Central Minimum Wages Revised Upward — Effective 1 April 2026
The Chief Labour Commissioner (Central) has notified revised Variable Dearness Allowance rates across seven scheduled employments under the Code on Wages, 2019. All revised rates are payable from 1 April 2026.
The Office of the Chief Labour Commissioner (Central) has revised Variable Dearness Allowance rates under Section 69(2) of the Code on Wages, 2019, effective 1 April 2026. The revision is based on the Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers rising by 11.28 points between July–December 2025, reaching 424.80 from 413.52 (Base Year 2016 = 100).
VDA is revised every six months — in April and October — to compensate workers for inflation. This notification covers seven scheduled employments under central government jurisdiction. The total minimum wage payable to a worker is Basic Rate + revised VDA. The VDA has been rounded off to the next higher rupee as decided by the Minimum Wages Advisory Board.
This notification remains in force under the Code on Wages until a corresponding order under Section 7(2) of the Code supersedes it. Cities are classified into three areas (A, B, C) — see the area classification section below.
Think of VDA as the government’s way of ensuring that a worker’s minimum wage keeps pace with the cost of living. If prices go up — groceries, transport, fuel — the worker’s wage needs to go up too, or they are effectively earning less in real terms.
VDA is added on top of a worker’s Basic Rate to arrive at the total minimum wage. Total Minimum Wage = Basic Rate + VDA. The Basic Rate stays fixed between reviews. The VDA changes every six months based on how much prices have risen.
The VDA is the “variable” part — it varies with inflation. The word “dearness” is old-fashioned English for “cost of living.”
CPI is a number that measures how expensive everyday goods and services have become, compared to a fixed starting point (the “base year”). The government tracks the prices of a standard “basket” of goods that a typical industrial worker buys — food, clothing, housing, fuel, transport. Every month, these prices are checked. As they rise, the CPI number rises.
For minimum wage purposes, the government uses the CPI for Industrial Workers (CPI-IW), published by the Labour Bureau. This is not the same as general consumer inflation (CPI-Urban or CPI-Rural) — it specifically tracks the cost of living for factory and industrial workers.
When the government measures price changes over time, it needs a fixed reference point — called the Base Year. In the Base Year, the CPI index is set to exactly 100. Every subsequent reading tells you how much prices have changed as a percentage relative to that starting point.
CPI of 424.80 (Base 2016=100) means prices for a typical industrial worker have risen by approximately 324.80% since the Base Year of 2016. Put another way, what cost ₹100 in 2016 now costs approximately ₹424.80.
The government updates the Base Year periodically. The current series uses 2016 as the base year, replacing the earlier 2001-base series.
The cost of living varies significantly across India. It costs more to live in Mumbai or Delhi (Area A) than in a smaller city (Area B) or a rural/semi-urban area (Area C). To reflect this, minimum wages are set at three levels — higher in expensive cities, lower in cheaper areas.
Area A covers the major metros: Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kolkata, Ahmedabad, Pune, and a few satellite cities like Noida and Gurgaon.
Area B covers approximately 100 larger cities and urban agglomerations including Jaipur, Pune, Lucknow, Kochi, Surat, Patna, Chandigarh, and others listed in the official classification.
Area C is everything else — all towns, smaller cities and rural areas not specifically listed under A or B. It has the lowest minimum wage rates.
Applicable to employees engaged in agricultural operations across all scheduled areas. Rates vary by worker category and area classification.
| Category | Area A | Area B | Area C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unskilled | ₹528333 + 195 VDA | ₹483303 + 180 VDA | ₹478300 + 178 VDA |
| Semi-Skilled / Unskilled Supervisory | ₹578364 + 214 VDA | ₹530335 + 195 VDA | ₹488307 + 181 VDA |
| Skilled / Clerical | ₹627395 + 232 VDA | ₹578364 + 214 VDA | ₹529334 + 195 VDA |
| Highly Skilled | ₹694438 + 256 VDA | ₹645407 + 238 VDA | ₹578364 + 214 VDA |
Covers workers in Gypsum, Barytes, Bauxite, Manganese, China Clay, Kyanite, Copper, Clay, Magnesite, White Clay, Stone, Steatite, Ochre, Asbestos, Fire Clay, Chromite, Quartzite, Silica, Graphite, Felspar, Laterite, Dolomite, Red Oxide, Wolfram, Iron Ore, Granite, Rock Phosphate, Hematite, Marble, Calcite, Uranium, Mica, Lignite, Gravel, Slate and Magnetite Mines. Rates are split between above-ground and below-ground work.
| Category | Above Ground | Below Ground |
|---|---|---|
| Unskilled | ₹556350 + 206 VDA | ₹693437 + 256 VDA |
| Semi-Skilled / Unskilled Supervisory | ₹693437 + 256 VDA | ₹827523 + 304 VDA |
| Skilled / Clerical | ₹827523 + 304 VDA | ₹964610 + 354 VDA |
| Highly Skilled | ₹964610 + 354 VDA | ₹1,078683 + 395 VDA |
Covers construction/maintenance of roads and runways, building operations, and laying underground cables (electric, telecom, water, sewerage).
| Category | Area A | Area B | Area C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unskilled | ₹821523 + 304 VDA | ₹693437 + 256 VDA | ₹556350 + 206 VDA |
| Semi-Skilled / Unskilled Supervisory | ₹918579 + 339 VDA | ₹781494 + 287 VDA | ₹650410 + 240 VDA |
| Skilled / Clerical | ₹1,008637 + 371 VDA | ₹918579 + 339 VDA | ₹781494 + 287 VDA |
| Highly Skilled | ₹1,094693 + 401 VDA | ₹1,008637 + 371 VDA | ₹918579 + 339 VDA |
Covers: (i) Goods sheds and parcel offices of Railways; (ii) Goods-sheds, godowns, warehouses; (iii) Docks and ports; (iv) Passenger, goods and cargo at airports (international and domestic).
| Area | Basic Rate | VDA | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Area A — Major Metros | ₹523 | ₹304 | ₹827 |
| Area B — Large Cities | ₹437 | ₹256 | ₹693 |
| Area C — All Other Areas | ₹350 | ₹206 | ₹556 |
Covers employees in the employment of Sweeping and Cleaning (excluding manual scavenging, which is prohibited).
| Area | Basic Rate | VDA | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Area A | ₹523 | ₹304 | ₹827 |
| Area B | ₹437 | ₹256 | ₹693 |
| Area C | ₹350 | ₹206 | ₹556 |
Separate rates for security staff without arms and with arms. Armed guard rates are higher in all areas.
| Area | Basic Rate | VDA | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Area A | ₹637 | ₹371 | ₹1,008 |
| Area B | ₹579 | ₹339 | ₹918 |
| Area C | ₹494 | ₹287 | ₹781 |
| Area | Basic Rate | VDA | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Area A | ₹693 | ₹401 | ₹1,094 |
| Area B | ₹637 | ₹371 | ₹1,008 |
| Area C | ₹579 | ₹339 | ₹918 |
Piece rate wages for workers in Stone Mines. Rates vary by work type and stone size. Workers on minimum guaranteed time rate are entitled to time rate wages plus special allowance for unskilled above-ground workers.
| Work Type | Basic | VDA | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft Soil | ₹351 | ₹209 | ₹560 |
| Soft Soil with Rock | ₹531 | ₹310 | ₹841 |
| Rock | ₹703 | ₹410 | ₹1,113 |
| Removal & Stacking of Rejected Stones | ₹283 | ₹167 | ₹450 |
| Stone Size | Basic | VDA | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 to 1.5 inches | ₹2,171 | ₹1,243 | ₹3,414 |
| 1.5 to 3.0 inches | ₹1,857 | ₹1,063 | ₹2,920 |
| 3.0 to 5.0 inches | ₹1,088 | ₹627 | ₹1,715 |
| Above 5.0 inches | ₹893 | ₹517 | ₹1,410 |
Cities classified as per the notification dated 19 January 2017. Area C comprises all areas not listed below. Classification is unchanged from the previous revision.