Your union can only sit across the table from your employer once it is formally recognised. Under the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, the union that 51 percent of workers back becomes the sole negotiating union, and where no union reaches 51 percent, a negotiating council is formed with seats for unions that have at least 20 percent support.
Quick answer: Register your union under the IR Code, 2020. If yours is the only union in the establishment, the employer recognises it as the sole negotiating union. If several unions exist, the one with 51 percent or more worker support negotiates alone. If none reaches 51 percent, a negotiating council is set up with one seat for every 20 percent of support.
Recognition is the legal status that lets a trade union actually bargain with the employer over pay, hours and conditions. Without it a union can exist on paper but has no statutory seat at the negotiating table. The Industrial Relations Code, 2020 created clear, number-based rules for who gets that seat.
The governing law is the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, in force from 21 November 2025 along with the other three labour codes (Wages, Social Security, and Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions). It subsumed the old Trade Unions Act, 1926 and the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.
Registration (Section 6). A union starts with registration. The Code says “Any seven or more members of a Trade Union may, by subscribing their names to the rules of the Trade Union … apply for registration”. It adds that no union “shall be registered unless at least ten per cent. of the workers or one hundred workers, whichever is less … are the members”. A registered union must keep that level “at all times … subject to a minimum of seven”.
Recognition (Section 14). Once registered, recognition follows these rules:
Unions are registered by the Registrar of Trade Unions of the appropriate Government (Central or State). Important caveat: the method of verifying support and the exact criteria are PRESCRIBED in rules made by the appropriate Government, such as the Industrial Relations (Central) Rules, and these can differ between the Centre and States. Where a step depends on a rule, confirm it with your own labour department. For the wider reform, see the new labour codes guide.
Real-life example (illustrative). At the Sundarpur auto-parts plant in Pune district, 1,000 workers are on the muster roll and three registered unions function. In a March 2026 verification, the Nav Nirman Shramik Sangh shows 40 percent support, the Ekta Mazdoor Union 20 percent, and the Sundarpur Workers Front 20 percent. No union reaches 51 percent, so a negotiating council is formed. Nav Nirman gets 2 seats for its two full 20 percent blocks; the other two get 1 seat each. A fourth union with only 12 percent gets no seat, being below the 20 percent floor. The names and figures are fictional and only show how seats are shared.
If the labour department or employer is slow, or the count looks wrong, the Right to Information Act, 2005 is a strong tool. Ask the public information officer of the labour department for the list of registered unions in your establishment, the verification records, and the current recognition or negotiating-council status. Draft it fast with the AI RTI Drafter, and read the RTI Act for your timelines. See also working hours and overtime and women at work. A deeper how-to sits in The RTI Playbook.
It is the single union the employer must bargain with. Under the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, a union becomes the sole negotiating union if it is the only union in the establishment, or if it has 51 percent or more worker support on the muster roll.
The employer constitutes a negotiating council. Every registered union with at least 20 percent support on the muster roll gets a seat, with one representative for each full 20 percent block of support.
At least seven members must subscribe to the union rules. The union must also have members equal to 10 percent of the workers or 100 workers, whichever is less, in the establishment or industry it is connected to.
No. Registration under Section 6 gives the union legal status. Recognition under Section 14 is the separate step that lets the union actually negotiate with the employer.
Support is checked against the workers on the muster roll using the verification method prescribed in the rules made by the appropriate Government. This is why the exact process can differ between the Centre and the States.
It came into force on 21 November 2025, together with the Code on Wages, the Code on Social Security and the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code.
Yes. You can file an RTI with the labour department asking for the registered-unions list, the verification records and the recognition or negotiating-council status. This creates a paper trail and a statutory deadline for a reply.
No. Only registered unions with at least 20 percent support on the muster roll qualify. A union below 20 percent gets no seat on the council.