Our Expert in Bangladesh
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The Bangladesh Labour (Amendment) Act, gazetted via SRO on 16 February 2026, represents the most consequential overhaul of the country’s employment framework since the original Bangladesh Labour Act 2006 was enacted two decades ago. For international apparel brands sourcing from Bangladesh’s ready-made garment (RMG) sector, and for the factories that supply them, the amendments impose immediate obligations across trade-union registration, maternity and festival leave, the prohibition on worker blacklisting, and employer provident-fund contributions. Compliance officers, HR directors, and sourcing managers who delay action risk audit failures, contract disputes, and reputational exposure in a supply chain that accounts for more than 80 per cent of Bangladesh’s export earnings.
This guide distils the amendment into a prioritised, supplier-facing employer compliance checklist for Bangladesh, organised around a 30/60/90-day action plan that procurement and legal teams can implement now.
Before diving into the section-by-section analysis, every supplier and buyer reading this should initiate three workstreams immediately:
The amendment touches virtually every chapter of the original Bangladesh Labour Act 2006. The table below maps each major legal change to its practical impact and the immediate supplier action required. Industry observers expect that buyer audit programmes, particularly those run by European and North American brands, will begin incorporating these requirements into supplier scorecards within the first quarter of enforcement.
| Legal Change | Who It Affects | Immediate Supplier Action (0–30 Days) |
|---|---|---|
| Lowered trade-union registration threshold, unions may now be registered with a reduced minimum membership percentage at the establishment level | All factories with 300+ workers; HR departments | Verify existing union membership lists against new threshold; update factory register; brief line managers on lawful conduct during union formation |
| Maternity leave extended, qualifying female workers entitled to enhanced paid maternity leave | Female workers; payroll & benefits teams | Adjust leave balances in HRIS; notify payroll vendor; recalculate projected benefit liability for current fiscal year |
| Festival leave entitlements formalised and expanded | All workers; shift-scheduling teams | Revise annual leave calendar; update roster software; issue revised leave policy to workers |
| Prohibition on blacklisting of workers who participate in lawful union activity or raise grievances | All employers; HR & recruitment | Cease any blacklist practice immediately; update disciplinary policy; preserve existing records as audit evidence |
| Employer registration and enhanced provident-fund contribution obligations | Employers with qualifying workforce sizes; finance teams | Confirm registration status with the relevant authority; recalculate contribution rates; update payroll deductions |
| Strengthened collective-bargaining agent (CBA) nomination and recognition procedures | Factories with registered unions; industrial-relations teams | Review existing CBA agreements; prepare for potential renegotiation; document all bargaining interactions |
Each of these changes carries enforcement consequences that are examined in detail below. For a condensed overview of the original statute, the Laws of Bangladesh portal maintains the full text of the Bangladesh Labour Act 2006, which remains the baseline against which all amendments are measured.
Compliance with the Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act is not a single event but a phased programme. The plan below assigns clear ownership across HR, procurement, legal, and finance functions. Each bucket reflects the practical lead-times required for system changes, contract negotiations, and worker communications in the RMG compliance landscape in Bangladesh.
Payroll is the area where non-compliance becomes visible fastest, and where penalties accrue on a per-worker, per-month basis. The labour amendment 2026 modifies several entitlements that feed directly into payroll calculations.
| Entitlement | Position Under the 2006 Act | Position Under the 2026 Amendment |
|---|---|---|
| Maternity leave (paid) | 16 weeks (8 weeks pre-delivery, 8 weeks post-delivery) | Enhanced duration, qualifying female workers receive extended paid maternity leave in Bangladesh as specified by the gazette SRO |
| Festival leave | 11 days per year (at employer’s discretion in scheduling) | Expanded and formalised, workers entitled to additional paid festival leave days with reduced employer discretion over scheduling |
| Provident-fund employer contribution | Employer matches worker contribution at prescribed rate | Contribution obligations enhanced; registration requirements tightened for qualifying employers |
Action steps:
Every buyer-supplier agreement and individual employment contract should be reviewed for consistency with the Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act. The following clauses are now essential in any new or renewed supplier contract:
For a broader overview of employer duties including provident-fund obligations under the amendment, readers can consult the Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act, Employers Guide published on this site.
The prohibition on blacklisting is one of the most operationally sensitive provisions in the amendment. It prohibits employers from maintaining or sharing lists that penalise workers for participating in lawful union activity, filing grievances, or exercising rights under the Act. UNI Global Union has described this provision as a “game changer for worker rights” that directly addresses longstanding RMG sector concerns.
Practical steps for HR teams:
The labour amendment 2026 materially lowers the barriers to trade-union registration in Bangladesh. Under the Bangladesh Labour Act 2006, the minimum membership threshold for registering a union at the establishment level required a specific percentage of the total workforce, a figure that union advocates argued was prohibitively high in large factories. The amendment reduces this threshold, making it easier for workers in large RMG facilities to form and register unions.
In parallel, the amendment strengthens the procedures for nominating a collective-bargaining agent (CBA). Where previously the process could be stalled by employer procedural objections, the revised framework sets clearer timelines for the Director of Labour to process applications and resolve disputes over bargaining-agent recognition. The Bangladesh Employers’ Federation (BEF) has published guidance on these changes, and industry observers expect that union formation activity will increase in factories with 300 or more workers in the coming 12 months.
Recommended SOP for factory HR when a union approaches:
For buyers, the practical effect of these changes is that supplier scorecards should add a “freedom of association” module covering trade-union registration in Bangladesh and collective bargaining Bangladesh indicators. Early indications suggest that brands sourcing from Bangladesh will begin requesting union-status declarations as a standard element of supplier qualification from mid-2026.
International buyers conduct social-compliance audits with increasing frequency, and the labour amendment 2026 introduces new categories of evidence that auditors will request. The table below provides a practical audit-evidence checklist, mapping each document type to the reason auditors seek it and the recommended storage method.
| Document / Evidence | Why Auditors Request It | Recommended Storage |
|---|---|---|
| Updated payroll registers (showing revised maternity leave, festival leave, provident-fund deductions) | To verify compliance with enhanced entitlements under the amendment | Digital payroll system with monthly PDF exports; retain for minimum 5 years |
| Revised employee handbook / leave policy (Bangla and English) | To confirm policy alignment with statutory changes | HR shared drive and physical notice boards; version-controlled with date stamps |
| Anti-blacklisting policy and training records | To verify that the prohibition on blacklisting has been operationalised | HR compliance folder; training attendance sheets signed by participants |
| Union correspondence log (registration acknowledgements, CBA meeting minutes) | To assess freedom-of-association compliance | Dedicated industrial-relations file; access restricted to HR manager and legal counsel |
| Disciplinary records and investigation files | To rule out retaliatory action against union members or grievance filers | Individual employee files with restricted access; redact personal data as required |
| Provident-fund registration certificate and contribution receipts | To confirm employer registration and correct contribution rates | Finance department; scanned copies in audit-ready folder |
| Updated supplier contracts containing compliance covenant, no-blacklist warranty, and audit-cooperation clause | To verify contractual alignment between buyer expectations and supplier obligations | Legal department contract repository; shared with buyer compliance team upon request |
The SICIP (Skills for Industry Competitiveness and Innovation Program) has published social and environmental management references that align with the evidence categories above and can serve as supplementary guidance for suppliers building their audit packs. Suppliers that organise their evidence proactively, rather than scrambling to assemble it after an audit is announced, consistently score higher in buyer evaluations and face fewer corrective-action requests.
The Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act strengthens the enforcement powers of the Department of Inspection for Factories and Establishments (DIFE) and the Director of Labour. Penalties for non-compliance have been recalibrated, and industry commentary from the Textile Today network and the BEF indicates that enforcement activity is expected to intensify in the RMG sector throughout 2026.
| Violation Type | Likely Enforcement Action | Operational Impact | Recommended Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Failure to pay enhanced maternity or festival leave | DIFE inspection; monetary penalty per worker per instance | Payroll back-payments; buyer audit failure; potential order suspension | Immediate payroll update; retain calculation worksheets as evidence of good faith |
| Maintaining or using a worker blacklist | Director of Labour investigation; potential criminal liability for responsible officers | Buyer contract termination; media exposure; loss of export orders | Suspend all blacklist practices; implement anti-blacklisting policy; conduct internal investigation |
| Obstructing trade-union registration or CBA process | Director of Labour intervention; unfair-labour-practice finding | Industrial unrest; buyer reputational risk; potential withdrawal of preferential trade benefits | Train HR and management on lawful conduct; engage industrial-relations counsel early |
| Non-compliance with provident-fund registration or contribution requirements | Regulatory penalty; employer liability for arrears plus interest | Financial exposure; audit non-conformance | Confirm registration; reconcile contributions monthly; retain receipts |
The likely practical effect of these enhanced penalties will be a shift in enforcement culture from complaint-driven to proactive inspection. Suppliers should prepare an incident-response protocol that assigns a senior manager as the compliance liaison for any DIFE inspection, and should retain employment counsel on standby to advise in real time.
The following templates are starting points. Each should be reviewed and adapted by qualified legal counsel before use in contracts or workplace communications.
The Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act is not simply a regulatory update, it is a recalibration of the employment relationship in the world’s second-largest garment-exporting country. Suppliers who treat the 30/60/90-day action plan in this guide as a minimum standard, rather than an aspiration, will find themselves better positioned for buyer audits, more resilient to enforcement scrutiny, and more attractive to the international brands that are increasingly making compliance a prerequisite for order placement. The cost of inaction, payroll penalties, contract termination, and reputational damage, far exceeds the investment required to update policies, retrain staff, and redraft contracts now.
For bespoke compliance support, contract drafting, or audit-readiness training tailored to your supply chain, qualified employment counsel with Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act expertise can be engaged through the Global Law Experts network.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ashraful Hadi at Alliance Laws, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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