HomeTechnologyTCS summoned by Pune Labour Commissioner after employees allege unfair and unlawful layoffs

TCS summoned by Pune Labour Commissioner after employees allege unfair and unlawful layoffs

TCS has been summoned by the Pune Labour Commissioner after several employees alleged unfair and unlawful layoffs, including forced resignations and sudden terminations. The labour department is now investigating the claims, marking a major development in the ongoing TCS layoffs controversy.

November 17, 2025 / 16:00 IST
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TCS
TCS

Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s biggest IT services company, is facing questions from the Labour Commissioner’s office in Pune after employees alleged that the company had been letting people go unfairly. The notice comes after a series of complaints filed by the tech-worker union NITES, which says many employees have approached them over sudden job losses and pressure to resign.

NITES claims that workers across multiple cities have reported abrupt terminations, being pushed to put in resignations, and in some cases, not receiving all the payments they were entitled to. After reviewing these complaints, the Pune Labour Commissioner has summoned TCS for a hearing on November 18, asking the company to explain its position.

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These allegations arrive at a time when TCS is already restructuring its workforce and preparing for a bigger shift towards AI-driven roles. The company has indicated that up to 2 percent of jobs may be cut in the next financial year as it adjusts to changing business needs. But NITES believes the number of affected employees is far higher than what the company has acknowledged.

In its financial results, TCS reported that its staff count dropped sharply this year. Between June and September, its employee base fell by around 20,000 compared to the same period a year ago — the steepest decline the company has seen in recent times. However, TCS has maintained that the layoffs being talked about publicly are exaggerated. Its HR head said earlier that only about 1 percent of the workforce had been impacted.