📰 NATIONAL

1% Construction Welfare Cess: India’s New Labour Code 2026

India notifies 1% construction welfare cess under Code on Social Security, 2020. Key facts on BOCW funds, Rule 42 self-assessment & four labour codes for UPSC & SSC.

⏱️ 12 min read
📊 2,390 words
📅 May 2026
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“With ₹48,000 crore in unspent welfare funds and 1.5 crore workers still unregistered, the adequacy of the legal framework is not in question — its implementation is.”

The Government of India has officially notified a 1% cess on the total cost of construction under the Code on Social Security, 2020. Issued under Section 100(1) of the Code, this notification supersedes the 28-year-old notification dated 26 September 1996 — migrating construction worker welfare from a standalone statute into India’s new consolidated labour code architecture.

This is the first cess notification issued under any of the four new labour codes. The development is significant as the Code on Social Security, 2020 consolidates nine separate central legislations into a single statute, extending social security coverage to organised, unorganised, gig, and platform workers alike.

1% Cess Rate on Construction Cost
71M Workers in Construction Sector
₹1.17L Cr Cumulative Cess Collections
₹48,000 Cr Unspent Welfare Funds
📊 Quick Reference
Legal Basis Section 100(1), Code on Social Security, 2020
Cess Rate 1% of total construction cost (excl. land)
Exemption Threshold Residential projects below ₹50 lakh
Supersedes BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996 (26 Sep 1996 notification)
Central Rules Notified G.S.R. 344(E), 8 May 2026
Laws Consolidated 9 central enactments under Code on SS, 2020

📌 What Is the Construction Welfare Cess?

The construction welfare cess is a levy on the total cost of construction (excluding land value) paid by employers who undertake building and other construction works. The rate is fixed at 1% of the construction cost.

The levy applies to:

  • Commercial buildings — regardless of the total cost of construction
  • All establishments employing ten or more building workers
  • Residential projects costing ₹50 lakh or more (those below ₹50 lakh are exempt, as of 21 November 2025)

The cess is separate from income tax or GST and is specifically ring-fenced for welfare purposes. Collections flow into Building and Other Construction Workers (BOCW) Welfare Funds, managed by state-level welfare boards. These boards disburse benefits including health and medical assistance, accident insurance, maternity support, educational scholarships for workers’ children, housing loans, and pension assistance.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of it like this: every time a builder constructs a commercial building or a residential complex costing ₹50 lakh+, they must contribute 1 rupee for every 100 rupees spent (excluding land cost) into a welfare pot for construction workers. That money funds healthcare, insurance, pensions, and education for the labourers who built the structure.

📜 From the 1996 Act to the 2020 Code

The construction welfare cess traces its origins to the Building and Other Construction Workers’ Welfare Cess Act, 1996 (Act No. 28 of 1996), enacted alongside the Building and Other Construction Workers (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Service) Act, 1996. The original rate notification was issued on 26 September 1996. For nearly three decades, these two statutes formed the legal backbone for construction worker welfare in India.

The Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) repealed and subsumed the 1996 Cess Act, along with eight other central social security legislations. Most operational chapters of the 2020 Code came into force on 21 November 2025, following notification by the Ministry of Labour and Employment.

1996
BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996 enacted; original 1% cess notification issued on 26 September 1996
2020
Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) passed by Parliament, consolidating 9 central laws including the BOCW Cess Act
21 Nov 2025
Most chapters of the Code on Social Security, 2020 came into force; new ₹50 lakh residential exemption threshold effective
14 Jan 2026
CBDT granted Section 10(46) income-tax exemption to West Bengal BOCW Welfare Board
8 May 2026
Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 notified via Gazette Notification No. G.S.R. 344(E), formally operationalising the Code
✓ Quick Recall

Nine laws consolidated: The Code on Social Security, 2020 subsumed the Employees’ Compensation Act 1923, ESI Act 1948, EPF Act 1952, Maternity Benefit Act 1961, Payment of Gratuity Act 1972, Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Act 2008, and the BOCW Cess Act 1996, among others.

✨ Key Provisions of the Notified Cess Framework

Rate and Coverage: The cess is levied at 1% of the total construction cost (excluding land). It applies to all establishments employing ten or more building workers and to commercial buildings irrespective of construction cost. Residential construction costing below ₹50 lakh is exempt.

Self-Assessment Mechanism: Rule 42 of the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 introduces a self-assessment mechanism for cess payment. Employers calculate construction cost based on rates specified by the State PWD/CPWD, or on returns submitted to RERA. The self-assessment must be certified by a Chartered Engineer — defined as a person holding an engineering degree and corporate membership of the Institute of Engineers India — and is to be paid in advance at project approval or before commencement.

ESI and Pension Integration: The Centre has announced plans to link the construction welfare cess into the formal social security system, integrating it with ESIC for healthcare benefits and pension schemes for registered construction workers.

Parameter Old Framework (1996 Act) New Framework (2020 Code)
Legal Basis BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996 Code on Social Security, 2020 (Section 100)
Cess Rate 1% of construction cost 1% of construction cost (unchanged)
Residential Exemption Below ₹10 lakh or under 100 sq. m. Below ₹50 lakh (from 21 Nov 2025)
Assessment Method Government officer assessment Self-assessment certified by Chartered Engineer (Rule 42)
Coverage Scope Construction workers Organised, unorganised, gig, and platform workers
⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse the rate change with the threshold change. The cess rate remains unchanged at 1% — it has been 1% since 1996. What changed is the residential exemption threshold, which was raised from ₹10 lakh (or under 100 sq. m.) to ₹50 lakh. Also note: the new notification is the first under the four labour codes, not the first cess notification ever.

🌍 Challenges in Implementation

Despite the legislative framework being in place since 1996, implementation has remained chronically weak. Only 5.65 crore workers are registered under the BOCW framework, against an estimated 7.1 crore actively engaged in the sector. The informal, seasonal, and migrant nature of construction employment makes registration and benefit delivery difficult.

On the financial side, cumulative cess collections have crossed ₹1.17 lakh crore, of which approximately ₹48,000 crore remains unspent. The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has flagged persistent under-utilisation across multiple state welfare boards:

  • Jharkhand: The board failed to prepare annual budgets for several years and spent only half the available funds between 2017–18 and 2021–22.
  • Madhya Pradesh: CAG reported in April 2025 that ₹416 crore from the fund had been diverted to populist schemes unrelated to worker welfare.

The self-assessment mechanism (Rule 42) has drawn criticism from trade union groups, who argue it may reduce actual cess recovery compared to assessment by a government officer, particularly for private projects where employers have an incentive to understate construction costs.

💭 Think About This

India’s construction sector generates ₹26.27 lakh crore in GVA annually, yet ₹48,000 crore sits unspent in welfare funds while 1.5 crore workers remain unregistered. Does the problem lie in the law, the administration, or both? What structural changes — digital ID, direct benefit transfer, or third-party auditing — might help close this gap?

⚖️ The Four Labour Codes: Broader Reform Context

The construction welfare cess notification is one component of India’s sweeping labour reform through four codes, which together replace 29 central labour laws. All four codes came into effect on 21 November 2025:

  • Code on Wages, 2019 — Consolidates four wage-related laws, including the Minimum Wages Act 1948.
  • Industrial Relations Code, 2020 — Consolidates three laws governing trade unions, industrial disputes, and standing orders.
  • Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 — Consolidates 13 laws related to worker safety.
  • Code on Social Security, 2020 — Consolidates nine laws, including the construction cess framework.
✓ Quick Recall: Four Codes at a Glance

Wages (2019) → 4 laws | IR Code (2020) → 3 laws | OSH Code (2020) → 13 laws | Social Security (2020) → 9 laws
Total: 4 codes replacing 29 central labour laws.

🌍 Significance for Workers and the Construction Sector

India’s construction sector is the second-largest employment generator in the economy. In FY 2024–25, nominal GVA from construction reached ₹26.27 lakh crore — a 9.4% increase over the previous year. Government initiatives such as PMAY-U, under which over 1.18 crore houses have been sanctioned and 86.6 lakh completed (as of September 2024), have dramatically increased the volume of construction activity and the cess base.

The integration of the cess into the formal social security architecture, combined with digital measures such as the e-Shram portal for unorganised worker registration, is expected to improve portability of benefits for migrant construction workers — historically among the most vulnerable segments of the labour force.

🧠 Memory Tricks
Four Codes: “WISE”
Wages (2019) → Industrial Relations (2020) → Safety/OSH (2020) → Social Security (2020). Together: 4 codes, 29 laws replaced.
The “1% unchanged” hook:
The cess rate has been 1% since 1996 — nearly 30 years unchanged. What changed: the law it sits under (now Code on SS, 2020), the exemption threshold (₹10L → ₹50L), and the assessment method (govt officer → self-assessment by Chartered Engineer).
Date anchor: 8 May 2026
Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 notified via Gazette No. G.S.R. 344(E) on 8 May 2026. Rule 42 = self-assessment mechanism for cess.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
Under which legal provision was the 1% construction welfare cess notified in 2026?
Click to flip
Answer
Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020). It supersedes the notification dated 26 September 1996 under the BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

⚖️
India has ₹48,000 crore in unspent construction worker welfare funds. Does the problem lie in the law, the institutions, or the workers’ own ability to access benefits?
Consider: CAG reports of diversion (MP), failure to audit (Jharkhand), documentation barriers for migrant workers, and whether digitisation (e-Shram) is sufficient without administrative reform.
🌍
Is India’s consolidation of 29 labour laws into four codes a genuine reform or a reorganisation that retains old weaknesses in a new structure?
Think about: the self-assessment mechanism vs. government assessment, Supreme Court petition on gig worker welfare delays, states’ role in implementation, and the gap between legal reform and ground-level impact.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
The 2026 construction welfare cess notification was issued under which legal provision?
A) Section 28 of the BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996
B) Section 36 of the Industrial Relations Code, 2020
C) Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020
D) Section 10(46) of the Income Tax Act
Explanation

The cess is notified under Section 100(1) of the Code on Social Security, 2020, superseding the 1996 notification under the BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996.

Question 2 of 5
What is the new residential construction exemption threshold under the 2025 cess framework?
A) Below ₹10 lakh or under 100 sq. m.
B) Below ₹50 lakh
C) Below ₹25 lakh
D) Below ₹1 crore
Explanation

The new residential exemption threshold is ₹50 lakh, raised from the earlier ₹10 lakh (or properties under 100 sq. m.) under the 1996 framework.

Question 3 of 5
Which rule of the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 introduces the self-assessment mechanism for cess payment?
A) Rule 10
B) Rule 28
C) Rule 36
D) Rule 42
Explanation

Rule 42 of the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 introduces the self-assessment mechanism. The assessment must be certified by a Chartered Engineer.

Question 4 of 5
How many central labour laws do India’s four labour codes collectively replace?
A) 29
B) 9
C) 44
D) 13
Explanation

The four labour codes together replace 29 central labour laws. The Code on Social Security, 2020 alone consolidates nine enactments.

Question 5 of 5
How much of the cumulative BOCW cess collection remains unspent?
A) ₹1.17 lakh crore
B) ₹71,000 crore
C) ₹48,000 crore
D) ₹26,000 crore
Explanation

Cumulative BOCW cess collections have exceeded ₹1.17 lakh crore, of which approximately ₹48,000 crore remains unspent.

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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 26 September 1996 notification under the now-repealed BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996.
2
Rate Unchanged, Threshold Revised: The cess rate remains 1% (unchanged since 1996). The residential exemption threshold has been raised from ₹10 lakh (or under 100 sq. m.) to ₹50 lakh, effective 21 November 2025.
3
Self-Assessment (Rule 42): The Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025 (G.S.R. 344(E), 8 May 2026) introduce self-assessment certified by a Chartered Engineer, replacing assessment by a government officer under the old framework.
4
Four Labour Codes: Code on Wages (2019), Industrial Relations Code (2020), OSH Code (2020), and Code on Social Security (2020) — together replacing 29 central labour laws; all came into force on 21 November 2025.
5
Implementation Gap: Cumulative cess collections exceed ₹1.17 lakh crore; approximately ₹48,000 crore remains unspent. CAG has flagged diversion (₹416 crore in MP) and under-utilisation across multiple state welfare boards.
6
First Under Four Codes: This is the first cess notification issued under any of the four new labour codes — a landmark in India’s labour reform architecture, though the cess rate itself is a continuation of a 30-year-old levy.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the construction welfare cess and who pays it?
It is a 1% levy on the total cost of construction (excluding land value) paid by employers who undertake building and other construction works. It applies to establishments employing ten or more building workers, all commercial buildings (regardless of cost), and residential projects costing ₹50 lakh or more. The collected funds go into state-level BOCW Welfare Boards for worker benefits.
Why was a new notification needed if the cess rate hasn’t changed?
The old BOCW Welfare Cess Act, 1996 was repealed when the Code on Social Security, 2020 came into force. The new notification legally anchors the same 1% cess under the new code’s framework (Section 100), ensuring legal continuity while integrating it into the broader social security architecture covering gig and platform workers too.
What is the self-assessment mechanism under Rule 42?
Under Rule 42 of the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2025, employers calculate the construction cost themselves — based on PWD/CPWD rates or RERA filings — and pay the cess in advance before work begins. This assessment must be certified by a Chartered Engineer (a person with an engineering degree and corporate membership of the Institute of Engineers India). Trade unions have criticised this, arguing it gives employers room to understate costs.
Why is so much BOCW welfare fund money unspent?
Multiple factors: informal and migrant workers lack documentation (birth certificates, address proofs) needed to register; state welfare boards have poor administrative capacity; CAG audits have found some states failed to prepare annual budgets or diverted funds to unrelated schemes (e.g., ₹416 crore in Madhya Pradesh). Around 1.5 crore workers remain unregistered out of an estimated 7.1 crore active workers.
What are the four new labour codes and when did they come into force?
The four codes are: (1) Code on Wages, 2019 — consolidates 4 laws; (2) Industrial Relations Code, 2020 — consolidates 3 laws; (3) Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 — consolidates 13 laws; (4) Code on Social Security, 2020 — consolidates 9 laws. Together they replace 29 central labour laws and came into effect on 21 November 2025.
🏷️ Exam Relevance
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains (GS-II) UPSC Mains (GS-III) SSC CGL SSC CHSL Banking PO State PSC Labour Officer Exam CAT/MBA GDPI
Prashant Chadha

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