The 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC) recommendations, scheduled to be effective from January 1, 2026, has been delayed but are keenly awaited. The proposed revisions are expected to touch around 50 lakh Central government employees, and around 68 lakh pensioners.
CPC is a government-appointed panel that decides how much central government employees should be paid and how their benefits should evolve over time. Since the setting up of the first CPC in 1946, these reviews have quietly shaped how millions of government employees are compensated. On November 3, 2025, the 8th CPC was constituted and tasked with providing its recommendations within 18 months.
How Does CPC Work?
The CPC takes a close look at rising cost of living, inflation, and changing work conditions among other factors to recommend revision of salaries, allowances, and pensions.
The most important component of a salary revision is the fitment factor, recommended by CPC for calculating the revised basic pay.
The government evaluates the CPC recommendations before making a decision. It is reportedly still assessing its economic impact, and weighing the budgetary implications before taking a final call.
The 8th CPC is expected to recommend a noticeable bump in pay, with basic salaries likely to rise by around 25-35 per cent for employees as well as pensioners.
What Is The Key Metric?
The key metric is the fitment factor, which is a multiplier applied to an employee’s existing basic pay to arrive at the revised figure.
For the upcoming 8th CPC, early reports suggest the fitment factor to be in the range of 2.28 to 2.86. It is being suggested that a fitment factor of 2.86 may be used to build the new pay matrix and revise the salary and allowances.
If that happens, the minimum basic salary at Level 1 may rise to around Rs 51,480, marking a significant jump from the current levels.
The maximum basic pay for government employees is also expected to increase to approximately Rs 1.60 lakh, reflecting a broad upward revision in salary and pension across pay grades.
How Is Salary revision Calculated?
Your current basic pay is multiplied with the fitment factor proposed by the pay commission to estimate the revised basic salary.
On top of this, common allowances, such as dearness allowance (DA), house rent allowance (HRA), and travel allowance (TA) are added.
Put it all together to get a rough estimate of what your gross salary could look like.
For example, if your current basic pay is Rs 20,000, multiply it by the fitment factor (say 3.0) to get a revised basic of Rs 60,000. Add DA (10 per cent = Rs 6,000) and HRA (30 per cent for metro cities = Rs 18,000), along with TA (Rs 6,000).
Your gross salary will therefore come to Rs 90,000, including (revised basic pay + DA + HRA + TA).















