The new Convention was adopted at the 114th Session of the International Labour Conference in Geneva on 12 June 2026. The Convention sets out global standards on issues such as working conditions, classification, health and safety, pay and algorithmic management for digital labour platforms and digital platform workers. National governments must now decide whether to ratify and implement the Convention into local law.
The adoption of the Convention is a significant moment for the sector. It represents the outcome of a series of developments within the ILO aimed at establishing a labour standard for platform work.
Following a ‘normative gap analysis’ in March 2023, ‘standard setting on decent work in the platform economy’ was placed on the agenda of the June 2025 International Labour Conference. At that session, constituents agreed the form of the new standard, as well as the basic definitions and scope.
A second standard-setting discussion was held at the June 2026 Conference, which resulted in the adoption of the Convention.
This process has taken place against a broader backdrop of:
The new Convention applies to ‘all digital labour platforms’ and ‘all digital platform workers’, regardless of their classification of employment status. The Convention provides detailed definitions for both. It covers both location-based and online platform work.
The Convention also allows for some exclusions at national level in certain circumstances, subject to consultation and review.
The new Convention appears to move in this direction. It extends certain core labour protections to platform workers regardless of their employment status.
As the ILO notes in their recent closing press release following the 2026 Conference, this includes ‘in areas such as occupational safety and health and employment termination or deactivation.’ The Convention also ‘encourages Member States to extend adequate remuneration or payment to all workers, including those who are not in an employment relationship.’
This reflects a broader regulatory trend that we have seen at a national level. Some countries have recently introduced legislation extending core labour and social protections to digital platform workers regardless of their employment status. This has been referred to as a ‘floor’ of rights for platform workers and is something we explore in more detail in our recent article.
The treatment of employment status was one of the more closely followed aspects in the run up to the adoption of the Convention.
In particular, there had been question marks over whether the Convention would create a new classification test at the international level, including the possible introduction of a ‘presumption of employment’ for platform workers. This did not, however, materialise.
Instead, the adopted Convention seemingly takes a balanced approach that respects national legal systems and rules. There is also express recognition of self-employment status for digital platform workers. Article 9 of the Convention reads as follows:
‘Each Member shall take appropriate measures to ensure the correct classification of digital platform workers in respect of the existence or non-existence of an employment relationship, guided mainly by the facts relating to the performance of work, the remuneration or payment of the digital platform worker, among other elements, and considering the specificities of work via digital labour platforms.’
Now that it has been adopted, the Convention must be submitted by member States to their national authorities for consideration. If ratified, it will become legally binding twelve months later, requiring implementation in national law and regular reporting on their application.
Employers should be aware that the Convention establishes an international framework that could influence national regulation of platform work. Organisations engaging or operating digital labour platforms may wish to monitor ratification and implementing measures.
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