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Employment Law Bangladesh 2026: Labour (amendment) Act, Employer Duties & Provident Fund

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 8 May 2026 · Updated when new SROs or gazette notifications are published

Employment law Bangladesh entered a new compliance era when the Labour (Amendment) Act 2026 received presidential assent and the Ministry of Labour and Employment followed up with SRO No. 53‑Law/2026, published in the Extraordinary Gazette on 16 February 2026. Together, these instruments lower registration thresholds to establishments employing as few as twenty workers, expand provident‑fund obligations, sharpen end‑of‑service benefit calculations, and tighten enforcement mechanisms. For multinational employers, garment‑sector sourcing companies, and domestic businesses alike, the changes demand immediate payroll, contractual, and registration action, making this the most significant overhaul of the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 since the major amendments of 2013 and 2018.

What this guide covers: This pillar article translates every material change into concrete employer duties, timelines, checklists, sample contract clauses, and cost‑impact estimates. It is written for HR directors, general counsel, in‑house legal teams, and multinational compliance officers who need to act now.

Immediate actions, do this week:

  • Audit headcount. Determine whether your establishment now meets the 20‑worker registration threshold.
  • Check registration status. File or update your establishment registration with the Department of Labour if newly in scope.
  • Review provident‑fund arrangements. Confirm whether your current scheme meets the 2026 statutory requirements or needs to be set up from scratch.
  • Recalculate end‑of‑service reserves. Update accrual methodologies and payroll ledgers to match the amended benefit formulas.
  • Amend employment contracts and handbooks. Insert updated clauses on fund contributions, leave, and severance.

What Changed, The Bangladesh Labour Amendment Act 2026 & Feb 2026 SROs

The Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 (Act No. 42 of 2006), as published on the official Laws of Bangladesh portal, is the country’s primary employment statute. It consolidates the law on hiring, working conditions, wages, trade‑union rights, and dispute resolution. Major amendments in 2013 and 2018 refined safety standards and trade‑union registration processes. The Labour (Amendment) Act 2026 continues that trajectory, while SRO No. 53‑Law/2026, gazetted on 16 February 2026 through the Department of Printing and Publications, amends the Bangladesh Labour Rules, 2015, to implement the Act’s operational mechanics.

The key changes fall into four categories:

  • Registration thresholds. Establishments employing twenty or more workers, calculated across all categories (permanent, temporary, casual, and contract), now require formal registration with the Chief Inspector of Factories and Establishments, replacing the previous variable thresholds that largely captured only large‑scale factories.
  • Provident fund obligations. The amendment introduces clearer statutory duties for employers to establish or expand provident‑fund schemes, specifying contribution structures, trust‑governance requirements, and reporting timelines.
  • End‑of‑service benefits. Calculation methods for gratuity and compensation on retrenchment, discharge, or retirement have been refined, accrual periods are standardised and minimum benefit floors are raised.
  • Enforcement and penalties. Inspection powers are broadened, penalty schedules are increased, and a shorter compliance‑cure period applies before prosecution can commence.

Timeline of Enactment & SRO Publication

Event Date Significance
Labour (Amendment) Act 2026 passed by Parliament January 2026 Statutory authority for all changes
Presidential assent received February 2026 Act enters the statute book
SRO No. 53‑Law/2026 gazetted (amending Labour Rules 2015) 16 February 2026 Operational rules take effect; employers must comply from this date
Transitional compliance window (industry expectation) 16 Feb – 16 Aug 2026 (6 months) Early indications suggest inspectors are allowing a reasonable compliance window, though this is not codified

Pre‑2026 vs. 2026, Comparison Table

Topic Pre‑2026 Rule 2026 Position & Employer Action Required
Registration threshold Large‑scale units only; variable by sector Establishments with 20+ workers must register, audit headcount and file with DOL
Provident fund Limited sectoral obligations; voluntary for many establishments Statutory PF obligations with defined contribution framework, set up trust or statutory account
End‑of‑service payments Existing severance rules; calculation disputes common Clarified accrual formula and minimum floors, recalculate reserves and update payroll
Inspection & penalties Moderate fine schedules; longer cure periods Higher fines, shorter cure window, broader inspector powers, prepare documentation proactively

Which Employers Are Now in Scope? Registration Threshold and Entity Types

One of the most operationally significant changes under the labour law amendment Bangladesh employers face is the lowered registration threshold. The Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 defines a “worker” broadly, any person, including apprentices, employed in any establishment for wages to do manual, technical, promotional, or clerical work. The 2026 amendment and SRO No. 53‑Law/2026 set the threshold at twenty workers across all slab categories.

This captures entities that previously operated below regulatory radar:

  • Factories (manufacturing, processing, assembly), now covered at 20+ workers, down from higher previous thresholds.
  • Commercial establishments (offices, retail, hospitality, logistics), newly in scope in many cases.
  • IT and service-sector offices, previously often unregistered; the 20‑worker slab now captures mid‑size tech and BPO operations.
  • EPZ employers, remain governed primarily by the Bangladesh EPZ Labour Act, 2019, but should monitor whether SRO cross‑references apply.

How to Calculate Worker Headcount

The headcount for registration threshold purposes includes all individuals meeting the Act’s definition of “worker.” Employers should follow these steps:

  • Step 1: Count every person on the payroll, permanent, probationary, temporary, casual, or badli (substitute).
  • Step 2: Add contract workers physically present at the establishment, even if employed through a contractor.
  • Step 3: Add apprentices.
  • Step 4: Exclude persons in purely managerial or administrative capacities who fall outside the statutory definition of “worker.”
  • Step 5: Compare the total against the 20‑worker threshold. If the count reaches twenty on any day during the preceding twelve months, registration is triggered.
Entity Type Threshold Before 2026 Threshold After 2026
Factory Variable / larger units 20+ workers
Commercial establishment Often unregistered 20+ workers
IT / BPO office Generally not captured 20+ workers
EPZ unit EPZ Labour Act, 2019 governs Primary regime unchanged; monitor SRO cross‑references

Employer Registration & Compliance Process, Step‑by‑Step

Employer compliance Bangladesh 2026 begins with registration. Establishments newly captured by the 20‑worker threshold must apply to the Chief Inspector of Factories and Establishments using the prescribed forms under the Bangladesh Labour Rules, 2015 (as amended by SRO No. 53‑Law/2026). The process follows a defined sequence that HR teams can project‑manage over roughly three months.

Practical Checklist for HR

  • Gather documents: trade licence, TIN certificate, memorandum/articles of association, floor plan, list of workers with designations, proof of provident‑fund arrangement, and health‑and‑safety compliance records.
  • Complete prescribed forms: registration application as specified in the amended Rules, ensure the form version matches the 2026 SRO requirements.
  • Designate an internal owner: appoint the Head of HR or Company Secretary as the registration lead, with sign‑off authority.
  • Submit to the local Inspector’s office: file electronically where available; retain stamped acknowledgement.
  • Prepare for inspection: inspectors may visit to verify headcount, workplace conditions, and documentary compliance before issuing the registration certificate.
  • Display registration certificate: once received, display in a conspicuous place at the establishment as required by the Act.

Example Timeline for a 3‑Month Compliance Project

Month Actions Owner
Month 1 Headcount audit; gap analysis; document collection; internal approvals HR Lead / Legal
Month 2 Complete forms; establish or update provident‑fund trust; submit registration application HR Lead / Finance
Month 3 Respond to inspector queries; obtain certificate; update handbooks and contracts; train line managers HR / Compliance

Non‑registration carries real risk. The amended penalty schedule increases fines for operating an unregistered establishment, and inspectors are empowered to issue compliance orders with shorter cure periods. Industry observers expect enforcement to intensify, particularly in the garment and logistics sectors where international buyer audits already scrutinise registration status.

Provident Fund & End‑of‑Service Obligations Under Employment Law Bangladesh

The provident fund obligations Bangladesh employers must now meet represent one of the most consequential payroll changes in years. Under the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006, as modified by the 2026 amendment and the implementing SRO, employers meeting the registration threshold are required to establish a provident‑fund scheme for eligible workers, replacing the previous regime where such obligations were limited to specific sectors or left largely to voluntary adoption.

Core Requirements

  • Who must set up a fund: Every registered establishment with twenty or more workers.
  • Worker eligibility: Workers who have completed one year of continuous service become eligible for provident‑fund membership.
  • Contribution structure: Both employer and worker contribute to the fund. The Act and SRO establish minimum contribution rates as a percentage of basic wages; the exact rates should be confirmed against the gazetted SRO text, as further notification by the government may adjust them.
  • Fund vehicle: Employers may establish a trust‑based provident fund governed by a board of trustees (with worker representation) or utilise a statutory account under government oversight. Trust deeds must be registered, and annual audited accounts submitted to the prescribed authority.
  • Timing of contributions: Employer contributions must be deposited into the fund account within a prescribed number of days from each pay period, late payments attract penalty interest.
  • Reporting: Annual returns to the Chief Inspector’s office showing total contributions, withdrawals, and fund balance are mandatory.

Payroll Implementation Checklist

Action Owner Due Date Guidance
Identify eligible workers (1+ year of service) HR / Payroll Within 30 days of SRO effective date
Determine contribution rates from SRO text Legal / Finance Immediate
Select fund vehicle (trust vs. statutory account) CFO / Legal Within 60 days
Draft and register trust deed (if trust route) Legal Within 90 days
Configure payroll system for deductions and employer contributions Payroll / IT Before first contribution due date
Issue PF enrolment notices to eligible workers HR Within 30 days of fund establishment
Submit first annual return Finance / Legal Within 12 months of fund establishment

Sample Clause, Employment Contract / Provident Fund Enrolment

Note: This is a template only. Adapt it to your specific business circumstances and seek qualified legal advice before use.

“The Employee shall, upon completion of one (1) year of continuous service, become a member of the Establishment’s Provident Fund established in accordance with the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 (as amended) and SRO No. 53‑Law/2026. The Employer and the Employee shall each contribute [X]% of the Employee’s basic wages per month to the Fund. Contributions shall be deducted from the Employee’s wages and, together with the Employer’s matching contribution, deposited into the Fund account within [Y] days of each pay date. Membership, withdrawal, and forfeiture conditions are governed by the Fund’s Trust Deed and the prevailing statutory provisions.”

Special Notes for EPZs and Collective Agreements

Employers operating within Export Processing Zones remain primarily governed by the Bangladesh EPZ Labour Act, 2019. However, where a collective bargaining agreement or bilateral trade accord references the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006, the 2026 amendments may have indirect impact on benefit structures. EPZ employers should review their existing worker‑welfare fund arrangements against the new provident‑fund standards to ensure comparability, particularly where international buyer codes of conduct require equivalence with national law.

End‑of‑service benefits Bangladesh employers owe upon retrenchment, discharge, or retirement are also clarified. The amendment standardises the accrual period and raises minimum benefit floors. Employers should recalculate reserves using the updated formula and ensure that payroll systems reflect the new methodology from the SRO effective date.

Wages, Hours, Leave, and Other Contractual Impacts

Beyond registration and provident‑fund compliance, the labour law amendment Bangladesh introduced touches several aspects of day‑to‑day employment management.

Minimum Wage

The Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 empowers the Minimum Wages Board to set sector‑specific minimum wages. While the 2026 amendment itself does not reset minimum‑wage figures, the lowered registration threshold means that more establishments now fall under formal inspection, and therefore under active enforcement of whatever minimum‑wage gazette is in force. Employers should confirm compliance with the latest Minimum Wages Board declarations for their sector.

Working Hours and Overtime

Standard working hours under the Act remain at eight hours per day and forty‑eight hours per week. Overtime can extend the day to ten hours, with a weekly ceiling of sixty hours, subject to overtime pay at twice the ordinary rate. The 2026 SRO reinforces recordkeeping obligations, employers must maintain daily attendance registers and overtime logs available for inspector review.

Leave Entitlements

Annual leave, casual leave, sick leave, and festival holidays continue under existing provisions. Maternity benefit remains at sixteen weeks for eligible workers. The amendment tightens documentation requirements: employers must issue leave‑balance statements quarterly and retain records for the prescribed statutory period.

Contract Amendment Checklist

  • Update wage‑payment clauses to reference the current minimum‑wage gazette.
  • Insert or update provident‑fund enrolment clauses.
  • Revise overtime‑payment wording to match the recordkeeping standards in the amended Rules.
  • Add quarterly leave‑balance statement obligations to HR policy manuals.
  • Review maternity‑benefit clauses for alignment with the 16‑week entitlement.

Dispute Resolution, Inspections, and Enforcement Risks

Employment law Bangladesh compliance is only as strong as the enforcement framework behind it. The 2026 amendments strengthen this framework in several ways that employers should prepare for proactively.

Labour Courts and the Labour Appellate Tribunal continue to exercise jurisdiction over industrial disputes, unfair labour practices, and claims arising from the Act. The amendment does not restructure these bodies, but it does shorten certain limitation periods for filing complaints and provides inspectors with expanded authority to issue compliance notices with binding remedial timelines.

Practical Steps When Facing a Labour Inspection or Complaint

  • Designate an inspection liaison. Assign a senior HR or compliance officer to receive and respond to inspector visits.
  • Maintain a ready‑access compliance file. This should include the registration certificate, trade licence, worker register, attendance and overtime logs, provident‑fund trust deed and latest return, leave records, and wage‑payment receipts.
  • Respond within the cure period. If the inspector issues a compliance order, respond within the shortened statutory cure period. Document all remedial steps taken and retain proof of implementation.
  • Engage legal counsel early. If a worker complaint escalates to the Labour Court, early engagement with experienced Bangladesh labour‑law counsel is critical. The limitation period for employer responses is tight under the amended rules.
  • Keep written records of every communication. All exchanges with inspectors, workers, and trade unions should be documented and date‑stamped.

Penalties for non‑compliance have increased under the 2026 amendments. While the exact fine schedules are set out in the gazetted SRO text, the likely practical effect will be that previously tolerated paperwork lapses now attract meaningful financial penalties, a shift that industry observers expect will be felt most acutely in mid‑size establishments encountering the formal inspection regime for the first time.

Practical Compliance Roadmap & Cost Impact

For most employers, achieving full employer compliance Bangladesh 2026 will require a dedicated project with identifiable resource commitments. The table below provides an indicative roadmap.

Task Estimated Time Key Cost Drivers
Headcount audit and gap analysis 1–2 weeks Internal HR hours; external audit if multi‑site
Registration filing 2–4 weeks (including inspector response) Filing fees; document preparation
Provident‑fund trust setup 4–8 weeks Legal fees (trust deed); trustee appointment; bank account
Payroll system reconfiguration 2–4 weeks Payroll vendor uplift; IT configuration; testing
Contract and handbook amendments 2–3 weeks Legal drafting; employee communication
Training for line managers 1 week Internal or external trainer; materials

The return on this investment is straightforward: avoiding escalated fines, prosecution risk, and supply‑chain reputational damage. For garment‑sector exporters, non‑compliance findings during buyer social audits can result in order cancellations that dwarf the cost of a three‑month compliance project.

Templates & Wording

Employers seeking ready‑to‑adapt documentation can use the sample clauses provided in this guide as a starting point. All templates should be reviewed by qualified legal counsel before implementation, as specific business circumstances, collective agreements, and sector regulations may require adjustment.

Sample Severance / End‑of‑Service Clause

Note: Template only, adapt to your business and seek legal advice.

“Upon termination of employment by retrenchment, discharge, or retirement, the Employee shall be entitled to end‑of‑service benefits calculated in accordance with Sections [relevant section numbers] of the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006 (as amended in 2026). The benefit shall be computed at the rate of [X] days’ wages for each completed year of service, using the Employee’s last‑drawn basic wages as the calculation base. Payment shall be made within [Y] working days of the effective date of termination.”

A comprehensive downloadable compliance checklist and sample contract clauses pack is planned as a companion resource to this guide. Readers can consult the Bangladesh Labour (Amendment) Act 2026, Employers Guide for additional context on the amendments, or browse the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with Bangladesh employment‑law specialists.

Conclusion, Employment Law Bangladesh Demands Immediate Employer Action

The Bangladesh Labour (Amendment) Act 2026 and SRO No. 53‑Law/2026 represent a structural shift in employment law Bangladesh compliance. The combination of lowered registration thresholds, statutory provident‑fund obligations, refined end‑of‑service calculations, and tighter enforcement creates a clear imperative for every employer operating in or sourcing from Bangladesh to act now. The practical steps are well‑defined: audit headcount, register or update your registration, establish or expand your provident fund, recalculate benefit reserves, and amend contracts and handbooks.

Employers who move promptly will avoid penalties, satisfy buyer audit requirements, and build stronger worker relations. Those who delay face escalating fines, inspection risk, and supply‑chain reputational exposure. For tailored compliance audits, contract drafting, and registration assistance, employers are encouraged to connect with qualified Bangladesh employment‑law counsel through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Laws of Bangladesh, Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006
  2. Department of Printing & Publications, Extraordinary Gazette (SRO No. 53‑Law/2026, 16 February 2026)
  3. Bangladesh Labour Rules, 2015 (BEF English copy)
  4. Better Work, Bangladesh Labour Act 2006 Overview
  5. Ministry of Labour / Department of Labour (DOL)
  6. MCCI, Bangladesh Labour Act 2006 Consolidated English Text
  7. The Daily Star, A Closer Look at Bangladesh’s New Labour Law: Gains and Gaps
  8. Multiplier, Employment Laws in Bangladesh

FAQs

What is the Labour (Amendment) Act 2026 and when did it take effect?
The Labour (Amendment) Act 2026 is the latest amendment to the Bangladesh Labour Act, 2006. It was passed by Parliament in January 2026 and received presidential assent in February 2026. The implementing rules, SRO No. 53‑Law/2026, were published in the Extraordinary Gazette by the Department of Printing and Publications on 16 February 2026, and took effect from that date.
Any establishment (factory, commercial office, IT or BPO centre, or other workplace) employing twenty or more workers must register with the Chief Inspector of Factories and Establishments. “Workers” includes permanent, temporary, casual, contract, and apprentice staff. Establishments operating within Export Processing Zones are governed primarily by the EPZ Labour Act, 2019.
Registered establishments with twenty or more workers are required to establish a provident‑fund scheme. Workers become eligible for membership after completing one year of continuous service. The fund may be structured as a trust or as a statutory account, with both employer and worker contributions at rates specified in the SRO. Employers should review the gazetted text for precise contribution percentages, as these may be updated by government notification.
The 2026 amendment standardises the accrual formula: eligible workers receive a prescribed number of days’ wages for each completed year of service, calculated on the last‑drawn basic wage. The minimum benefit floor has been raised. Employers should recalculate reserves against the amended formula and ensure their payroll systems reflect the updated methodology from 16 February 2026.
Penalty schedules have been increased under the 2026 amendments. Operating an unregistered establishment or failing to deposit provident‑fund contributions within the prescribed time attracts monetary fines that have risen materially from pre‑2026 levels. Repeated non‑compliance may lead to prosecution. Inspectors now operate with shorter cure periods, meaning that employers have less time to remedy deficiencies before enforcement action commences.

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Employment Law Bangladesh 2026: Labour (amendment) Act, Employer Duties & Provident Fund

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