8th Pay Commission Approved: How 1.15 Crore Employees, Pensioners Will Benefit

The Union Cabinet has officially approved the terms of reference for the 8th Central Pay Commission. This temporary body will examine salary structures and retirement benefits for central government staff. The commission has 18 months to submit its recommendations, which are expected to take effect from January 2026. This move will impact approximately 1.15 crore employees and pensioners across the country.

Key Points: Cabinet Approves 8th Central Pay Commission Terms of Reference

  • Commission to submit recommendations within 18 months of formation
  • Will consider economic conditions and fiscal prudence requirements
  • Expected to benefit 50 lakh employees and 65 lakh pensioners
  • Recommendations likely implemented from January 1, 2026
  • Must examine impact on state government finances
  • Will review private sector salary structures for comparison
2 min read

Cabinet okays terms of reference of 8th Central Pay Commission

Union Cabinet approves 8th Pay Commission terms, set to benefit 50 lakh employees and 65 lakh pensioners with recommendations expected by January 2026.

"The Commission will make its recommendations within 18 months of the date of its constitution - Official Terms of Reference"

New Delhi, Oct 28

The Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Tuesday approved the Terms of Reference of the 8th Central Pay Commission, which will take up the issue of increasing salaries of Central government employees and payments to pensioners.

The 8th Central Pay Commission will be a temporary body. The Commission will comprise one Chairperson; one Member (part-time) and one Member-Secretary. It will make its recommendations within 18 months of the date of its constitution.

It may consider, if necessary, sending interim reports on any of the matters as and when the recommendations are finalized, according to the terms of reference approved by the Cabinet.

The terms further states that while making its recommendations the Commission will keep in view the economic conditions in the country and the need for fiscal prudence; the need to ensure that adequate resources are available for developmental expenditure and welfare measures; the unfunded cost of non-contributory pension schemes; the likely impact of the recommendations on the finances of the State Governments which usually adopt the recommendations with some modifications; and the prevailing emolument structure, benefits and working conditions available to employees of Central Public Sector Undertakings and private sector.

The Central pay commissions are periodically constituted to go into various issues of emoluments structure, retirement benefits and other service conditions of Central Government employees and to make recommendations on the changes required thereon.

Usually, the recommendations of the pay commissions are implemented after a gap of every ten years. Going by this trend, the effect of the 8th Central Pay Commission recommendations would normally be expected from January 1, 2026.

The government had announced formation of the 8th Central Pay Commission in January 2025 to examine and recommend changes in the salaries and other benefits of Central Government employees.

The move is expected to benefit around 50 lakh Central government employees, including defence personnel, along with more than 65 lakh pensioners, according to officials.

Pay commissions are generally formed once in every 10 years to recommend the fitment factor, and other modalities for the revision of salaries of employees and pensions paid to the retirees.

The 7th Pay Commission was set up by the erstwhile Manmohan Singh-led government in February 2014 while its recommendations were implemented by the government from January 2016 onwards.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Good move but I hope they also consider the impact on state government finances. Many states are already struggling with financial burdens and implementing these recommendations becomes challenging for them.
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Sarah B
As someone working in the private sector, I wonder why government employees get pay revisions every 10 years with guaranteed increments while we face salary cuts and job uncertainty. The system seems unbalanced. 🤔
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Vikram M
The mention of 'fiscal prudence' is crucial. While employees deserve fair compensation, we must ensure the country's development projects don't suffer due to excessive salary burdens. Balance is key! 💯
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Ananya R
My father is a pensioner and this news brings him so much relief. The rising medical costs and inflation have been hard on senior citizens. Hope the commission considers these factors seriously.
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Michael C
While I support fair compensation for government employees, I hope this doesn't lead to another round of inflation that affects common citizens. The economic ripple effects need careful consideration.

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