India Inc. to Offer 9.1% Salary Hike in 2026, GCCs Lead at 10.4%

Corporate India is projected to give an average salary increase of 9.1% in 2026, with Global Capability Centres (GCCs) offering the highest increments at 10.4%. The report notes a cooling job market with overall attrition declining to 16.4% in 2025, though most exits remain voluntary. A major shift is underway as nearly half of organizations move towards skill-based compensation, rewarding expertise in AI and cybersecurity. Variable pay is also gaining importance, rising to an average of 16.1% of fixed salary in 2025.

Key Points: 2026 Salary Hike Forecast: India Inc. Projects 9.1% Average Increase

  • GCCs lead hikes at 10.4%
  • Financial services see 10% increase
  • Attrition cools to 16.4% in 2025
  • AI skills command 30-40% premium
2 min read

India Inc. projects 9.1 pc salary hike in 2026: Report

EY report forecasts 9.1% avg salary hike for 2026 in India. GCCs lead with 10.4%. Shift to skill-based pay for AI, cybersecurity roles.

"The future of pay is no longer just about the size of annual increments but about identifying the right skills to reward - Abhishek Sen, EY India"

New Delhi, Feb 23

Corporate India is expected to roll out an average salary increase of 9.1 per cent in 2026, with Global Capability Centres leading the growth in pay, a new report said on Monday.

GCCs are expected to offer the highest increments at 10.4 per cent, driven by strong global demand for digital and technology capabilities, according to the latest Future of Pay report by EY India.

The financial services sector is likely to see salary hikes of around 10 per cent, followed by e-commerce at 9.9 per cent and life sciences and pharmaceuticals at 9.7 per cent, the report said.

The report also highlighted a gradual cooling in attrition levels. Overall attrition declined to 16.4 per cent in 2025 from 17.5 per cent in 2024, indicating a more stable job market.

However, more than 80 per cent of exits remain voluntary, suggesting that employees are still switching jobs for better opportunities rather than due to layoffs.

Financial services recorded the highest attrition at 24 per cent, while professional services and hi-tech and IT sectors also saw elevated levels.

In comparison, GCCs reported relatively lower attrition at 14.1 per cent, as per the report.

Abhishek Sen, Partner and Leader, Total Rewards, HR Technology and Learning at EY India, said companies are rethinking how they invest in talent.

"The future of pay is no longer just about the size of annual increments but about identifying the right skills to reward and balancing competitiveness with long-term sustainability," he noted.

The report points to a major shift towards skills-based compensation. Nearly half of the organisations surveyed are moving from traditional role-based pay structures to skill-based frameworks.

Professionals with expertise in artificial intelligence, generative AI, machine learning, cybersecurity and cloud computing can command salary premiums of 30 to 40 per cent, as these skills are becoming critical for business growth.

Variable pay is also gaining importance. The average variable pay as a share of fixed salary rose to 16.1 per cent in 2025, compared to 14.8 per cent a year earlier.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see GCCs leading. They bring global standards and pay scales to India. But I hope this trend translates to better pay in traditional manufacturing and core sectors too, not just tech and finance. The economy needs balanced growth.
A
Abhishek O
The report mentions "long-term sustainability." I hope companies interpret that correctly. It shouldn't mean smaller fixed hikes and more variable pay, putting all the risk on employees. A 16.1% variable pay component is already quite high for average performers.
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Sarah B
Working in a GCC in Bangalore, I can confirm the focus on digital skills is intense. The attrition rate being lower here makes sense – the projects are global, work culture is good, and now with top increments, why would people leave? Win-win.
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Karthik V
While the headline number looks good, we must see if it beats inflation. Also, 24% attrition in financial services is crazy! It shows people are still chasing the highest bidder. Companies need to focus on retention beyond just salary – job satisfaction, work-life balance matter too.
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Meera T
As someone in the life sciences sector, a projected 9.7% hike is very respectable. It's a stable field. The shift to skill-based pay is interesting, but how do you objectively measure "skill" in research-based roles? Hope the implementation is fair.

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