Labour Welfare Fund (LWF) Registration

The Labour Welfare Fund is a statutory contribution that funds welfare benefits, such as health, housing, education, and recreation, for workers, set up under each state’s own Labour Welfare Fund Act. It applies in about sixteen states, with fixed, usually small, amounts contributed by both the employer and the employee at intervals that vary by state. Because the amounts are small, LWF is one of the most commonly missed obligations. Samkhya handles your LWF registration and contributions.

Labour Welfare Fund: A Detailed Guide

The Labour Welfare Fund is established by individual state governments to provide welfare amenities such as healthcare, housing, education, and recreation to workers and their families. There is no central LWF Act; instead, each state has its own legislation, for example the Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat, and Tamil Nadu Labour Welfare Fund Acts, which sets the contribution amount, frequency, due dates, and applicability. LWF currently applies in about sixteen states and union territories, including Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Kerala, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, and Punjab. Contributions are fixed rupee amounts per employee per period, not a percentage of salary, with the employer’s share usually higher than the employee’s.

Why LWF Compliance Matters

LWF compliance matters for several reasons:

  • Statutory Obligation: It is a legal requirement in states that have an LWF Act, with penalties for default.
  • Worker Welfare: Contributions fund healthcare, education, housing, and recreation for workers.
  • Tender Eligibility: Many government contracts require proof of LWF compliance.
  • Audit Safety: LWF is checked during labour inspections, so compliance avoids exposure.
  • Low Cost: The amounts involved are small relative to the risk of missing them.
  • Builds Goodwill: It demonstrates the employer’s commitment to employee welfare.

When LWF Applies

LWF applies depending on the state:

  • Applicable States Only: Required only in states that have enacted an LWF Act.
  • State Thresholds: Each state sets the number of employees and categories covered.
  • Fixed Amounts: Contributions are fixed sums per employee, not a percentage of pay.
  • Varying Frequency: Payment may be monthly, half-yearly, or annual depending on the state.
  • Employer Pays More: The employer’s share is usually higher than the employee’s.
  • Contract Workers: Some states, such as Karnataka, now cover contract workers too.

How LWF Contributions Work

LWF contributions follow a simple pattern:

  • Both Contribute: Both the employer and the employee contribute a fixed amount.
  • Employer Responsibility: The employer deducts the employee’s share, adds its own, and deposits the total.
  • State-Specific Rates: The amounts differ by state and are revised from time to time.
  • Frequency Varies: Some states collect monthly, others half-yearly or annually.
  • Excluded Categories: Managerial or higher-paid employees are excluded in some states.
  • To the State Board: Contributions go to the State Labour Welfare Board.

Who Must Register

LWF registration applies to:

  • Establishments in a state that has an LWF Act and that meet the state’s employee threshold.
  • Factories, shops, and commercial establishments as defined by the state.
  • Employers of contract workers, where the state covers them.
  • Businesses operating across multiple states, in each applicable state.
  • Employers, who must register with the relevant State Labour Welfare Board.

State Boards and the Process

The Labour Welfare Fund is administered by each State Labour Welfare Board, and registration and contribution are done through the state’s labour department or LWF portal. The employer registers the establishment, deducts the employee’s fixed share from salary, adds its own share, and deposits the total with the board by the state’s due date, then files the prescribed return (often Form A or a state-specific form) with employee-wise details. Because every state has its own rates, frequency, and forms, a multi-state employer must follow each state’s calendar separately. Records of challans and returns must be kept for inspection by labour officers.

Documents Required

For the Establishment:

  • Certificate of incorporation, partnership deed, or LLP agreement, and PAN.
  • Proof of the business address.

For Compliance:

  • Employee details with the count and categories covered, and salary records.
  • Bank details for depositing the contributions.

LWF Registration and Contribution Process

LWF compliance follows a clear sequence:

  1. Confirm whether the state has an LWF Act and that you meet the threshold.
  2. Register the establishment with the State Labour Welfare Board.
  3. Identify the contribution amount and frequency for that state.
  4. Deduct the employee’s fixed share from salary.
  5. Add the employer’s share and deposit the total with the board.
  6. File the prescribed LWF return with employee-wise details.
  7. Keep challans and returns for inspection.

Register for LWF with Samkhya

Registering for the Labour Welfare Fund with Samkhya Corporate Services is simple. Just follow these easy steps:

  • Tell us your states: Share where your establishments are located.
  • We confirm applicability and rates: We check the LWF Act and current rates for each state.
  • Fill the form: Complete our online form with your establishment and employee details.

From there, our team registers you with the boards and manages your periodic contributions.

Ongoing LWF Compliance

LWF compliance is light but easy to miss:

  • Timely Contribution: Deposit the combined contribution by each state’s due date.
  • Correct Rates: Apply the current state rates, which are revised from time to time.
  • File Returns: File the LWF return for each contribution period.
  • Multi-State Calendars: Track different frequencies and due dates across states.
  • Cover the Right Employees: Include contract workers where the state requires it.
  • Maintain Records: Keep challans and return copies for labour inspections.

Contribution and Cost

The Labour Welfare Fund is not a tax but a small statutory welfare contribution, made as a fixed amount per employee rather than a percentage of salary. The amounts are modest, typically ranging from a few rupees to a few hundred rupees per employee per contribution period, and are shared between the employee and the employer, with the employer’s share usually higher and the employer responsible for depositing the total. The exact figures, frequency, and covered categories differ by state and are revised periodically; for instance, Karnataka moved to Rs. 50 from the employee and Rs. 100 from the employer annually and lowered its applicability threshold to ten employees, while other states collect monthly or half-yearly. Although the Code on Social Security, 2020, in force from 21 November 2025, allows the Centre to frame schemes that may eventually absorb these funds, state LWF Acts continue to apply for now.

LWF in Major States (illustrative)

State Frequency Employee Employer
Maharashtra Half-yearly. Rs. 25. Rs. 75.
Karnataka Annual. Rs. 50. Rs. 100.
Tamil Nadu Annual. Rs. 20. Rs. 40.
West Bengal Half-yearly. Rs. 3. Rs. 30.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Labour Welfare Fund?

It is a statutory state fund that provides welfare benefits such as health, housing, education, and recreation to workers, funded by small fixed contributions from employers and employees.

Which states have an LWF?

About sixteen states and union territories, including Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Kerala, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, and Punjab.

How much is the LWF contribution?

It is a fixed amount per employee, not a percentage of salary, usually small and differing by state, with the employer’s share typically higher than the employee’s.

How often is LWF paid?

It varies by state. Some states collect monthly, others half-yearly or annually, so a multi-state employer follows each state’s calendar.

Who deposits the LWF?

The employer deducts the employee’s share, adds its own share, and deposits the total with the State Labour Welfare Board, then files the return.

Why is LWF often missed?

Because the amounts are small, LWF is easy to overlook, but labour inspectors check it and arrears with penalties can build up.