India has no single national minimum wage. Rates are set by individual states and vary by skill category, industry, and geographic zone.
Unskilled wages range from ₹10,000 to ₹18,456 per month depending on the state, with Delhi consistently at the top and Rajasthan among the lowest.
State wage notifications are the legally binding reference — not the national floor wage. Employers must follow the notification for the state where the employee works.
Minimum wage applies mainly to entry-level and labor-intensive roles — tech and formal business salaries are market-driven and far exceed statutory minimums.
Statutory costs add 10% to 20% on top of base salary — including EPF at 12% of basic pay, ESI where applicable, and gratuity accrual.
Minimum wage is a compliance floor, not a hiring benchmark — to hire effectively, employers need to understand both the legal minimum and the actual market salary for each role.
Minimum wage in India is one of the first things employers look up, and one of the easiest things to get wrong.
Most people expect a single number they can apply across roles, locations, and teams. That works in countries with a national minimum wage. In India, it doesn’t hold up for long.
There is no universal rate. Minimum wages are defined at the state level, vary by skill category, and in many cases change again depending on the industry and location of the employee. Two people doing similar work in different states can legally be paid very different wages, and both can be fully compliant.
The bigger issue isn’t the structure. It’s how employers use the number.
Minimum wage tells you the legal floor. It does not tell you what employees actually earn, and it certainly doesn’t tell you what you need to pay to hire and retain talent. In most sectors, especially business and technology roles, real salaries sit far above minimum wage levels.
This is where companies usually get it wrong. They treat minimum wage as a benchmark, when in reality it’s only relevant for a narrow segment of roles.
To hire effectively in India, you need to look at two layers at the same time. The first is the minimum wage framework, which determines compliance. The second is the actual salary landscape, which determines hiring success.
This guide breaks down both, using the latest 2026 data across states, sectors, and roles, so you can understand not just what you must pay, but what you should pay.
What is minimum wage in India?
Minimum wage in India is the legally mandated lowest wage that employers must pay workers, set by state governments based on skill level, industry, and location.
Minimum Wage in India (2026): The Headline Numbers
India does define a national “floor wage,” but in practice, employers rarely use it.
| Metric | 2026 Estimate |
|---|---|
| National floor wage (guideline) | ₹178 per day (~₹4,600/month) |
| Typical unskilled minimum wage | ₹10,000 – ₹18,000/month |
| Semi-skilled roles | ₹12,000 – ₹19,000/month |
| Skilled roles | ₹14,000 – ₹22,000/month |
| Highly skilled categories | ₹18,000 – ₹25,000+ |
The national floor wage is rarely used in real payroll calculations because every state sets its own rates, and those rates are almost always higher. What actually matters is the wage notification issued by the employee’s state.
The spread across categories is also significant. Moving from unskilled to skilled work can increase the minimum wage requirement by 30 to 50 percent, depending on the state. That makes role classification critical for compliance.
How Minimum Wage Works in India
Layer 1 — State
Each state publishes its own legally binding wage notification. The employee’s work location determines which state’s rates apply — not your company’s headquarters.
Layer 2 — Skill level
Roles are classified as unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, or highly skilled. Each category has a different wage threshold — moving up one level can increase the minimum by 30–50%.
Layer 3 — Zone
Many states divide regions into zones — metro, urban, rural. The same job in Mumbai vs a small Maharashtra town can legally have a different minimum wage within the same state notification.
Layer 4 — Industry
Wages are often set under “scheduled employments” — specific industries like construction, retail, or security may have their own separate wage structures defined by the state.
All 4 layers must be applied together — using only one leads to non-compliance
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Minimum wage in India works through a layered system, not a single rule.
The most important factor is the state. Each state government publishes wage notifications that define minimum pay levels for different types of work. These notifications are legally binding and must be followed by employers operating in that jurisdiction.
On top of that, roles are classified by skill level. Categories such as unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, and highly skilled are used across most states, and each category has a different wage threshold. This classification isn’t just formal. It directly determines what you must pay.
Many states also divide regions into zones. Metro cities and high-cost areas fall into higher-paying zones, while smaller cities and rural regions fall into lower ones. This is why the same role can have different wage requirements within the same state.
Industry classification adds another layer. Minimum wages are often defined under “scheduled employments,” which means sectors like construction, manufacturing, retail, and security can each have their own wage structures.
Put together, this creates a system where minimum wage isn’t a single number, but something you have to apply carefully.
How Minimum Wage Is Calculated in India
Minimum wage in India is determined by applying a few key factors together, not by using a single national number.
Identify the correct state
Use the employee’s work location — not your registered office. Remote workers are governed by the state they work from.
Classify the skill level correctly
Map each role to unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, or highly skilled using the state’s legal definitions — job titles alone are not sufficient.
Check the zone (metro vs non-metro)
States like Karnataka, Maharashtra, and Telangana have zone-based differences. Using the wrong zone is one of the most common compliance errors.
Check for scheduled industry rates
Construction, security, retail, and manufacturing often have separate wage structures. Verify whether your industry falls under a scheduled employment category.
Use the latest state notification (including DA)
Many states revise wages every 6 months via Dearness Allowance updates. Running outdated rates makes you non-compliant even if the original figure was correct.
Verify the basic pay component specifically
Not all salary components count toward minimum wage. The basic pay portion must independently meet the minimum — allowances alone are not enough.
All 6 factors must be correct simultaneously for full compliance
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| Factor | What You Need to Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| State | Employee’s work location | Each state sets its own legally binding wage rates |
| Skill Level | Unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, highly skilled | Directly determines minimum wage category |
| Zone | Metro vs non-metro (if applicable) | Wages vary within the same state |
| Industry | Scheduled employment (if defined) | Some sectors have separate wage structures |
| Latest Notification | Most recent state update (incl. DA revisions) | Using outdated rates leads to non-compliance |
| Salary Structure | Basic wage vs allowances | Basic pay must meet minimum wage requirements |
Minimum wage is only compliant when all of these factors are applied correctly at the same time.
State-Wise Minimum Wages in India (2026)
Minimum wages vary widely across states.
The table below compiles the latest available wage notifications across major states and union territories. These figures represent monthly equivalents and reflect the most recent revisions between 2024 and 2026.
| State / UT | Unskilled (₹/month) | Skilled (₹/month) | Highly Skilled (₹/month) | Effective Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andaman & Nicobar Islands | 16,952 | 22,256 | 24,414 | Jan 1, 2026 |
| Assam | 10,138 | 14,732 | 18,941 | Jun 1, 2024 |
| Bihar | 11,128 | 14,066 | 17,160 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Chandigarh | 14,562 | 15,012–15,237 | 15,637 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Chhattisgarh | 10,656–11,176 | 12,086–12,606 | 12,866–13,386 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Delhi | 18,456 | 22,411 | 24,356 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Gujarat | 12,727–13,013 | 13,273–13,585 | NA | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Haryana | 11,274 | 13,051–13,704 | 14,389 | Jul 1, 2025 |
| Jharkhand | 13,050 | 18,042 | 20,802 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Karnataka | 15,644–17,666 | 16,225–18,134 | 17,436–19,537 | Apr 1, 2025 |
| Madhya Pradesh | 12,150 | 14,869 | 16,494 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Maharashtra | 12,442–13,635 | 14,054–15,246 | NA | Jul 1, 2025 |
| Punjab | 11,726 | 13,403 | 14,435 | Sep 1, 2025 |
| Rajasthan | 7,410 | 8,034 | 9,334 | Jan 1, 2023 |
| Telangana | 13,119–14,119 | 13,619–16,119 | 14,119–16,619 | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Uttar Pradesh | 11,021 | 13,580 | NA | Oct 1, 2025 |
| Uttarakhand | 12,391–12,539 | 13,838–14,023 | NA | Apr 1, 2024 |
| West Bengal | 9,760–10,329 | 11,807–12,499 | 12,990–13,748 | Jul 1, 2025 |
Source: Latest wage notifications published by state labour departments (Source Link)
Note: Figures reflect most recent updates available (2024–2026) and include applicable Dearness Allowance (DA) revisions
Source: State labour dept. notifications, 2024–2026 · Midpoint shown where ranges apply
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The differences here are not minor. Delhi sits at the top end of the spectrum, while states like Rajasthan and Bihar operate at significantly lower levels. In some cases, the gap between two states can exceed 40 percent for the same category of work.
Many of these figures also include zone-based variations. States such as Karnataka, Maharashtra, and Telangana publish different rates depending on whether the employee is in a metro or a smaller city. Using the wrong zone is one of the most common compliance mistakes.
Minimum wages are often notified under state-specific Shops and Establishment regulations.
Sector-Wise Wages in India (Including Technology)
The differences become clearer when you look at how wages vary across sectors.
Some industries operate very close to minimum wage levels, while others sit far above them. The table below brings both into one view, showing how minimum wage interacts with actual salary ranges.
| Sector | Role Type | Minimum Wage / Entry Level (₹/month) | Market Salary Range (₹/month) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Construction | General labor | 10,000 – 14,000 | 12,000 – 18,000 |
| Manufacturing | Machine operator / technician | 12,000 – 16,000 | 15,000 – 22,000 |
| Retail & Shops | Store staff | 11,000 – 15,000 | 14,000 – 22,000 |
| Security Services | Guard / supervisor | 13,000 – 17,000 | 16,000 – 22,000 |
| Logistics & Warehousing | Picker / loader | 10,000 – 14,000 | 13,000 – 20,000 |
| BPO / Customer Support | Executive | 15,000 – 20,000 | 20,000 – 35,000 |
| Admin / Business Roles | Office staff | 12,000 – 18,000 | 25,000 – 60,000 |
| Technology (Developers) | Junior | Not applicable | 40,000 – 80,000 |
| Technology (Developers) | Mid-level | Not applicable | 80,000 – 1.6L |
| Technology (Developers) | Senior | Not applicable | 1.2L – 2.5L+ |
For most employers, this is where the confusion starts. Minimum wage looks like a benchmark, but in reality, it’s only relevant for a narrow set of roles.
In sectors like construction, logistics, and entry-level retail, minimum wage is highly relevant. It defines the baseline and often sits close to what workers actually earn.
As you move into structured business roles such as customer support, administration, or supervisory positions, salaries begin to move away from minimum wage and become more market-driven.
In technology, minimum wage isn’t a meaningful reference point at all. Salaries are determined by experience, skill level, and company type, not by statutory wage rules.
Technology Salaries in India (2026)
Technology sits at the other end of the wage spectrum and needs to be looked at separately.
In this segment, compensation is not anchored to minimum wage in any meaningful way. Instead, it is driven by demand for skills, availability of talent, and competition between employers.
The table below provides a clearer breakdown by experience level.
| Level | Experience | Annual Salary (₹) | Monthly Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresher (Service Companies) | 0–1 year | 3L – 4.5L | 25,000 – 38,000 |
| Fresher (Product Companies) | 0–1 year | 6L – 12L | 50,000 – 1L |
| Junior Developer | 1–3 years | 5L – 10L | 40,000 – 80,000 |
| Mid-Level Developer | 3–5 years | 10L – 20L | 80,000 – 1.6L |
| Senior Developer | 5–8 years | 15L – 30L+ | 1.2L – 2.5L+ |
| Lead / Staff Engineer | 8+ years | 25L – 50L+ | 2L – 4L+ |
What stands out here is not just the numbers, but the spread. A fresher at a service company and a mid-level developer at a product company can differ by three to four times in salary, even within the same city.
This is why minimum wage is not a useful benchmark for tech hiring. Employers need to rely on market data instead, especially when competing for experienced talent.
Employer Cost: What You Actually Pay Beyond Salary
Minimum wage or salary is only one part of the total cost of employment.
In India, employers are required to make statutory contributions that sit on top of base pay. Here is information about EPF.
| Component | Employer Contribution |
|---|---|
| Employees Provident Fund (EPF) | 12% of basic salary |
| Employees State Insurance (ESI) | 3.25% (if applicable) |
| Gratuity (accrual) | ~4.81% of basic |
| Bonus (where applicable) | Minimum 8.33% |
In practical terms, this means the total employer cost is typically 110 to 120 percent of the employee’s salary for lower and mid-range roles.
For minimum wage employees, this additional cost is proportionally significant. For higher-paid employees, the relative impact is smaller, but still important for budgeting.
Salary Differences by City in India
Minimum wage varies by state, but actual salaries vary even more by city.
This is especially visible in sectors like technology, business operations, and services, where market demand drives compensation. Cities with strong industry presence, particularly in tech and startups, consistently command higher salaries.
| City | Mid-Level Salary (₹/month) | Senior Salary (₹/month) | Premium vs National |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bangalore | 80,000 – 1.8L | 1.5L – 3L+ | +30% to 40% |
| Hyderabad | 70,000 – 1.5L | 1.3L – 2.8L | +20% to 30% |
| Pune | 65,000 – 1.4L | 1.2L – 2.5L | +15% to 25% |
| Delhi NCR | 70,000 – 1.5L | 1.3L – 2.8L | +20% to 30% |
| Mumbai | 65,000 – 1.4L | 1.2L – 2.5L | +15% to 25% |
| Chennai | 60,000 – 1.2L | 1.1L – 2.2L | +10% to 15% |
| Tier-2 Cities | 40,000 – 90,000 | 80,000 – 1.5L | Baseline |
What stands out here is not just the difference in numbers, but the reason behind it.
Bangalore sits at the top because it has the highest concentration of product companies, global R&D centers, and venture-funded startups. Hyderabad and Delhi NCR follow closely for similar reasons. Cities like Pune and Chennai remain strong but slightly more cost-efficient.
Tier-2 cities operate at a lower baseline, but this gap has been narrowing. Many companies now hire remotely from these locations while offering salaries aligned with Tier-1 cities, creating an arbitrage opportunity that is slowly disappearing as competition increases.
CTC vs Take-Home Salary in India
Example: an employee offered ₹20L CTC per year does not take home ₹20L. Here’s where the money goes:
What employer pays (CTC)
What employee receives (in-hand)
Key insight: Candidates compare offers based on take-home pay, not CTC. Two offers with the same CTC can result in very different in-hand amounts depending on how the salary is structured.
Figures are illustrative. Actual deductions vary by tax regime, salary structure, and state rules.
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One of the most important concepts for employers hiring in India is the difference between CTC (Cost to Company) and take-home salary.
CTC represents the total cost incurred by the employer. It includes base salary, employer contributions to provident fund, gratuity accrual, and sometimes variable pay. However, employees do not receive the full CTC amount in hand.
In most cases, the actual take-home salary is around 65 to 75 percent of CTC after deductions such as provident fund contributions, income tax, and professional tax.
For example, if an employee is offered ₹20L CTC annually, their monthly take-home salary typically falls between ₹1.1L and ₹1.3L depending on tax regime and salary structure.
This gap is not just a technical detail. It directly affects hiring outcomes. Candidates compare offers based on what they receive in hand, not the headline CTC number.
For employers, this means that two offers with similar CTC can result in very different take-home salaries depending on how the compensation is structured.
Cost of Living vs Wage Reality
Minimum wage and salary benchmarks only make sense when viewed alongside living costs.
In India, cost of living varies significantly across cities. A worker earning ₹15,000 per month in a smaller city may manage basic expenses comfortably. The same income in Mumbai or Bangalore would leave very little room for savings.
A typical monthly cost for a single individual in an urban area falls between ₹10,000 and ₹22,000, depending on housing, lifestyle, and location.
This explains why employers in metro cities rarely pay at minimum wage levels, even for entry-level roles. The market adjusts to cost of living pressures.
Common Employer Mistakes in India
Applying one state’s rates across all employees
Employers with distributed or remote teams often use one state’s wage structure company-wide. Each employee’s work location governs their rates — not the company’s registered state.
Misclassifying the skill category
Job titles don’t map directly to legal skill categories. A “junior analyst” might legally qualify as skilled rather than semi-skilled, requiring a higher minimum wage threshold.
Missing Dearness Allowance (DA) revisions
Many states revise wages every 6 months via DA updates. Payroll that was compliant in April may fall short by October if the revision isn’t applied — one of the most common silent violations.
Basic pay structured below the minimum
Not all salary components count toward minimum wage. If basic pay is set too low and padded with allowances, the basic component may legally fall short — even if the total package looks fine on paper.
Non-compliance can result in back wages, penalties, and legal action — even if unintentional
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Most compliance issues in India are not the result of intentional violations. They come from applying the system incorrectly.
A common mistake is assuming that minimum wage is uniform across the country. Employers often apply one state’s wage structure to employees in another state, especially in remote or distributed teams. This leads to immediate non-compliance.
Another issue comes from role classification. Job titles do not always align with legal skill categories, and misclassifying an employee can result in underpayment even if the salary appears reasonable.
There is also a tendency to overlook wage revisions. Many states update minimum wages periodically through Dearness Allowance adjustments. If payroll is not updated in line with these revisions, employers can fall out of compliance without realizing it.
Finally, salary structuring itself can create problems. In India, not all components of compensation count toward minimum wage. If the structure is not designed correctly, the basic salary component may fall below the required threshold.
The Legal Framework: Code on Wages
Minimum wage in India is governed by the Code on Wages, 2019, which consolidates multiple wage-related laws into a single framework.
The law introduces a national “floor wage”, but this is not what employers actually use for payroll.
In practice:
- The central government sets the floor wage (a baseline)
- State governments set minimum wages (legally binding)
Employers must always follow the state-issued minimum wage notification, not the national floor wage.
Enforcement and Penalties
Minimum wage compliance is enforced at the state level through inspections and employee complaints.
If an employer pays below the prescribed minimum wage, they can be required to:
- Pay back wages
- Pay penalties or fines
- Correct wage structures
Repeated or serious violations can lead to legal action.
Using an Employer of Record (EOR) in India
Must track wage notifications for every state your employees work from
Requires in-house expertise on EPF, ESI, gratuity, and professional tax
Setting up a legal entity in India takes 3–6 months before first hire
DA revisions and zone rules require constant monitoring to stay compliant
Compliance errors carry penalties, back wages, and potential legal action
EOR tracks all state-specific wage notifications and applies them automatically
Statutory contributions (EPF, ESI, gratuity) are handled and filed on your behalf
Hire in India within days — no entity required, no 3–6 month setup wait
Wage revisions, zone classifications, and DA updates managed automatically
Compliance liability sits with the EOR — your company is protected from payroll penalties
Best for companies hiring across multiple states or without a local entity
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Compare EOR providers →For companies hiring in India without a local entity, managing payroll and compliance internally can become complex very quickly.
An Employer of Record (EOR) acts as the legal employer on behalf of the company and handles all employment-related responsibilities. This includes employment contracts, payroll processing, tax withholding, statutory contributions, and compliance with state-specific labor laws.
This becomes particularly valuable in India because of the multi-layered wage system. Hiring employees across different states means dealing with different wage structures, tax rules, and compliance requirements.
An EOR simplifies this by centralizing everything under one operational model, while ensuring that local regulations are followed correctly.
Final Takeaway
Minimum wage in India isn’t a single number, and it doesn’t reflect what people actually earn.
It is a structured system designed to set a legal baseline, and it plays an important role in sectors where wages are closely regulated. But beyond that, the labor market operates on a completely different scale.
Salaries in India are shaped by industry, experience, location, and demand for skills. Understanding this difference is what allows employers to move from basic compliance to effective hiring.
Once you separate minimum wage from market salary, the system becomes easier to navigate.
Detailed Summary – Minimum wage in India
Article summary
Bottom line for employers
Minimum wage sets the legal floor — it does not reflect what employees actually earn. Separate compliance from hiring strategy: use state wage notifications for the first, and market salary data for the second.



