under section 70 of the Industrial Relations Code, 2020. You also get one month notice or pay in lieu.

Q. Is the worker re-skilling fund the same as my compensation?

No. The fund contribution under section 83, equal to fifteen days wages credited within forty-five days, is paid in addition to the section 70 retrenchment compensation. They are two separate amounts.

Q. Does my employer need Government permission to retrench me?

Only if the establishment employed 300 or more workers on average in the preceding twelve months. Then prior permission of the appropriate Government is required under section 79. Smaller units only have to serve notice on the Government.

Q. Is being sacked for misconduct counted as retrenchment?

No. Termination as a punishment by way of disciplinary action is expressly excluded from the definition of retrenchment in section 2, so no retrenchment compensation is payable for a misconduct dismissal.

Q. Does retrenchment compensation apply if I served less than one year?

No. Section 70 protection requires not less than one year of continuous service, measured under section 66. Below that, the compensation provision does not apply.

Q. What can I do if my employer refuses to pay?

Raise the matter with the conciliation officer. An individual worker can approach the Industrial Tribunal after forty-five days, and the claim must be made within three years of the retrenchment.

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