Payroll compliance in India trips up more foreign employers than any other part of hiring here — not because it's conceptually hard, but because it involves multiple overlapping filings, each with its own deadline and penalty structure. Here's what you actually need to stay on top of.
Payroll Compliance in India: The Complete Guide for Foreign Employers (2026)
The core statutory components
Employee Provident Fund (EPF)
Mandatory retirement savings scheme. Employer contributes 12% of basic salary, employee contributes a matching 12% (deducted from salary). Applies to establishments with 20+ employees, though many voluntarily register earlier. Monthly filing, due by the 15th of the following month.
Employee State Insurance (ESI)
Applies to employees earning below a monthly wage threshold. Covers medical benefits and cash compensation during sickness/disability. Employer contributes ~3.25%, employee ~0.75%. Filed monthly.
Professional Tax
State-level tax on salaried income, amount and rules vary by state (some states, like Delhi, don't levy it at all). Deducted from employee salary and remitted by the employer, typically monthly or annually depending on state.
Tax Deducted at Source (TDS)
Employers must deduct income tax from employee salaries based on their tax slab and remit it monthly, then file quarterly TDS returns (Form 24Q). Errors here are one of the most common compliance failures for foreign companies unfamiliar with India's slab system.
Gratuity
Lump-sum payment owed to employees who complete 5+ years of continuous service, calculated at roughly 15 days' wages per year of service. Many companies accrue this monthly (about 4.81% of basic salary) even though it's only paid out on exit, to avoid a large unbudgeted liability later.
The compliance calendar, simplified
| Filing | Frequency | Typical deadline |
|---|---|---|
| EPF contribution + return | Monthly | 15th of following month |
| ESI contribution | Monthly | 15th of following month |
| Professional tax | Monthly/annual (state-dependent) | Varies by state |
| TDS deposit | Monthly | 7th of following month |
| TDS return (24Q) | Quarterly | End of month following quarter |
| Annual Form 16 issuance | Annual | By June 15 |
Why foreign employers get this wrong
The most common failure isn't ignorance of the rules — it's assuming payroll compliance is a once-a-year, tax-season problem the way it might be in other markets. In India it's a monthly discipline with real penalties (interest, late fees, and in serious or repeated cases, personal liability for company directors) for missed deadlines.
Frequently asked questions
What happens if I miss an EPF filing deadline?
Interest accrues on the outstanding amount, plus a damages penalty that scales with how late the payment is and how often it recurs.
Do I need to handle this myself if I use an EOR or PEO?
No — this is exactly what an EOR or PEO provider manages on your behalf. The filings and deadlines above are the ones your provider should be handling; if they're not proactively confirming each month's filings are complete, that's a red flag.
Is professional tax the same across India?
No. It's a state-level tax, so the rate and even whether it applies at all depends on the state where the employee is based.
If you want a compliance calendar tailored to your specific hiring state and headcount, book a 15-minute compliance review.
