Maternity Leave Rights in India: Complete Guide for Working Women
By Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran | 19 Law Chambers, Visakhapatnam | Legal Awareness
Every working woman in India has the right to paid maternity leave — regardless of whether she works in a private company, government office, or even some categories of informal employment. Furthermore, the Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 significantly enhanced maternity rights — extending paid leave to 26 weeks and adding work-from-home and crèche provisions. However, many employers particularly private companies routinely violate these rights. Advocate Ganta Surya Kiran at 19 Law Chambers helps working women across Andhra Pradesh enforce their maternity rights effectively.
Who is Eligible for Maternity Leave Under the Maternity Benefit Act?
The Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (as amended in 2017) applies to: every establishment employing 10 or more persons factories, mines, plantations, shops, offices, and commercial establishments. Specifically, to be eligible, a woman must have worked for the employer for at least 80 days in the 12 months preceding the expected delivery date. Consequently, even relatively new employees who have worked only 80 days are entitled to full maternity benefits. Moreover, the Act applies equally to women who adopt children below 3 months and to commissioning mothers in surrogacy arrangements though the leave duration differs.
Key Maternity Rights Under the 2017 Amendment
26 Weeks Paid Maternity Leave: Working women expecting their first or second child receive 26 weeks of fully paid maternity leave of which 8 weeks must be taken before delivery and 18 weeks after. Furthermore, for the third child onwards the entitlement is 12 weeks paid leave. Importantly, “fully paid” means full wages — not a reduced allowance.
12 Weeks Leave for Adoption and Surrogacy: Women who adopt a child below 3 months receive 12 weeks of maternity leave from the date of adoption. Moreover, commissioning mothers in surrogacy arrangements also receive 12 weeks leave.
Work From Home Option: For establishments employing 50 or more persons employers must offer women the option of working from home after maternity leave, if the nature of work permits. Furthermore, the conditions for work-from-home are determined by mutual agreement between the woman and employer. Consequently, employers cannot compulsorily require women to return to office work immediately if remote work is feasible.
Crèche Facility: Establishments with 50 or more employees must provide a crèche facility either at the workplace or within a prescribed distance. Moreover, women must be allowed 4 visits to the crèche daily — including their lunch break. Consequently, employers who do not provide crèche facilities are in violation of the Act — and face penalties.
No Termination During Pregnancy and Maternity Leave: Employers absolutely cannot terminate a woman’s employment during pregnancy, maternity leave, or the nursing period except for gross misconduct proven through a fair inquiry. Furthermore, any termination during this period is void the woman must be reinstated with full back wages. Consequently, threats of dismissal during pregnancy are specifically illegal and should be immediately challenged.
Disclosure of Maternity Rights at Appointment: Every employer must provide written information about maternity benefits to every woman employee at the time of her appointment. Consequently, employers cannot claim ignorance and employees cannot be denied benefits for lack of awareness.
How to Enforce Your Maternity Rights — Step by Step
- Give Written Notice to Employer Inform your employer in writing of your pregnancy specifically stating the expected delivery date and requesting maternity leave as per the Maternity Benefit Act. Furthermore, do this as early as you are comfortable disclosing giving both you and your employer adequate planning time. Consequently, written notice creates a record that prevents any future dispute about whether notice was given.
- Demand Full Pay During Maternity Leave Confirm with your employer in writing that you will receive your full wages during the 26-week maternity leave period. Furthermore, if your employer attempts to pay only a portion issue a formal written demand citing Section 5 of the Maternity Benefit Act. Moreover, any deduction from maternity wages is a statutory violation punishable with imprisonment up to 1 year and fine.
- File Complaint With Labour Commissioner if Rights Are Denied If your employer refuses maternity leave, terminates your employment, or reduces your wages file an immediate complaint before the Inspector of the area under the Maternity Benefit Act. Specifically, the Inspector has powers to: direct the employer to reinstate you with back wages, prosecute the employer for violation, and order payment of all maternity benefits withheld. Furthermore, file a complaint with the Assistant Labour Commissioner simultaneously. Read: Labour Court Complaint India.
- File Consumer or Civil Court Complaint Additionally, file a civil suit for damages and injunction against the employer. Moreover, courts have awarded significant compensation to women whose maternity rights were violated including lost wages, compensation for mental agony, and exemplary damages against employers who acted in bad faith.
- File Complaint With the National Commission for Women File a complaint with the National Commission for Women (NCW) which takes up maternity rights violations by employers. Furthermore, the NCW has powers to summon employers and recommend government action. Consequently, NCW involvement often leads to faster compliance than individual legal proceedings alone.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: My employer said my maternity leave will be “unpaid” because I have not completed one year. Is this correct?
No — the eligibility threshold is only 80 days of work in the preceding 12 months not one full year. Furthermore, check carefully whether you worked 80 or more days before your expected delivery date. Specifically, even part-time work counts if it was with the same employer. Consequently, if you meet the 80-day threshold your employer must provide fully paid maternity leave.
Q: My employer threatened to fire me because I am pregnant. What should I do immediately?
File an urgent complaint before the Labour Commissioner termination during pregnancy is specifically illegal under the Maternity Benefit Act. Furthermore, simultaneously send a legal notice to your employer stating the specific legal prohibition and threatening legal proceedings. Moreover, preserve all threatening communications messages, emails, and verbal threats witnessed by colleagues. Consequently, employers who fire pregnant employees face both prosecution and reinstatement orders. Free legal aid: NALSA — nalsa.gov.in.
Q: My company has fewer than 10 employees. Does the Maternity Benefit Act still apply?
The Act specifically covers establishments with 10 or more employees. However, even for smaller establishments constitutional protections and general contract law may provide remedies. Furthermore, ESI-covered women have separate maternity benefit rights through ESIC regardless of establishment size. Read: Employment Rights India | Free Legal Aid in AP.
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