Reviewed on: 2026-06-19.
Direct answer. If your employer has not paid your salary or has made illegal deductions, you have at least four legal routes: a wage claim under the Code on Wages 2019, an EPFO grievance for PF shortfall, a complaint to the Labour Commissioner, or a CPGRAMS petition for central government establishments. The right route depends on your situation.
Before you file anything, identify what exactly is unpaid. The answer decides your forum.
[Start: Employer has not paid / deducted wages]
|
v
Is it minimum wages or total salary not paid?
|
|- YES --> File claim under Code on Wages s.45
| Authority: jurisdictional Wage Authority
| Limit: 3 years from wages falling due
| Outcome: wages + up to 10x compensation
|
|- NO: Is it an illegal deduction from wages paid?
|
|- YES --> Claim under Code on Wages s.18
| (same authority, same 3-year window)
|
|- NO: Is it PF/ESI not deposited?
|
|- YES --> File on EPFiGMS (EPFO)
| or ESIC grievance portal
|
|- NO: Is employer a central govt / PSU?
|
|- YES --> CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in)
|
|- NO --> State Labour Commissioner
(SHRAM SUVIDHA / state portal)
The Code on Wages 2019 (in force from 21 November 2025 in most states) consolidates the old Payment of Wages Act 1936 and the Minimum Wages Act 1948 into a single statute. If your employer has not paid wages at all, or has paid below the minimum rate, or has made a deduction that is not permitted under the Code, you file a written claim before the Wage Authority appointed by the state government.
What the authority can order:
Key timelines:
Who is covered: All employees whose wages are below the wage ceiling notified by the Central Government (check the current ceiling with your state Labour Department). Most workers in factories, shops, construction, plantations, and unorganised sectors fall within this ceiling.
How to file:
If your employer has deducted an amount that the Code does not permit (for example, a deduction for a supposed loss or fine that was not sanctioned in writing, or a deduction that exceeds 50 per cent of wages in a pay period), the remedy is still the same Wage Authority under section 18 of the Code on Wages 2019. The procedure and timelines are the same as Route 1 above.
If the unpaid element is Provident Fund (PF) or Employees' Pension Scheme (EPS) contributions that your employer collected from your salary but did not deposit, or if your PF balance or pension payment (PPO) is wrong, file on the EPFO grievance portal: EPFiGMS.
For most employees in the organised private sector, the state Labour Commissioner is the nodal authority for wage complaints. The central SHRAM SUVIDHA portal (shramsuvidha.gov.in) integrates complaint filing for central-sphere establishments. State portals vary; search “[your state] labour department complaint” to find the right URL.
The Labour Commissioner can:
If your employer is a central government department, a central public sector undertaking, or a central autonomous body, escalate unpaid salary grievances to CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in). CPGRAMS routes your petition to the concerned ministry's grievance officer, who must respond within 30 days.
| Document | Why you need it |
|---|---|
| Appointment letter or offer letter | Proves agreed salary |
| Pay slips for the unpaid period | Shows the shortfall |
| Bank statements | Shows salary credits stopped |
| PF passbook or UAN statement | For PF-related claims |
| Any written notices / emails from employer | Evidence of acknowledgement of dues |
| Attendance records (if disputed) | Rebutts employer's “you were absent” defence |
Yes. An oral contract of employment is legally valid. You can use bank statements, witness statements from colleagues, or any written communication (even WhatsApp messages) to establish the terms of employment. The Wage Authority can also summon the employer's records.
Filing a wage claim is a statutory right. Victimisation for exercising this right can itself attract legal action under the Industrial Disputes Act 1947 if you are a “workman” within that Act. Keep a record of any retaliatory communication.
There is no statutory minimum amount under the Code on Wages 2019. Even a single day's unpaid wages can be the subject of a claim.
The Wage Authority should decide within 3 months. In practice, contested claims can take longer. The SHRAM SUVIDHA conciliation route is faster for straightforward cases.
Yes. A wage claim before the Wage Authority and a criminal complaint (for example, under section 316 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023 for breach of trust, or under the Code on Wages for the penalty provisions) are parallel remedies. Filing one does not bar the other.
Under the Code on Wages 2019, the Wage Authority may order up to ten times the unpaid amount as compensation. This is in addition to the actual wages due. The multiplier is discretionary and depends on the gravity and duration of the default.
File your claim before the Wage Authority in the state where you performed the work, not where the employer is registered. The authority in the workplace state has jurisdiction.
Workers paid through a contractor are entitled to wages from the contractor under the Code on Wages. The principal employer (the company that hired the contractor) is also liable if the contractor defaults. Gig workers and platform workers may have access to the Social Security Code 2020 once notified, but as of 2026 those provisions are not yet in force; they should use the Labour Commissioner route.
If the Labour Commissioner or Wage Authority is not acting on your complaint, or if you want copies of records held by a public authority (such as the inspection register or past orders against your employer), file an RTI application.
File an RTI to: the Labour Commissioner / concerned Labour Department
RTI questions to ask:
→ Use our free AI RTI Drafter to generate a complete Section 6(1) application.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak