India’s Gig Economy Workers Under Social Security Code 2020: Legal Rights, Implementation And 2026 Rules Update
Introduction: Social Security Code 2020 and Gig Workers Legal Rights in India (2025–2026)
The Indian labour law landscape underwent a historic structural transformation with the official enforcement of the four Labour Codes. Crucially, the Code on Social Security, 2020, was brought into legal force effective November 21, 2025. Subsequently, the Ministry of Labour and Employment notified the final subordinate legislation—the Social Security (Central) Rules, 2026—on May 8 and 9, 2026, completely operationalizing the statutory framework.
For the first time in Indian legislative history, the Social Security Code, 2020 extends the protective umbrella of social security beyond the traditional employer-employee master-servant relationship, formally recognizing and granting statutory rights to India’s rapidly expanding gig and platform workers (projected by NITI Aayog to reach 23.5 million by 2030).
This publication provides a comprehensive doctrinal and compliance analysis of the Social Security Code, 2020, and the finalized 2026 Rules, delineating the specific legal rights of gig workers and the corresponding statutory liabilities imposed upon digital aggregators.
Statutory Definitions And Scope (Section 2)
To eliminate jurisdictional ambiguity, the Social Security Code 2020 precisely distinguishes the new categories of workers:
- Gig Worker [Section 2(35)]: Defined as a person who performs work or participates in a work arrangement and earns from such activities outside of a traditional employer-employee relationship.
- Platform Worker [Section 2(61)]: A sub-category of gig workers who use an online algorithmic matching platform to provide specific services or solve specific problems (e.g., ride-hailing drivers, food delivery partners).
- Aggregator [Section 2(2)]: A digital intermediary or marketplace for a buyer or user of a service to connect with the seller or service provider (platform worker). The Seventh Schedule of the Code explicitly lists aggregator categories, including ride-sharing services, food and grocery delivery, logistics, and e-commerce platforms.
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