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Indian payroll and compensation management has become increasingly complex due to frequent regulatory changes and evolving labour laws. The payment systems, legal payments, and legal compliance are in the process of constant change--they are stimulated by the implementation of the new labour codes, the fast digitisation of business, and more stringent data protection laws. 

With the heightening regulatory attention, organizations are currently compelled to consider payroll as not only a transactional organization feature, but also a compliance-driven and risk-sensitive business process.

As the Code on Wages, 2019, Code on Social Security, 2020, Industrial Relations Code, 2020, and Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020, come into effect, the payroll structures will have to be revised to the updated wage definitions, contribution rates and benefit calculations. 

Meanwhile, adherence to the Income Tax Act, 1961, the Employees Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 and the Employees state insurance act, 1948 are also obligatory and not negotiable.

In Payroll Compliance India 2026, compliance is far more than mere simple salary calculations. It encompasses:

  • Proper statutory deductions and deposits by PF, ESI, Professional Tax and Labour Welfare Fund Acts.

  • Proper calculation and disclosure of TDS on salary under the Income Tax Act.

  • Filing of tax and statutory returns on time.

  • Keeping of statutory registers and payroll records as required by the labour laws.

  • Regular payroll audit to check compliance and risk aversion.

Also, increased focus on employee data security, which is being facilitated by the emerging data protection and data privacy models, has ensured that safe payroll data management is as important.

These reforms, notified by the Ministry of Labour & Employment, represent the most significant shift in Indian labour law in decades.

Who Should Use This Payroll Compliance Checklist

This checklist is relevant for:

  • HR and payroll managers handling monthly salary processing
  • Finance and compliance teams are responsible for statutory filings
  • Startups scaling operations and hiring across states
  • Companies managing remote and hybrid employees
  • Enterprises preparing for full labour code implementation

What is Payroll Compliance?

Payroll compliance is the act of making sure that all activities of payroll, such as the calculation of salaries, tax deductions, contributions, filing, as well as the labour law compliance, are within the legal requirements of the Indian authorities.

It includes:

  • Payroll Statutory Compliance.
  • PF ESI compliance
  • TDS on salary compliance
  • India Payroll statutory deductions.
  • Salary slip compliance requisites.
  • Payroll documentation requirements.
  • Payroll tax compliance

Digitisation, new payroll and implementation of the new labour codes in India all contribute to shaping compliance in 2026.

Payroll Regulations Every Company Should Have in 2026

Payroll regulations in 2026 require Indian employers to go beyond basic salary processing. Companies must align payroll practices with statutory deductions, minimum wage laws, and structural changes introduced under the labour codes. Compliance now covers wage design, working hour rules, statutory reporting, and accurate employee records. Key rules include:

  • Compliance with four new Labour Codes relating to Wages, Industrial Relations, Social Security and Occupational Safety.
  • Keeping correct employee records to use in payroll and statutory reporting.
  • PF and ESI, PT and TDS deductions and deposits on time.
  • Giving out payrolls with mandatory information such as wages, tax deductions, and mandatory contributions.
  • Adhering to working hours, overtime and leave wages.
  • Compliance with the need of ensuring the accuracy of payroll data.
  • Through digital payroll compliance systems that will calculate without any errors.

50% Wage Definition Under Labour Codes

Under the labour codes on wages and social security, employers must ensure that basic wages and specified fixed components make up at least 50 per cent of an employee’s total remuneration. This rule is intended to curb excessive use of allowances to reduce statutory social security contributions.

If the wage components considered as basic wages fall below this threshold, the excess portion of allowances may be treated as wages for calculating provident fund, gratuity, and other statutory benefits. This can significantly increase an employer’s compliance liability.

Wage components generally included within the definition of wages are basic pay, dearness allowance, and retaining allowance, where applicable. Certain exclusions, such as statutory bonuses, overtime payments, and genuine reimbursements, are permitted only within limits prescribed under the labour codes.

For employers, this definition directly impacts salary structure design, cost-to-company planning, and long-term statutory exposure. Salary structures that are not aligned with the 50 per cent rule may face retrospective adjustments once the labour codes are fully enforced.

Simple Example of the 50% Wage Rule

If an employee’s total monthly salary is ₹50,000, at least ₹25,000 must qualify as wages under the labour code definition.

If the basic wage is set at ₹15,000 and the remaining amount is structured through allowances, the excess ₹10,000 may be reclassified as wages for statutory calculations. This would increase provident fund and gratuity contributions for both the employer and the employee.

Employers should proactively review and realign salary structures to ensure compliance with the 50 per cent wage definition and avoid future statutory disputes.

This uniform definition of 'wages' is mandated under the Official Gazette of India to ensure consistency across all statutory benefits."

Payroll Compliance Checklist 2026

The payroll compliance checklist is structured in such a way that it facilitates monthly, quarterly, and annual payroll activities. This checklist will be broken down into several phases- pre-payroll, payroll processing, post-payroll and annual compliance.

Statutory Compliance Snapshot 2026 (India)

This statutory compliance snapshot summarises the key payroll laws, contribution rates, and due dates every Indian employer must follow in 2026.

Compliance Type Applicability Statutory Rate Due Date Governing Authority
Provident Fund PF Employees earning up to the statutory wage limit 12 percent employee + 12 percent employer On or before the 15th of next month EPFO
Employees' State Insurance ESI Employees earning up to the notified wage ceiling 0.75 percent employee + 3.25 percent employer On or before 15th of next month ESIC
Tax Deducted at Source TDS All salaried employees as per the slab As per the Income Tax Act On or before the 7th of next month CBDT
Professional Tax PT State specific State-defined slabs Monthly or as per state schedule State Government
Labour Welfare Fund LWF Applicable states State-specific contribution Half-yearly or yearly State Labour Welfare Boards
Bonus Payment Eligible employees 8.33 per cent to 20 per cent Within 8 months, the FY end Labour Department
Gratuity Employees completing 5 years 15 days' wages per year of service At separation Labour Department

Statutory rates and due dates are subject to notifications issued by EPFO, ESIC, CBDT, and respective state authorities.

Statutory Compliance Calendar 2026 (India)

This Statutory Compliance Calendar 2026 serves as a ready reckoner for HR, payroll, finance, and compliance teams in India. It covers key labour law, payroll, tax, and corporate compliance deadlines applicable across most organisations. Actual applicability may vary by state, employee strength, and industry.

Monthly Statutory Compliance Calendar – 2026

January 2026

  • PF: Deposit for December 2025 – 15 Jan

  • ESI: Deposit for December 2025 – 15 Jan

  • Professional Tax (PT): Monthly payment (state-specific) – By 15–20 Jan

  • TDS (Salary & Non‑salary): December 2025 – 7 Jan

  • GST (GSTR‑3B & GSTR‑1): December 2025 – 20 & 11 Jan

February 2026

  • PF: January – 15 Feb

  • ESI: January – 15 Feb

  • PT: Monthly payment – By state due date

  • TDS: January – 7 Feb

  • GST: January returns – 11 & 20 Feb

March 2026

  • PF: February – 15 Mar

  • ESI: February – 15 Mar

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: February – 7 Mar

  • GST: February returns – 11 & 20 Mar

April 2026

  • PF: March – 15 Apr

  • ESI: March – 15 Apr

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: March – 7 Apr

  • GST: March returns – 11 & 20 Apr

  • Labour Welfare Fund (LWF): Payment (state‑specific)

May 2026

  • PF: April – 15 May

  • ESI: April – 15 May

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: April – 7 May

  • GST: April returns – 11 & 20 May

June 2026

  • PF: May – 15 Jun

  • ESI: May – 15 Jun

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: May – 7 Jun

  • GST: May returns – 11 & 20 Jun

July 2026

  • PF: June – 15 Jul

  • ESI: June – 15 Jul

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: June – 7 Jul

  • GST: June returns – 11 & 20 Jul

  • Quarterly TDS Return (Q1): 31 Jul

  • ESI Half‑Yearly Return: By 11 Jul

August 2026

  • PF: July – 15 Aug

  • ESI: July – 15 Aug

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: July – 7 Aug

  • GST: July returns – 11 & 20 Aug

September 2026

  • PF: August – 15 Sep

  • ESI: August – 15 Sep

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: August – 7 Sep

  • GST: August returns – 11 & 20 Sep

October 2026

  • PF: September – 15 Oct

  • ESI: September – 15 Oct

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: September – 7 Oct

  • GST: September returns – 11 & 20 Oct

  • Quarterly TDS Return (Q2): 31 Oct

November 2026

  • PF: October – 15 Nov

  • ESI: October – 15 Nov

  • PT: Monthly payment

  • TDS: October – 7 Nov

  • GST: October returns – 11 & 20 Nov

December 2026

  • PF: November – 15 Dec

  • ESI: November – 15 Dec
  • PT: Monthly payment
  • TDS: November – 7 Dec
  • GST: November returns – 11 & 20 Dec
  • Quarterly TDS Return (Q3): 31 Dec

Annual & Event‑Based Statutory Compliances

  • Form 16 (Salary TDS Certificate): By 15 June
  • Income‑tax Return (Non‑audit cases): 31 July
  • Income‑tax Return (Audit cases): 31 October
  • Tax Audit Report (Form 3CD): 30 September
  • POSH Annual Report: By calendar year end
  • Shops & Establishment Renewal: State‑specific
  • Bonus Payment (Payment of Bonus Act): Within 8 months of FY end
  • Gratuity Payment: Within 30 days of eligibility

Pre-Payroll Compliance

Companies need to make sure that, before processing payroll, the following are done:

  1. Employee Information Management
  • Proper onboarding records of the employees.
  • Updated KYC documents
  • Verified bank details
  • New classification (permanent, contract, gig worker)
  1. Attendance/ Leave Compliance
  • Implementing labour-code-friendly attendance tracking.
  • Proper connection with payroll software.
  • Weekly offs and leave policies are mandatory.
  1. Policy Updates

Adjusted the wage structures in line with the definition of wages in the labour code:

  • Overtime policies
  • Allowance restructuring
  1. Payroll Documentation Requirements
  • Employee master database
  • Attendance registers
  • Leave records
  • Overtime approvals

Pre-payroll compliance assists in minimising the errors of calculations and increases the audit preparation.

Compliance on Payroll Processing

The calculation of payroll should be correct, punctual and by the statutory provisions.

Key Processing Checks:

  • By the new definition of wages, the Calculation of salary.
  • Statutory deductions (PF, ESI, TDS, PT)
  • Rules on bonus, gratuity, and leave encashment.
  • Proper exemption credits (HRA, LTA, deductions u/s 80C, etc.)

Such statutory deduction requirements as of 2026:

  • PF - 12% of the basic wages (can be modified by the labour codes)
  • ESI - 0.75% employee + 3.25% employer
  • TDS - As per the income tax slab
  • State-specific Professional Tax

Precision in the processing process assists the companies in preventing short deductions and payroll arguments.

Post-Payroll Compliance

The employers are required to fill in the following after payment of salaries:

1. Statutory Payments

 

  • PF deposits must be made on or before the 15th of the following month as per EPF regulations.
  • ESI deposits by the 15th day of each month
  • TDs payments by month 7th
  • Professional tax according to the state schedules
  1. Payroll Reporting
  • PF ECR filing
  • ESI returns
  • Form 24Q TDS returns
  • Salary registers maintenance
  1. Employee Communication Compliance
  • Offering salary slips and obligatory information.
  • Sharing Form 16 annually
  • Informing employees about changes in statutes.

Compliance Checklist Annual

The 2026 Annual Payroll Compliance Checklist for Indian companies will contain:

  • Filing annual PF returns- Make sure that the amount of the employee and employer Provident Fund contributions is properly computed, deposited and reconciled with EPFO records. Annual verification helps to discover the difference between wages and UAN mapping, and contribution ceilings before audits.
  • Filing annual ESI returns- Ensure that ESI contributions on employees with entitlement are properly deducted and paid within statutory guidelines. Annual ESI reporting is a guarantee that employees are not going to fall under the minimums of the wages, eligibility to coverage, and continuation of the benefits.
  • Submission of TDS Form 24Q (Form 16 is included in quarter 4)- Form 24Q is a consolidation of quarterly pay TDS information, and Form 16 released during the fourth quarter is evidence of tax deduction to employees. Precision is essential to evade notices, fines, and tax complexity among employees.
  • Payroll/financial data reconciliation- Balance payroll with accounting and bank accounts to make sure that salary payouts, statutory deductions, and reimbursements are consistent with financial accounts. The action will avoid financial leakages and audit observations.
  • Calculations of bonuses and gratuities- Review bonus qualification and gratuity reflecting on the basis of wage definition, tenure, and legal provisions. Annual validation provides conformity of pay out with the Payment of Bonus Act and the Payment of Gratuity Act.
  • Revising the payroll regulations in accordance with the new labour code notifications- Oversee and monitor the changes that are being introduced under the new labour codes, such as the changed wage structure, contribution and definition of benefits. Timely updates will eliminate any future gaps in compliance and rework.
  • Auditing of attendance, leave and salary records- Compare records of attendance, leave days and salary calculations to make sure that the payouts are calculated on the actual working hours and number of granted leaves. This minimizes payroll controversy and enhances internal discipline.
  • Examining statutory registers- Periodically revise and update statutory registers, including wage, attendance and deduction registers as required by labour laws. The maintenance of the system is connected with the audit preparation and compliance with regulations during the inspections.

Payroll Tax Compliance: India

The compliance of the payroll tax is concerned with the correct calculation and the payment of statutory taxes on time:

 

  • Income Tax (TDS on Salary)

 

Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) on salary is the income tax deducted by the employer before paying salary to employees, based on applicable tax slabs and declarations.

Applicable Act:
Income Tax Act, 1961

Key Forms:

Form 24Q – Quarterly TDS return for salary
Form 16 – Annual TDS certificate issued to employees
Form 12BB – Employee investment and exemption declarations

Refer to the Income Tax Department’s official TDS chart for the most current rates applicable for FY 2025-26.

 

  • Professional Tax

 

Professional Tax is a state-levied tax on employment, deducted by employers from employee salaries and remitted to the respective state government.

Applicable Act:
State-specific Professional Tax Acts
(e.g., Maharashtra State Tax on Professions, Trades, Callings and Employments Act, 1975)

Key Forms:

  • State-specific PT returns and challans (varies by state)

Compliance Note:
Rates, slabs, and filing frequencies differ across states, making location-based payroll configuration essential.

 

  • Employer (PF, ESI) contributions

 

Provident Fund (PF)
A Provident Fund is a mandatory social security contribution where both employer and employee contribute towards long-term retirement savings.

Applicable Act:
Employees’ Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952

Contribution Structure:

  • Employer contribution: 12% of basic wages (subject to wage ceiling)
  • Employee contribution: 12% of basic wages

Key Forms:

  • ECR (Electronic Challan-cum-Return) – Monthly contribution filing
  • Form 5 – New employee joining
  • Form 10 – Employee exit
  • Form 3A / Form 6A – Annual PF statements

Compliance Note:
Delayed or incorrect PF filings attract interest, penalties, and scrutiny during statutory audits.

Employers must ensure all Aadhaar-linking and ECR filings are completed via the official EPFO Employer Portal

Employees’ State Insurance (ESI)

ESI is a social security scheme providing medical, maternity, and disability benefits to eligible employees earning within prescribed wage limits.

Applicable Act:
Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948

Contribution Structure:

  • Employer contribution: 3.25% of wages
  • Employee contribution: 0.75% of wages

Key Forms:

  • ESI Challan & Monthly Return
  • Form 6 – Half-yearly return
  • Form 1 – Employee registration

Compliance Note:
Proper wage eligibility tracking and timely remittance are critical to ensure uninterrupted employee benefits.

Registration and monthly contributions must be managed through the ESIC Portal to avoid interest on delayed payments."

Labour Welfare Fund (LWF)

 

Labour Welfare Fund is a statutory contribution made by employers and employees to support worker welfare initiatives such as housing, healthcare, and education.

Applicable Act:
State-specific Labour Welfare Fund Acts
(e.g., Maharashtra Labour Welfare Fund Act, 1953)

Contribution Structure:

  • Employer and employee contribution amounts vary by state
  • Filing frequency can be annual or bi-annual

Key Forms:

  • State-prescribed LWF returns and challans

Compliance Note:
Since LWF rules differ across states, multi-location employers must maintain state-wise payroll configurations.

 

  • Adherence prevents fines and helps proper reporting of financial statements

 

Adherence to payroll tax compliance ensures:

  • Prevention of penalties, interest, and legal disputes
  • Accurate statutory and financial reporting
  • Audit readiness and regulatory confidence
  • Protection of employee benefits and trust

Modern payroll automation and HRMS platforms help organizations manage these obligations accurately by automating calculations, filings, and compliance tracking.

Payroll Documentation and Records Keeping Requirements

Payroll records should be kept by Indian businesses for 7-10 years. Obligatory documents are:

  • Salary registers
  • Attendance & leave records
  • Overtime records
  • PF & ESI challans
  • TDS challans
  • Bank transfer proofs
  • Form 16 records
  • Bonus & gratuity registers
  • Letter of appointment and contracts with employees

The 2026 regulations prioritize compliance of digital payroll India, persuading the businesses to switch to cloud storage.

Payroll Audit Checklist (Monthly, Quarterly, Yearly)

Payroll audit assists in the accuracy of payroll data and compliance with regulations.

 

  • Monthly Audit Checklist

 

Verify attendance & overtime

Examine statutory deductions (PF, ESI, TDS)

Attract changes in the salary structure.

 

  • Quarterly Audit Checklist

 

TDS Form 24Q filing

Leave balance review

Allowances reimbursement audit.

 

  • Yearly Audit Checklist

 

Complete statutory compliance audit.

Checking of salaries against financial books.

Form 16 issuance

Bonus & LTA calculations

State-of-the-art payroll compliance tools using AI currently automate audit trails and exceptions.

 

  • Remote and Hybrid Teams Payroll Compliance

 

Remote and hybrid working models raise compliance issues:

  • Multi-state statutory laws
  • Application of professional tax.
  • Attendance authenticity
  • Allowance restructuring
  • Cross-state minimum wages
  • Electronic records specifications.

Software as uKnowva cloud payroll software India can automate compliance of distributed teams with digital timesheets, e-attendance and multi-state PF/PT rules.

Payroll Compliance Startups vs Large Companies

Startups:

  • Require flexible payroll systems.
  • Concentrate on elementary statutory compliance.
  • Limited HR teams
  • Use cloud payroll software.

Large Enterprises:

  • Complicated compensation systems and allowances.
  • Multi-state compliance regulations.
  • Detailed audit trails
  • Sophisticated reporting and analytics.
  • Increased reliance on AI payroll compliance solutions.

They both should fulfil the same statutory requirements,but in different ways and at different levels.

New Payroll Compliance Changes in 2026

The major evolving trends that will transform payroll in 2026:

  • Complete adoption of labour codes.
  • PF, ESI and gratuity are subject to the new definition of wage.
  • Intelligent compliance control.
  • Digital record-keeping must be made mandatory.
  • GST implications on some of the payroll services.
  • Tighter payroll data accuracy provisions.
  • Greater attention to payroll audit.

Common Payroll Compliance Mistakes to Avoid in India

Wrong wage allowance break-up (non-compliant allowances): 

  • Delayed statutory payments- Late remittance of PF, ESI, TDS, or PT attracts interest, penalties, and compliance notices. Repeated delays can also raise red flags during statutory audits.
  • Inadequate documentation and record keeping- Missing or inaccurate payroll records weaken audit readiness and expose organizations to legal disputes. Statutory registers must be maintained and retrievable at all times.
  • Lack of payroll audits- Without periodic payroll audits, errors in calculations and compliance gaps remain undetected. Regular audits help identify risks before they escalate into regulatory issues.
  • Payroll processing errors occur through manual processes- Manual payroll handling increases the likelihood of calculation errors, missed deductions, and inconsistent data. These errors multiply as employee count and complexity increase.
  • Incorrect TDS calculations- Errors in salary tax computation lead to mismatches in Form 24Q and Form 16, resulting in tax notices and employee dissatisfaction. Accurate investment declaration handling is critical.
  • Disregard multi-state compliance- Different states have varying labour laws, tax rates, and filing requirements. Ignoring location-specific rules can result in non-compliance for distributed workforces.
  • These risks are minimised in the case of automation- Payroll automation ensures rule-based calculations, timely statutory filings, and centralized compliance tracking. Automated systems significantly reduce human error and improve audit readiness.

Punishments and dangers of non-compliance with payroll

Non-compliance may lead to:

 

  • Heavy statutory fines

 

Non-compliance with payroll laws attracts monetary penalties imposed by statutory authorities.

Applicable laws: EPF Act, ESI Act, Income Tax Act, State PT Acts

Fine range: ₹10,000 to ₹1,00,000 per violation (can escalate for repeat offences)

 

  • Legal notices

 

Regulatory bodies may issue show-cause notices, recovery notices, or initiate prosecution against employers.

Applicable laws: EPF Act, ESI Act, Income Tax Act, Labour Codes

Penalty: Monetary fines plus potential imprisonment up to 3 years in severe or willful default cases

 

  • Employee disputes

 

Incorrect deductions or delayed statutory deposits can lead to employee complaints, labour court cases, and union escalations.

Applicable laws: Industrial Disputes Act, Payment of Wages Act, EPF & ESI Acts

Impact: Back payments, damages, legal costs, and reputational risk

 

  • Operational disruptions

 

Payroll non-compliance often triggers inspections, audits, and document submissions that disrupt daily HR and finance operations.

Applicable laws: Labour Codes, State Labour Laws

Impact: Management bandwidth diversion, delayed payroll cycles, and compliance firefighting

 

  • Interest payable on interest arrears

 

Delayed PF, ESI, or TDS payments attract mandatory interest and damages, compounding over time.

EPF: 12% interest per annum + damages up to 25% of arrears

ESI: 12% interest per annum + penalties up to 25%

TDS: 1%–1.5% per month under the Income Tax Act

 

  • Damage to the employer brand

 

Repeated non-compliance impacts employee trust, increases attrition, and weakens employer credibility during audits and hiring.

Applicable across: All labour and tax laws

Business risk: Lower retention, poor Glassdoor ratings, and reduced talent attraction

Violation of statutory law in terms of PF, ESI, TDS and Labour Act could result in penalties ranging from Rs 1,000 to lakhs per offence.

How to Choose Payroll Software for Indian Compliance

Choosing the right payroll software is critical for staying compliant with India’s complex statutory framework. Beyond salary calculations, payroll systems must support accurate deductions, timely filings, and audit readiness across central and state laws.

When evaluating payroll software for Indian compliance, focus on the following essentials.

  • Automated PF, ESI, PT and TDS- The payroll software must automatically calculate, deduct, and file all statutory contributions in line with current laws. Automation reduces errors, ensures timely payments, and keeps filings audit-ready.
  • Salary structures that are labour code-ready- The system should support flexible wage definitions and allowance configurations aligned with the new labour codes. This ensures compliance with revised wage calculations, contribution thresholds, and statutory benefits.
  • AI-driven validation checks- AI-based validations help detect anomalies such as incorrect deductions, missing declarations, or unusual payroll variances. These checks act as proactive controls to prevent compliance breaches before payroll is processed.
  • Biometric and HRMS integration- Seamless integration with biometric attendance systems and core HRMS ensures payroll is calculated on accurate, real-time attendance data. This eliminates discrepancies between attendance, leave, and salary payouts.
  • Payroll audit dashboard- A centralized dashboard should provide visibility into statutory compliance status, pending filings, exceptions, and audit flags. This enables HR and finance teams to identify risks early and stay inspection-ready.
  • Electronic payrolls and reports- The software must support digital payslips, statutory forms, and downloadable compliance reports. Electronic documentation improves data security, traceability, and regulatory reporting accuracy.
  • Inter-state compliance regulations- For organizations operating across multiple states, payroll software must automatically apply state-specific rules for Professional Tax, Labour Welfare Fund, and other local compliances. This ensures accurate payroll processing across locations.

GST and payroll compliance service

uKnowva Payroll Compliance Features:

  • Statutory updates that are automated.
  • AI-powered error detection
  • Digital payroll records
  • Compliance engine Multi-state.
  • Automated compliance reports.
  • Audit-ready system on the cloud.

uKnowva supports organisations in managing payroll compliance through automation, validation, and reporting features.

Regulatory and Legal References

  • EPF Act 1952
  • ESI Act 1948
  • Income Tax Act Section 192
  • Labour Codes on Wages and Social Security

Conclusion

India is fast changing in terms of payroll compliance due to the emergence of new laws, digitisation and changing work models. Companies embracing automated systems and ensuring a stringent compliance process will minimise risks, prevent fines and improve transparency. Applications such as uKnowva Payroll assist organisations to keep ahead of the regulatory changes and develop a payroll ecosystem that is future-proof.

FAQs on Payroll Compliance Checklist 

1. Why is payroll compliance critical for Indian businesses?

It ensures adherence to tax and labour laws, avoids penalties, builds trust, and ensures seamless payroll operations.

2. What is the impact of the new Indian labour codes on existing payroll compliance?

They standardise wage definitions, change PF/ESI contributions, revise working hours, and require restructuring of salary components.

3. What is the difference between professional tax and income tax compliance in India?

Professional tax is a state tax deducted monthly, while income tax (TDS) is deducted as per annual income slabs.

4. What are the essential payroll compliance requirements for Indian companies?

PF, ESI, TDS deductions and payments, minimum wage adherence, documentation, and statutory filings.

5. How to prepare for a payroll compliance audit in India?

Maintain documentation, reconcile payroll data, verify statutory payments, and ensure accurate attendance records.

6. Why are EPF, ESI, and TDS compliance critical for Indian employers?

They are mandatory statutory requirements; non-compliance can result in penalties, legal issues, and employee dissatisfaction.

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