India–UK Social Security Pact Takes Effect July 15, 2026: What Employers and Indian Professionals Need to Know
India and the UK will implement CETA and the Double Contribution Convention on July 15, 2026. Learn how the five-year social security exemption affects employers, mobility, and services trade.
The India–UK social security agreement, formally known as the Double Contributions Convention (DCC), will enter into force on July 15, 2026, alongside the India–UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA). The agreement is expected to reduce employment costs for Indian companies operating in the UK by eliminating double social security contributions for eligible employees on temporary assignments.
For businesses with cross-border mobility programs, particularly in the IT, consulting, engineering, financial services, and professional services sectors, the agreement represents a significant change to workforce deployment and payroll planning.
India–UK Social Security Pact: Applicability and scope
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India–UK Social Security Pact: Key Features |
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Provision |
Impact |
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Effective date |
July 15, 2026 |
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Covered employees |
Workers temporarily assigned between India and the UK by their employers |
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Social security treatment |
Contributions are paid only in the home country, avoiding dual contributions |
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Documentation required |
Certificate of Coverage (CoC) from the home-country authority |
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Duration of exemption |
Up to five years (60 months), according to government officials ahead of implementation |
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Main beneficiaries |
Indian professionals employed by Indian companies and sent to the UK on temporary assignments |
What is the India–UK Double Contributions Convention?
The India–UK Double Contributions Convention is a bilateral social security agreement that prevents employees and employers from paying mandatory social security contributions in both countries simultaneously during temporary overseas assignments. It was signed on February 10, 2026, following commitments made under the India–UK trade negotiations.
According to the UK government, the agreement allows “detached workers” temporarily working abroad to remain covered by their home country social security system instead of contributing to the host country’s system.
Importantly, the agreement concerns social security contributions and does not create new rights to state pensions or other social security benefits.
The UK has similar agreements with several countries, including Japan, South Korea, Canada, USA, Philippines, EU member states, to name a few. India has social security agreements in place with 21 countries, including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Netherlands, and South Korea.
How the exemption works
Under the DCC framework, an employee sent from India to work temporarily in the UK can continue contributing to India’s social security system, principally through the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO), while being exempt from UK National Insurance contributions (NIC) for the qualifying period. A valid Certificate of Coverage must be obtained and presented to claim the exemption.
The same principle applies reciprocally to UK employees temporarily assigned to India.
The DCC does not apply to Indian nationals who are directly employed by UK-based employers and are not on qualifying temporary assignments.
Why the agreement matters for Indian businesses
The DCC is expected to be particularly significant for Indian technology and professional services companies that regularly deploy employees to the UK for project delivery, consulting assignments, implementation support, and client-facing roles.
Government officials estimate that 90–95 percent of Indian professionals working in the UK through Indian employers will benefit from the arrangement. Indian-origin professionals are estimated to contribute approximately US$500 million annually to the UK social security system, creating a substantial cost burden where parallel contributions are also maintained in India.
The removal of duplicate contributions could:
- Reduce employment costs for Indian companies with UK operations;
- Improve the competitiveness of Indian service exporters;
- Facilitate cross-border workforce mobility;
- Simplify payroll compliance for temporary assignments; and
- Increase the attractiveness of UK assignments for Indian employees.
According to news reports, approximately 75,000 Indian professionals currently work in the UK, while more than 900 Indian companies maintain operations there. The UK is also India’s second-largest export market for IT services, accounting for an estimated 17 percent of sector export revenues.
The DCC enters into force alongside the India–UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA). Bilateral services trade between the two countries is substantial, with India’s services exports to the UK reaching approximately US$21.6 billion in 2024, compared to services imports of US$13.7 billion.
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Who Can Benefit from the India–UK Social Security Agreement? |
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Eligible |
Generally not eligible |
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Employees of Indian companies temporarily assigned to the UK |
Indian nationals directly employed by UK companies |
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UK employees temporarily assigned to India |
Individuals without a qualifying temporary assignment |
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Workers holding a valid Certificate of Coverage |
Employees unable to demonstrate continued home country social security coverage |
Compliance considerations for employers
Businesses planning to utilize the DCC should review their mobility and payroll frameworks before July 15.
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India–UK Double Contributions Convention: Employer Action Checklist |
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Action |
Why it matters |
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Identify employees on temporary UK assignments |
Determines potential eligibility |
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Review assignment duration |
Exemptions are available only for qualifying temporary assignments |
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Obtain Certificates of Coverage |
Required to claim exemption from host-country contributions |
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Review payroll processes |
Ensure correct treatment of social security obligations |
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Update mobility policies |
Reflect new contribution rules and assignment planning |
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Maintain supporting documentation |
Necessary for compliance reviews and audits |
Also Read: Working in India as an Expat: Visa, Tax, Payroll, and Relocation Guide for Foreign Employees
About Us
India Briefing is one of five regional publications under the Asia Briefing brand. It is supported by Dezan Shira & Associates, a pan-Asia, multi-disciplinary professional services firm that assists foreign investors throughout Asia, including through offices in Delhi, Mumbai, and Bengaluru in India. Dezan Shira & Associates also maintains offices or has alliance partners assisting foreign investors in China, Hong Kong SAR, Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Mongolia, Dubai (UAE), Japan, South Korea, Nepal, The Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Italy, Germany, Bangladesh, Australia, United States, and United Kingdom and Ireland.
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