8th Pay Commission 2026: Salary Hike, Fitment Factor & Pay Matrix
The 8th Pay Commission will revise the pay, allowances and pensions of nearly 50 lakh central government employees and 65+ lakh pensioners. Here's the latest status, expected fitment factor, salary-hike estimates, pay matrix projections, salary calculator method, DA update, pension changes and arrears — fact-checked and clearly separating what's confirmed from what's still an estimate.
As of mid-2026, the 8th Pay Commission is still in its consultation stage. The fitment factor, revised pay matrix, HRA and pension formula have NOT been finalised. Every salary figure below is an estimate or illustration to explain the method — not an official number. Final figures will come only with the Commission's report and the Government's resolution.
8th Pay Commission: Latest Status (2026)
The Union Cabinet approved the formation of the 8th Central Pay Commission in January 2025, and it was formally constituted via Gazette notification on 3 November 2025. Through the first half of 2026 the Commission has been in a consultation and data-collection phase — holding regional meetings and inviting memorandums from employee federations, unions and pensioner associations. A public feedback module was also opened on the MyGov portal.
Regional consultations have been held across cities (including Delhi and Lucknow in June 2026), with more scheduled. The panel is expected to take roughly 18 months to submit its report, after which the Government considers and notifies the changes. 1 January 2026 is the reference date for the revised pay — but actual implementation is widely expected later, with arrears paid back to that date.
What Is the 8th Pay Commission?
A Central Pay Commission is a body set up roughly every ten years to review and recommend revisions to the pay, allowances, pensions and service conditions of central government employees and pensioners. The 7th Pay Commission took effect from 1 January 2016; the 8th continues that cycle. Its mandate is to align government compensation with current economic conditions while keeping fiscal prudence and the impact on Centre and State finances in view.
8th Pay Commission Timeline & Key Dates
| Milestone | Date / Status |
|---|---|
| Cabinet approval of formation | January 2025 |
| Formally constituted (Gazette notification) | 3 November 2025 |
| Consultation & data collection | Ongoing through 2026 |
| Reference date for revised pay | 1 January 2026 |
| Report submission (expected) | Within ~18 months of constitution |
| Implementation & disbursement (expected) | Likely 2027, with arrears from Jan 2026 |
8th Pay Commission Fitment Factor
The fitment factor is the multiplier applied to your existing basic pay to arrive at the new basic pay. It is the single most important number in any pay revision — a higher factor means a bigger hike. Under the 7th CPC, the factor was 2.57 (which took the minimum basic from ₹7,000 to ₹18,000).
Estimates and demands for the 8th CPC fitment factor range widely — from a conservative ~1.83–2.46 to employee-union demands of 3.83 (via the NC-JCM). Figures like "2.28" or "3.0" seen online are projections, not confirmed. The final number will depend on inflation, fiscal space and the Commission's recommendations.
Fitment factor across Pay Commissions
| Pay Commission | Fitment Factor | Minimum Basic Pay |
|---|---|---|
| 6th CPC | 1.86 | ₹7,000 |
| 7th CPC | 2.57 | ₹18,000 |
| 8th CPC (estimates/demands) | ~1.83 to 3.83 (not final) | To be decided |
Expected Salary Hike & Minimum Pay
Because the fitment factor isn't fixed, the minimum basic pay under the 8th CPC can only be projected as a range. The table below shows how the current ₹18,000 minimum basic (Level 1) would change at a few illustrative factors — purely to show the method:
| Fitment Factor (illustrative) | Min Basic Pay (₹18,000 base) |
|---|---|
| 2.00 | ₹36,000 |
| 2.57 (= 7th CPC level) | ₹46,260 |
| 2.86 | ₹51,480 |
| 3.83 (union demand) | ₹68,940 |
These are illustrative calculations (basic × factor), not official figures.
8th Pay Commission Pay Matrix (Illustrative)
Below is an illustrative projection of how selected 7th CPC pay levels could scale at two sample fitment factors. It is meant to show the shape of the revision — the actual 8th CPC matrix will follow the Commission's report.
| Level | 7th CPC Basic | At 2.00 (illustrative) | At 2.57 (illustrative) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | ₹18,000 | ₹36,000 | ₹46,260 |
| Level 2 | ₹19,900 | ₹39,800 | ₹51,143 |
| Level 4 | ₹25,500 | ₹51,000 | ₹65,535 |
| Level 6 | ₹35,400 | ₹70,800 | ₹90,978 |
| Level 7 | ₹44,900 | ₹89,800 | ₹1,15,393 |
| Level 10 (entry officer) | ₹56,100 | ₹1,12,200 | ₹1,44,177 |
| Level 13 | ₹1,23,100 | ₹2,46,200 | ₹3,16,367 |
| Level 14 | ₹1,44,200 | ₹2,88,400 | ₹3,70,594 |
Illustrative only — for method, not official 8th CPC pay.
8th Pay Commission Salary Calculator: How It Works
You can estimate your revised gross salary in a few steps:
- Find your current basic pay under the 7th CPC pay matrix.
- Revised Basic Pay = Current Basic × Fitment Factor (use a scenario factor, since it isn't finalised).
- Add Dearness Allowance (DA): a percentage of revised basic (DA typically resets near zero at implementation and builds up again).
- Add House Rent Allowance (HRA): by city — roughly 27% (metro/X), 18% (Y) and 9% (Z) tiers, revised when DA crosses thresholds.
- Add Travel Allowance (TA) as per level and city.
- Gross Salary = Revised Basic + DA + HRA + TA (then apply deductions like NPS and standard deduction for net in-hand).
Dearness Allowance (DA): The Latest
Separately from the 8th CPC, the Government approved a 2% DA/DR hike from 1 January 2026, taking DA to 60%. Two points often misreported: the Government has said no proposal to merge DA with basic pay is currently under consideration, and DA is generally reset to a low base once a new pay structure is implemented (then it climbs again with inflation).
8th Pay Commission Pension Revisions
Pensioners are covered too. The current minimum pension under the 7th CPC is ₹9,000; it will be revised using the new fitment factor once decided. Key proposals and expected changes under discussion include:
- Minimum pension hike: could rise substantially depending on the final factor.
- Dearness Relief (DR) reset: likely reset once the revised structure is implemented.
- NPS/UPS updates: possible modifications, with pension-reform proposals discussing a minimum pension linked to Last Pay Drawn and an age-linked scale.
- Higher NPS contributions: government NPS contributions rise in line with higher revised basic pay.
Will There Be Arrears? (And Why Implementation Lags)
History suggests yes. The 7th CPC was constituted in 2014, submitted its report in late 2015, and was implemented in August 2016 — seven months after its 1 January 2016 reference date, with arrears paid as a lump sum for the gap. The 8th CPC is expected to follow a similar pattern: even though the reference date is 1 January 2026, salaries may be revised in 2027, with arrears calculated back to January 2026. The exact arrears depend on your pay level, the final fitment factor and the length of the delay.
Who Benefits?
The 8th Pay Commission is expected to benefit roughly 48.6 lakh central government employees and 67.8 lakh pensioners — over 1.15 crore people in total — spanning defence civilians, railways, postal, central police forces and central secretariat staff, among others.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Has the 8th Pay Commission been implemented?
No. It was constituted in November 2025 and is in the consultation stage as of 2026. Implementation is expected later (likely 2027), with arrears from the 1 January 2026 reference date.
What is the expected fitment factor?
It is not finalised. Estimates range from ~1.83 to 2.86, while unions demand up to 3.83. The 7th CPC factor was 2.57.
What is the DA now?
DA rose to 60% from 1 January 2026 (a separate 2% hike, not part of the 8th CPC). No DA-basic merger is currently confirmed.
When will I actually get the higher salary?
Most likely after the Government approves the Commission's report — expected in 2027 — with arrears back to January 2026.
This article is for general information based on official announcements and current reporting, not financial advice. Always rely on the final Government resolution and official orders for your actual pay and pension.
Key Takeaways
- The 8th Pay Commission was constituted on 3 November 2025 and is currently in its consultation stage — not yet implemented.
- The fitment factor is not finalised — estimates range ~1.83–2.86, with a union demand of 3.83 (7th CPC was 2.57).
- 1 January 2026 is the reference date, but rollout is likely in 2027, with arrears paid back to Jan 2026 (as happened with the 7th CPC).
- DA is 60% from Jan 2026 (a separate hike); no DA-basic merger is currently confirmed.
- It will benefit ~48.6 lakh employees and 67.8 lakh pensioners; all salary/pay-matrix figures circulating now are estimates, not official.
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