Recover Unpaid Wages Under the Code on Wages 2019
Your employer owes you wages, paid you below the minimum rate, or has dragged your salary for months. You do not need a lawyer or a slow court case. The Code on Wages 2019 gives you a time-bound claim before a government authority, with no court case needed, that can order the full amount back plus compensation up to ten times the dues.
File a written claim before the authority appointed under section 45 of the Code on Wages 2019. You have three years from the date the wages fell due. The authority can order your unpaid or underpaid wages plus compensation up to ten times the amount, and recover it from the employer as land revenue.
What the Code on Wages claim is
It is a formal application before a government officer who hears and decides money disputes between a worker and an employer. The claim covers unpaid wages, wages paid below the statutory minimum, wrong deductions, and delayed payment. The authority decides it like a civil court, but as a low-cost route without a full civil suit.
Legal position
The Code on Wages 2019 (Act 29 of 2019) came into force across India on 21 November 2025. It subsumes and repeals four older laws, including the Payment of Wages Act 1936 and the Minimum Wages Act 1948 (section 69(1)), so all wage recovery now runs through this single Code.
Under section 45(1), the appropriate Government appoints one or more authorities, not below the rank of a Gazetted Officer, to hear and determine wage claims. Under section 45(4), the application may be filed by the employee, by a registered trade union of which the employee is a member, or by the Inspector-cum-Facilitator. Under section 45(6), the application may be filed within three years from the date the claim arose, and the authority may still entertain it after three years on sufficient cause shown for the delay.
Section 45(2) is the part that matters most: while deciding the claim, the authority may order, having regard to the circumstances, payment of compensation in addition to the claim, which may extend to ten times of the claim determined. The authority must endeavour to decide the claim within three months. Under section 45(3), if the employer still does not pay, the authority issues a certificate of recovery to the Collector or District Magistrate, who recovers the money as arrears of land revenue.
The Inspector-cum-Facilitator under section 51 is the field officer who advises employers and workers on compliance, inspects establishments, and can file a claim on your behalf under section 45(4)©. Separately, section 54 lets the State prosecute the employer: paying an employee less than what is due is punishable with a fine up to ₹50,000, and a repeat of the same offence within five years can mean imprisonment up to three months or a fine up to ₹1 lakh, or both. That fine goes to the State and is a deterrent, not money you receive; your money comes from the section 45 claim.
Step-by-step: how to recover your wages
- Gather proof. Collect your appointment letter, payslips, bank statements, attendance or muster records, and any messages where the employer admits the dues. Write down the exact amount owed and the dates the wages fell due.
- Make a written demand first. Send the employer a short letter or message asking for the unpaid amount by a date, and keep a copy. Many cases settle here, and the letter becomes evidence later.
- Approach the Inspector-cum-Facilitator (optional). You can ask the local labour office or Inspector-cum-Facilitator under section 51 to advise, inspect, or file the claim for you under section 45(4)©. This is a help route, not a compulsory first step.
- File the claim before the authority. Submit your application to the authority appointed under section 45(1) for your area, with your documents and the amount claimed. One application can cover any number of employees of the same establishment under section 45(5).
- Watch the three-year limit. File within three years of the wages falling due (section 45(6)). If you are late, attach a short explanation of the delay so the authority can condone it under the proviso.
- Attend and prove the claim. The authority has the powers of a civil court (section 45(7)) to summon the employer and records. Present your proof and the amount.
- Appeal if needed. If you are unhappy with the order, file an appeal before the appellate authority within ninety days under section 49(1); delay can be condoned for sufficient cause.
Documents required
- Appointment letter or any written proof of employment
- Payslips or wage records, and your bank statements showing what was actually paid
- Attendance, muster roll, or duty records showing days worked
- A note of the agreed wage rate and the applicable minimum wage
- Your written demand letter to the employer and the employer's reply, if any
- Identity proof and your contact details
- A simple statement of the exact amount claimed, period by period
Common mistakes
- Waiting too long. The limit is three years from when wages fell due (section 45(6)); after that you must show sufficient cause for the delay.
- Going to a regular civil court first. Wage claims are meant for the section 45 authority, which is a low-cost route and faster than a civil suit.
- Assuming the ₹50,000 fine is your money. The section 54 fine is paid to the State; your recovery is the claim plus compensation under section 45(2).
- Treating the Inspector-cum-Facilitator as a mandatory gate. You can file the claim yourself directly under section 45(4)(a).
- No written proof. Without payslips, bank entries, or messages, the authority has little to act on. Build the paper trail before you file.
- Expecting the 10x compensation automatically. Section 45(2) says the authority may order compensation up to ten times; it is discretionary, decided on the circumstances.
Real-life example. Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak ran a small diagnostic lab in Patna district, Bihar. He employed a lab attendant, Kashvi Pathak, on a written appointment letter at ₹14,000 a month but stopped paying from January 2026, leaving ₹70,000 unpaid over five months. After a written demand went ignored, Kashvi filed a claim before the authority under section 45 in May 2026 with her appointment letter, bank statements, and attendance records. The authority found the dues proved and, given the deliberate non-payment, ordered the ₹70,000 plus compensation of ₹1,40,000 (two times the claim) under section 45(2), a total of ₹2,10,000.
Frequently asked questions
Who can file a wage claim under the Code on Wages 2019?
Under section 45(4), the claim can be filed by the employee, by a registered trade union of which the employee is a member, or by the Inspector-cum-Facilitator on the employee's behalf.
How long do I have to file a claim?
Three years from the date the wages fell due, under section 45(6). The authority may still accept a later application if you show sufficient cause for the delay.
How much compensation can I get on top of my unpaid wages?
Under section 45(2), the authority may order compensation in addition to your claim, which may extend to ten times the amount determined. It is discretionary and depends on the circumstances of non-payment.
Does this cover minimum wages and delayed payment too?
Yes. The Code on Wages 2019 subsumes the Minimum Wages Act 1948 and Payment of Wages Act 1936 (section 69), so below-minimum pay, wrong deductions, and delayed wages are all decided under the same section 45 claim.
Do I need to go through the Inspector-cum-Facilitator first?
No. You can file the claim directly under section 45(4)(a). The Inspector-cum-Facilitator under section 51 is an option who can advise, inspect, or file for you, not a compulsory first step.
What if the employer still does not pay after the order?
Under section 45(3), the authority issues a certificate of recovery to the Collector or District Magistrate, who recovers the amount from the employer as arrears of land revenue and remits it to you.
Can the employer also be punished?
Yes. Under section 54, paying less than what is due is punishable with a fine up to ₹50,000, and a repeat within five years can mean imprisonment up to three months or a fine up to ₹1 lakh, or both. This fine goes to the State.
Can I appeal the order?
Yes. Under section 49(1), an aggrieved person may appeal to the appellate authority within ninety days of the order; a later appeal can be allowed for sufficient cause.
Is there a court fee for filing the claim?
The claim is decided by a government authority, not a regular civil court, and is designed to be an accessible, low-cost route for workers. Check the wage rules notified for your State for the exact form and any nominal fee.
Sources
- Code on Wages 2019, section 45 (claims and procedure), section 49 (appeal), section 51 (Inspector-cum-Facilitator), section 54 (penalties), section 69 (repeal of Payment of Wages Act 1936 and Minimum Wages Act 1948)
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