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Construction Welfare Cess 2026: Key Provisions & BOCW Facts

India notifies 1% Construction Welfare Cess under Code on Social Security 2020. Key provisions, BOCW board facts, exemption limits, Rule 42 — explained for UPSC & SSC exams.

⏱️ 12 min read
📊 2,343 words
📅 May 2026
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“A welfare fund that sits unspent is not welfare — it is deferred promise.” — On India’s construction cess utilisation challenge

The Government of India has formally notified a 1% cess on the total cost of construction incurred by employers, marking a key step in operationalising the Code on Social Security, 2020. The notification, issued by the Ministry of Labour and Employment under Section 100(1) of the Code, supersedes a nearly three-decade-old notification dated 26 September 1996 that had governed the levy under the Building and Other Construction Workers’ Welfare Cess Act, 1996.

Simultaneously, the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 were notified on 8 May 2026 via Notification No. G.S.R. 344(E), replacing regulations under multiple older laws dating from 1924 to 2009. This move is part of a broader labour reform drive that has consolidated nine legacy statutes into one unified Code.

1% Cess Rate on Construction Cost
5 Cr Construction Workers in India
₹50 L New Residential Exemption Limit
9 Laws Merged into SS Code 2020
📊 Quick Reference
Cess Rate 1% of Construction Cost
Legal Basis Section 100(1), SS Code 2020
Supersedes Notification of 26 Sept 1996
Residential Exemption Houses below ₹50 Lakh
Rules Notified 8 May 2026 (G.S.R. 344(E))
Ministry Ministry of Labour & Employment

📜 From the 1996 Cess Act to the 2020 Code

The legal architecture for levying a welfare cess on construction was originally established by the Building and Other Construction Workers’ Welfare Cess Act, 1996, enacted in August 1996. That Act mandated a cess of not less than 1% and not more than 2% of construction cost. The 1996 notification fixed the operative rate at 1%, funding welfare boards under the companion BOCW (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Service) Act, 1996.

The Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) repealed the Cess Act of 1996 along with eight other central labour statutes, including the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948; the Employees’ Provident Funds Act, 1952; the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961; the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972; and the Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Act, 2008. The Code was formulated on the recommendations of the Second National Commission on Labour.

Most operational chapters of the Code came into force on 21 November 2025, followed by a corrigendum on 19 December 2025. The new cess notification brings Chapter VIII of the Code — governing the construction welfare cess — into full operational effect.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of this like updating old software. India’s construction workers’ welfare was governed by a patchwork of nine different laws — like nine separate apps doing the same job. The Code on Social Security, 2020 merged all nine into one unified “super-app,” and this cess notification is one of the final pieces needed to actually run it.

August 1996
BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996 enacted; cess rate fixed at 1% via notification dated 26 September 1996
2020
Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) passed by Parliament, consolidating nine labour laws
21 November 2025
Most operational chapters of the Code on Social Security, 2020 brought into force
8 May 2026
Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 notified via G.S.R. 344(E); new 1% cess notification issued, superseding 1996 notification

✨ Key Provisions of the New Notification

The rate of cess remains unchanged at 1% of the cost of construction, maintaining continuity with the 1996 regime. The levy applies to all commercial buildings regardless of cost. Key changes under the new framework include:

  • Raised Exemption Threshold: Individual residential houses costing less than ₹50 lakh are now exempt (effective 21 November 2025), up from the earlier ₹10 lakh limit or 100 sq. metre size threshold — a significant relief for urban homebuilders.
  • Self-Assessment Mechanism (Rule 42): Employers pay cess in advance via self-assessment, with construction cost certified by a chartered engineer — defined as a person holding an engineering degree with corporate membership of the Institution of Engineers (India). This replaces the inspector-driven model.
  • Reference Rates: For cost calculation, employers may rely on rates specified by the State PWD, Central PWD, or documents filed with RERA.
  • Penalty for Delay: Delayed cess payment attracts a penalty of 1% per month on the outstanding amount.
⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse the exemption thresholds: The OLD limit was ₹10 lakh (or 100 sq. metres). The NEW limit is ₹50 lakh — a 5x increase. Commercial buildings have NO exemption. Also note: the rate of cess is unchanged at 1%; only the residential exemption threshold has changed.

Aspect Old Regime (1996 Act) New Regime (SS Code 2020)
Cess Rate 1% (fixed via 1996 notification) 1% (unchanged)
Residential Exemption ₹10 lakh or 100 sq. metres ₹50 lakh (effective Nov 2025)
Assessment Model Inspector-driven third-party Self-assessment by employer + chartered engineer
Worker Registration Manual, state-wise Aadhaar-linked, centralised portal
Migrant Worker Benefits Linked to state of origin Portable — benefits in state of current work

👷 BOCW Welfare Board Structure and Fund Utilisation

Collections from the cess flow into state-level BOCW Welfare Boards, constituted by every State Government. These boards provide registered construction workers with health benefits, accident and disability insurance, financial aid, maternity benefits, pension assistance, and educational support for workers’ children. Workers between 18 and 60 years of age who have worked for at least 90 days in the previous year are eligible to register.

Key statistics as of 1 November 2022:

  • Over 5.06 crore construction workers registered with BOCW Boards
  • Total cess collected: ₹87,478.79 crore
  • Total cess spent: ₹49,269.20 crore
  • Unspent corpus: ₹38,209.59 crore
  • As of March 2019, only about 39% of total cess collected had been effectively utilised — consistently criticised by the CAG
✓ Quick Recall

COVID-19 Test: During the 2020 lockdown, state BOCW boards (then holding ~₹52,000 crore) disbursed ₹4,957 crore in cash assistance to around 2 crore registered construction workers — demonstrating the fund’s emergency safety-net value.

🌍 Integration with Formal Social Security

The Central Government has articulated a plan to integrate BOCW cess collections into the broader formal social security architecture, including eventual linkage to pension schemes and access to ESIC healthcare benefits for construction workers. This would be a structural shift — construction workers have historically been outside the ESIC framework (which covers establishments with ten or more employees).

The digital backbone for this integration is the e-SHRAM portal, launched in August 2021 to create a National Database of Unorganised Workers (NDUW) with Aadhaar-linked records. With over 28.46 crore unorganised workers registered as of December 2022, the framework to channel cess-funded welfare to verified beneficiaries is largely in place.

The new Code also provides that migrant construction workers are entitled to benefits in the state where they are currently working — a significant portability reform over the earlier state-of-origin model.

💭 Think About This

India’s construction sector is the second-largest employer after agriculture, yet most workers remain outside formal social security. Can a self-assessment cess model — dependent on employer honesty and chartered engineer certification — adequately fund welfare for 5 crore workers? What structural incentives exist for compliance?

⚖️ Challenges and Criticism

Several structural challenges persist despite the reform:

  • Self-Assessment Risk: Trade unions fear the shift from inspector-driven to self-certified assessment may lead to underreporting of construction costs, reducing cess collections and welfare funds.
  • Registration Barriers: Migrant workers often cannot register with BOCW boards because contractors are reluctant to issue employment confirmation letters, as this triggers compliance obligations under the Inter-State Migrant Workers Act.
  • CAG Criticism: The Comptroller and Auditor General has noted that several state boards failed to ensure timely worker registration, deployed welfare funds for non-welfare purposes, and maintained poor beneficiary data.
  • Implementation Dependence: The new Aadhaar-linked BOCW registration closes identification and portability gaps on paper, but its effectiveness will depend entirely on state-level administrative capacity.
🧠 Memory Tricks
Rate Continuity:
“1% in 1996, 1% in 2026” — The cess rate has never changed in 30 years. What changed is everything around it: exemption limits, assessment method, digital infrastructure.
5x Exemption Leap:
“₹10L to ₹50L = 5x jump” — Old residential exemption was ₹10 lakh; new is ₹50 lakh. Multiply by 5. Only for individuals building homes — NOT commercial buildings.
Nine into One:
“9 laws → 1 Code” — The Code on Social Security, 2020 is one of four Labour Codes, consolidating nine older laws. The other three Labour Codes cover wages, industrial relations, and occupational safety.
BOCW Numbers:
“87k crore collected, 38k crore unspent” — ₹87,478 crore collected; ₹38,209 crore sitting unused. The gap between collection and delivery is the core governance challenge.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
Under which section of which Act is the new 1% construction welfare cess notified?
Click to flip
Answer
Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020).
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

🌍
India’s BOCW boards have collected over ₹87,000 crore but left nearly ₹38,000 crore unspent. What structural and governance reforms would actually close this gap between collection and worker benefit delivery?
Consider: state administrative capacity, Aadhaar-linked registration vs. registration barriers for migrant workers, CAG findings on non-welfare use of funds, political incentives at state level.
⚖️
The shift from inspector-driven to self-assessed cess payment has been praised as reducing bureaucratic friction but criticised by trade unions as enabling underreporting. How should welfare-based tax systems balance ease of compliance with accountability?
Think about: moral hazard in self-assessment, role of chartered engineers as independent certifiers, comparison with GST self-filing, the RERA data cross-check as a safeguard.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
The new 1% Construction Welfare Cess is notified under which legal provision?
A) Section 10(46) of the Income Tax Act, 1961
B) Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020
C) Section 2(1) of the BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996
D) Article 246 of the Constitution of India
Explanation

The cess is levied under Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020), which superseded the Building and Other Construction Workers’ Welfare Cess Act, 1996.

Question 2 of 5
What is the new residential construction exemption threshold under the 2020 Code (effective November 2025)?
A) ₹10 lakh
B) ₹25 lakh
C) ₹50 lakh
D) ₹1 crore
Explanation

The new residential exemption threshold is ₹50 lakh (effective 21 November 2025), up from the old limit of ₹10 lakh or 100 sq. metres — a 5x increase.

Question 3 of 5
What does Rule 42 of the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 introduce?
A) Self-assessment mechanism with chartered engineer certification
B) Inspector-driven third-party assessment of construction cost
C) Mandatory RERA filing for all construction projects
D) Aadhaar-linked bank transfer of cess refunds
Explanation

Rule 42 introduces a self-assessment mechanism for cess payment, with cost certified by a chartered engineer who is a corporate member of the Institution of Engineers (India).

Question 4 of 5
As of November 2022, how much cess corpus remained unspent with state BOCW boards?
A) ₹4,957 crore
B) ₹49,269 crore
C) ₹87,478 crore
D) ₹38,209 crore
Explanation

As of 1 November 2022, state BOCW boards had collected ₹87,478.79 crore in cess and spent ₹49,269.20 crore, leaving ₹38,209.59 crore in unspent corpus — a persistent under-utilisation criticised by the CAG.

Question 5 of 5
How many earlier central labour laws did the Code on Social Security, 2020 consolidate?
A) Four
B) Nine
C) Twelve
D) Three
Explanation

The Code on Social Security, 2020 consolidated nine earlier central labour laws. It is one of four Labour Codes enacted by Parliament (the others covering wages, industrial relations, and occupational safety).

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
Legal Basis: The 1% Construction Welfare Cess is notified under Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020), superseding the notification of 26 September 1996 issued under the BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996.
2
Rate Unchanged, Exemption Expanded: The cess rate remains 1% of construction cost. The residential exemption threshold has been raised 5x — from ₹10 lakh to ₹50 lakh (effective 21 November 2025). Commercial buildings have no exemption.
3
Rule 42 Reform: The Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 (notified 8 May 2026 via G.S.R. 344(E)) introduce a self-assessment mechanism certified by a chartered engineer, replacing the inspector-driven model. Late payment attracts 1% per month penalty.
4
BOCW Fund Facts: As of November 2022, over 5.06 crore workers were registered; ₹87,478.79 crore collected; ₹38,209.59 crore unspent. Only ~39% of collected cess was effectively utilised as of March 2019 — a persistent CAG criticism.
5
Labour Code Context: The Code on Social Security, 2020 is one of four Labour Codes enacted by Parliament, consolidating nine earlier statutes. The Second National Commission on Labour recommended this consolidation.
6
Portability Reform: Under the new Code, migrant construction workers receive benefits in the state where they are currently working — not their state of origin — backed by Aadhaar-linked registration on a centralised portal.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Construction Welfare Cess and who pays it?
It is a 1% levy on the total cost of construction incurred by employers on building and other construction works. Employers — whether a company, government body, or individual — building commercial structures must pay this cess. Individuals building residential houses costing less than ₹50 lakh are exempt under the new Code.
What is the Code on Social Security, 2020, and which laws does it replace?
The Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) is a unified labour law that consolidates nine earlier central statutes, including the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948; the Employees’ Provident Funds Act, 1952; the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961; the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972; the BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996; and the Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Act, 2008. It is one of four Labour Codes enacted by Parliament.
What are BOCW Welfare Boards and how do they help workers?
Building and Other Construction Workers (BOCW) Welfare Boards are constituted by every State Government. They receive cess funds and provide registered construction workers with health benefits, accident and disability insurance, maternity benefits, pension assistance, and educational support for workers’ children. Workers aged 18–60 who have worked for at least 90 days in the previous year are eligible to register.
What is the e-SHRAM portal and how does it connect to the BOCW cess?
e-SHRAM is a National Database of Unorganised Workers (NDUW) portal launched in August 2021, with Aadhaar-linked records. With over 28.46 crore unorganised workers registered (as of December 2022), it provides the digital backbone for channelling BOCW cess-funded welfare to verified beneficiaries and enabling portability of benefits for migrant workers across states.
Why has cess under-utilisation been a persistent problem, and what is being done?
State BOCW boards have consistently collected far more than they spend — as of November 2022, ₹38,209 crore remained unspent. The CAG has noted poor beneficiary data, non-welfare use of funds, and weak registration systems. The new Code addresses this through Aadhaar-linked registration, a centralised portal, migrant worker portability, and eventual integration with ESIC and pension schemes — though effective implementation depends on state-level administrative capacity.
🏷️ Exam Relevance
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains (GS-II) UPSC Mains (GS-III) SSC CGL SSC CHSL Banking PO State PSC Labour Law Exams CAT/MBA GDPI
Prashant Chadha

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