Picture this: A talented software developer on your team announces she’s pregnant. Instead of quietly worrying about career implications, she confidently plans for 26 weeks of paid leave, knowing her job is protected and she’ll return to the same position and salary. She even discusses working from home for part of her leave and asks about the nursing room facilities.
This isn’t happening in some Scandinavian country with legendary worker benefits. This is happening right now in Mumbai offices, thanks to maternity benefit provisions under the New Labour Codes that came into effect from November 2025.
For employers—whether you’re running a startup in Bandra, managing a manufacturing unit in Thane, operating a retail chain across Mumbai, or heading HR for a corporate office in BKC—understanding maternity benefits isn’t optional anymore. The provisions are comprehensive, the penalties for non-compliance are severe, and more importantly, how you handle maternity benefits directly impacts your ability to attract and retain talented women employees.
This comprehensive guide walks you through everything you need to know about maternity benefits under the Code on Social Security, 2020.
The Code on Social Security, 2020 consolidates and strengthens maternity benefit provisions that were previously scattered across the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 and ESI Act, 1948. While it maintains most of the landmark 2017 amendments that increased maternity leave from 12 to 26 weeks, it also introduces important new provisions and clarifications.
Core principle: Every woman employee is entitled to maternity benefits regardless of the number of children she has. The duration varies, but the entitlement exists for all.
Coverage: The provisions apply to all establishments employing 10 or more persons across India, including factories, mines, plantations, shops, establishments, and even work-from-home arrangements.
Key definition change: "Wages" for calculating maternity benefits now follows the standardized definition under the codes—meaning with the new 50% basic salary rule, maternity benefit amounts have effectively increased for many employees.
Let's break down exactly who gets how much leave under the new code.
For First and Second Child: 26 Weeks
Women employees having their first or second child are entitled to 26 weeks of paid maternity leave. This is among the most generous maternity leave provisions globally—more than the United States (no federal mandate), United Kingdom (39 weeks but only partially paid), and comparable to countries like Canada and Sweden.
How the 26 weeks can be distributed:
Practical example: If a woman's expected delivery date is June 15, she can start her leave as early as April 20 (8 weeks before) and continue until approximately December 20 (18 weeks after delivery), totaling 26 weeks.
Flexibility: The codes allow the woman to choose when to commence pre-delivery leave (she doesn't have to take the full 8 weeks before if she doesn't want to). However, she must not work for at least 6 weeks immediately following delivery—this is mandatory for health reasons.
For Third Child Onwards: 12 Weeks
This is where it gets specific. Women who already have two or more surviving children at the time of delivery are entitled to 12 weeks of maternity benefit.
The distribution:
Why the difference? The policy rationale is to encourage smaller families while still providing essential maternity protection for all women regardless of family size.
"Surviving children" clarification: This refers to living children. If a woman had two children but one is deceased, she still qualifies for 26 weeks for the next pregnancy.
The Code on Social Security introduced progressive provisions for modern family formation methods.
Commissioning mothers (surrogacy): Women who use a surrogate to have a child are entitled to 12 weeks of paid leave from the date the child is handed over to them.
Adoptive mothers: Women who legally adopt a child below 3 months of age get 12 weeks of paid leave from the date of adoption.
Why this matters: This recognizes that bonding time and adjustment period are crucial regardless of biological birth. A mother adopting an infant or receiving a child via surrogacy needs time to establish routines, manage medical appointments, and adjust just as a biological mother does.
Documentation required: Legal adoption papers or surrogacy agreement and documentation of child handover.
Women who suffer miscarriage or undergo medical termination of pregnancy are entitled to leave with full wages for up to 6 weeks immediately following the incident.
No questions asked: Employers cannot demand detailed medical explanations beyond the medical certificate confirming miscarriage or termination. Sensitivity is crucial in these situations.
Multiple miscarriages: If a woman experiences multiple miscarriages in a year, she's entitled to 6 weeks leave for each instance.
Tubectomy operation: Women undergoing tubectomy (sterilization) are entitled to 2 weeks of leave with wages.
If pregnancy, delivery, miscarriage, or medical termination results in illness certified by a medical practitioner, additional leave of up to one month with wages may be granted.
Documentation: Requires proper medical certification from a registered medical practitioner specifying the illness and recommended rest period.
Calculating Maternity Benefit Amount: What Women Actually Get Paid
Maternity leave isn't unpaid leave—it's paid at the woman's full wages. But what exactly are "wages" for this calculation?
Wage Calculation Formula
The maternity benefit is calculated based on the average daily wage of the woman concerned.
Step 1: Take the wages earned in the 3 calendar months immediately preceding the month in which she gives notice of pregnancy.
Step 2: Divide the total wages by the number of days she actually worked during those 3 months.
Step 3: This gives the average daily wage, which is paid for each day of maternity leave.
Practical example:
An employee gives maternity leave notice in March. Her salary for December, January, February:
Total wages: ₹1,35,000 Total days worked: 60 days Average daily wage: ₹1,35,000 ÷ 60 = ₹2,250
If she takes 26 weeks (182 days) of leave: ₹2,250 × 182 = ₹4,09,500 total maternity benefit.
Impact of 50% Basic Rule
With the new requirement that basic salary must be at least 50% of CTC, maternity benefit amounts have effectively increased for many employees because:
Example comparison:
Eligibility Criteria: Who Qualifies for Maternity Benefits
Not every woman employee automatically qualifies. There are specific eligibility conditions.
The 80-Day Rule
A woman is entitled to maternity benefit only if she has actually worked in the establishment for at least 80 days in the 12 months immediately preceding the date of her expected delivery.
Actual working days count: These are days she physically worked, not calendar days. If she worked 3 days a week for 6 months, that's approximately 72 days—she doesn't qualify.
12-month calculation: Count backward from expected delivery date, not from leave application date.
Continuous service not required: The 80 days don't need to be continuous. Gaps are fine as long as total worked days in the 12-month period equal or exceed 80.
Multiple employers: If a woman worked for 50 days with Employer A and then 40 days with Employer B within the 12-month period, Employer B isn't liable because she worked only 40 days with them. However, ethical employers often still provide benefits.
Employment Type Doesn't Matter
The codes clarify that maternity benefits apply regardless of employment type:
Common mistake: Some Mumbai employers think probationers aren't entitled to maternity benefits. This is wrong. If a probationer meets the 80-day requirement, she qualifies.
Notice Requirements
To avail maternity benefit, a woman must give notice to the employer:
Ideal timing: At least 6 weeks before the expected delivery date, though earlier notice is appreciated for planning.
Medical certificate: The notice should be accompanied by a medical certificate from a registered medical practitioner stating the expected delivery date.
Payment Timeline: When Employers Must Pay
This is crucial for cashflow planning and compliance.
Maternity benefit must be paid in advance or during the leave period—not after the woman returns to work.
Two acceptable approaches:
Option 1 - Advance lump sum: Pay the entire maternity benefit amount at the start of leave or in two installments (half at start, half mid-leave).
Option 2 - Continue regular salary cycle: Continue paying regular monthly salary during the maternity leave period.
Most Mumbai companies prefer Option 2—continuing monthly salary—because:
Statutory Deductions Continue
Even during maternity leave, statutory deductions continue:
The woman is on paid leave, not unpaid leave, so all normal salary components and deductions apply.
Under the new codes, delayed payment of maternity benefits attracts:
This is one of the most progressive provisions introduced in recent amendments and retained in the new codes.
How It Works
After the mandatory post-delivery rest period (minimum 6 weeks), a woman employee may request to work from home for the remaining period of maternity leave, subject to:
Example scenario: A content writer takes 8 weeks pre-delivery leave and delivers on June 15. After 6 weeks mandatory post-delivery rest (till July 27), she requests to work from home starting August 1 for the remaining 12 weeks of her 26-week leave.
If her work can be done remotely (writing, editing, planning), the employer should consider approving this arrangement.
What "Work From Home" Means
This isn't full-time intensive work. The arrangement should be flexible:
Documentation required:
Benefits for Both Sides
For employees:
For employers:
Employers can refuse work-from-home requests if:
Important: Blanket policies prohibiting work-from-home during maternity leave are questionable under the codes. Each request should be evaluated individually.
Nursing Breaks: The Often-Forgotten Provision
Once a woman returns from maternity leave, her entitlements don't end.
Two Nursing Breaks Daily
Every woman employee is entitled to two breaks of prescribed duration (typically 15-30 minutes each, varies by state rules) for nursing the child until the child attains 15 months of age.
Key provisions:
Practical Implementation
Option 1 - Designated nursing room: Provide a private, comfortable room where women can nurse or express milk. This should have:
Option 2 - Flexible timing: Allow women to come late/leave early by 30-60 minutes daily to accommodate nursing at home.
Option 3 - Extended lunch breaks: Permit longer lunch breaks so women can go home to nurse (if living nearby).
Nursing Room vs. Creche Facility
Don't confuse nursing breaks with creche requirements:
Creche Facilities: Mandatory for 50+ Employee Establishments
If your Mumbai establishment employs 50 or more people, you must provide creche facilities.
The creche must:
Creche Access Rights
Women employees must be allowed at least four visits daily to the creche, including the nursing break intervals.
Compliance Options
Option 1 - In-house creche: Set up and maintain your own creche facility within or near your premises.
Option 2 - Common facility creche: Join with other establishments in the building/area to run a shared creche.
Option 3 - Third-party creche: Contract with professional creche service providers who set up and manage the facility.
Cost considerations: Running a compliant creche costs approximately ₹50,000-₹2,00,000 monthly depending on size and location in Mumbai. For many companies, Option 3 (outsourcing to specialists) is most cost-effective.
Right to Rejoin at Same Position
After maternity leave, the woman has the right to rejoin:
Prohibited actions:
Notice Period Cannot Include Maternity Leave
If you serve termination notice to a woman whose notice period overlaps with maternity leave, the maternity leave doesn't count toward notice period.
Example: You give 3 months notice on June 1. She goes on maternity leave from July 15 to December 15 (22 weeks). The 3-month notice period cannot count those 22 weeks—it extends beyond her maternity leave.
Medical Bonus: Additional Benefit
If your establishment doesn't have ESIC coverage, you must pay a medical bonus to women availing maternity benefit.
Amount: ₹3,500 (as prescribed, subject to periodic revision)
When paid: Along with maternity benefit or at the time of delivery
Purpose: To cover medical expenses related to pregnancy and delivery
Not applicable if: The establishment is covered under ESI (because ESI provides medical benefits directly)
Documentation and Compliance for Employers
Here's exactly what you need to maintain for maternity benefit compliance.
Maternity Benefit Register
You must maintain a register containing:
Medical Certificates to Collect
At application stage:
Post-delivery:
For miscarriage/termination:
Employment Records
Update employment records to show:
Display Requirements
You must display an abstract of the maternity benefit provisions:
Failure to provide mandatory creche facilities attracts:
Employment Protection: Your Job is Safe
Maternity benefits would be meaningless if women could be fired during pregnancy or after childbirth. The codes provide strong employment protection.
Dismissal During Maternity Leave is Illegal
It's unlawful to dismiss, discharge, or reduce the rank of a woman:
Exceptions: Dismissal is permitted only for:
Burden of proof: If a woman is dismissed during/around maternity leave period, the employer must prove it was for valid reasons completely unrelated to pregnancy.
Scenario 1: Employee Resigns During Pregnancy
A woman announces pregnancy, applies for maternity leave starting in 2 months, but then resigns before leave begins.
Your obligations:
Scenario 2: Employee Doesn't Return After Maternity Leave
A woman takes 26 weeks maternity leave and doesn't rejoin after leave ends.
Your obligations:
Scenario 3: Employee Gets Pregnant During Notice Period
An employee serves resignation with 2 months notice. During notice period, she discovers pregnancy.
Your obligations:
Scenario 4: Part-Time Employee Pregnancy
A part-time employee working 3 days/week becomes pregnant. She's worked 120 days over the past year.
Your obligations:
Scenario 5: Contractual Employee Pregnancy
An employee on a 2-year fixed-term contract becomes pregnant in month 8 of the contract.
Your obligations:
Managing maternity benefit compliance while being sensitive to employees' needs requires expertise. Kaizen Consultancy Services has been helping Mumbai businesses navigate maternity benefits for 18+ years.
Our Maternity Benefit Compliance Services:
✅ Policy Drafting: We create comprehensive maternity benefit policies tailored to your business.
✅ Eligibility Assessment: We help determine which employees qualify and calculate benefit amounts accurately.
✅ Register Maintenance: We maintain compliant maternity benefit registers with all required documentation.
✅ Payment Calculation: We calculate maternity benefits correctly under the new wage definitions and 50% basic rule.
✅ Creche Compliance: We help you set up creche facilities or connect you with reliable third-party providers.
✅ Manager Training: We train your managers on legal obligations and sensitive handling of maternity situations.
✅ Notice Response: If any disputes or notices arise, we handle them with expertise and care.
✅ Work-From-Home Framework: We help draft policies and agreements for maternity work-from-home arrangements.
Why Employers Trust Kaizen for Maternity Benefits:
Contact Kaizen Consultancy Services Today:
Get your free maternity benefit policy review—we'll ensure you're fully compliant with the new codes while supporting your women employees properly.
Because maternity benefits aren't just legal obligations—they're opportunities to build a supportive, inclusive workplace that attracts and retains the best talent.
Get your free HR compliance audit under the New Labour Codes—we'll identify gaps and provide a clear action plan. Because HR compliance isn't just about avoiding penalties—it's about building a sustainable, legally sound organization ready for growth.