Across global markets, HR transformation often stalls where good strategy meets messy execution.
In India in 2026, that friction is tangible. Not only because technology stacks are dated, but because sweeping regulatory change has made compliance an operational and technological headache for many organisations.
What’s changing on the ground
India’s new four consolidated labour codes — covering wages, social security, industrial relations, and occupational safety — officially took effect from 21 November 2025, replacing 29 older central laws in what has been described as the most significant reform of the country’s labour legislation in decades.
While the codes are set centrally, the states are responsible for drafting and enforcing their own rules, creating a patchwork of interpretations and timelines. This means HR teams can no longer implement a single compliance playbook nationwide. They must track multiple state-specific nuances and configure systems accordingly, a non-trivial task in an already fragmented tech landscape.
At the same time, India’s HR tech landscape is still uneven, and many are still ‘playing catch-up’ rather than leading with strategic integration.
What this is costing organisations
The cost implications of this regulatory and operational complexity are real and measurable. A recent business survey found that, as companies align compensation and payroll with the new codes, wage bills could rise by 5–15% in the near term, particularly for firms with large workforces or complex pay structures.
This is not just “more paperwork.” Redefining elements of pay and benefits, such as how wages are calculated for provident fund or gratuity purposes, or how contract workers are classified, has direct downstream effects on HR systems and reports. Legacy HR platforms, spreadsheets, and point solutions struggle to adapt to these shifts, leading to manual workarounds that slow processes and increase error risk.
The result: CFOs and HR leaders are pushing harder to measure HR software ROI, not just in efficiency gains but in risk reduction, audit readiness, and the ability to pivot quickly to new compliance requirements.
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Where technology actually helps
Against this backdrop, some practical patterns are emerging:
Stabilise core HR systems: Organisations prioritise human capital management (HCM) and payroll platforms that can handle rule variance, statutory reporting, and audit trails. Next-gen HR technology is no longer optional. It’s table stakes for compliance continuity.
Automate operational work: Workflow engines that reduce manual approvals, onboarding bottlenecks, and routine HR cases help show quick, credible ROI and free up HR teams to focus on analysis and planning.
Clean data and analytics: HR analytics tools that tie data across the workforce — from hiring to attrition — create clearer visibility into costs and performance, which in turn improves decision-making.
Looking ahead, the pivot for many Indian organisations will be to move beyond tactical fixes to integrated HR platforms that reduce compliance risk, lower total operating cost, and surface measurable value. For payroll leaders especially, the challenges of the new wage and payment rules will justify a deeper look at purpose-built solutions — a topic we explore in our payroll-focused article.