8th Pay Commission: Who Can Participate, How To Submit Data, And What Comes Next
The process for the 8th Central Pay Commission (8th CPC) is gathering momentum as employee federations, unions, pensioner associations, and departmental bodies prepare their memorandums and recommendations. Recently, the deadline for submission of memorandums was extended, allowing more stakeholders to place their demands before the commission.
The 8th CPC is expected to affect nearly 55 lakh central government employees and around 69 lakh pensioners. Its recommendations will determine revised pay scales, allowances, pensions, and service-related benefits for the coming decade.
Who Can Participate?
The following stakeholders can submit proposals and data:
- Central Government Employees’ Federations
- Railway Employee Associations
- Defence Civilian Employee Organizations
- Pensioners’ Associations
- Individual Ministries and Departments
- Staff Side of the National Council (JCM)
- Recognized Service Associations and Unions
Several organizations, including the Indian Railways Technical Supervisors’ Association (IRTSA) and defence employee bodies, have already submitted detailed memorandums demanding higher fitment factors and revised salary structures.
How Are Suggestions Submitted?
Stakeholders generally submit:
- Memorandums on pay revision
- Salary structure proposals
- Promotion and career progression demands
- Pension revision recommendations
- DA/DR calculation suggestions
- Inflation index proposals
Defence employee federations have also sought a new inflation index for calculating Dearness Allowance (DA), Dearness Relief (DR), and revised salaries under the 8th CPC.
What Happens Next?
The Commission will:
- Examine memorandums and data.
- Hold consultations with employee organizations.
- Analyze inflation, living costs, and fiscal impact.
- Prepare recommendations on salaries, pensions, allowances, and fitment factors.
- Submit its final report to the Central Government.
Current reports indicate that the final recommendations may arrive during 2027, though salary revisions are expected to be effective from 1 January 2026 with arrears payable for the delayed period.
8th Pay Commission: How Fitment Factors From 2.57 To 3.83 May Change Salaries
The fitment factor is the multiplier used to convert existing basic pay into revised basic pay.
Formula:
Revised Basic Pay = Existing Basic Pay × Fitment Factor
The 7th Pay Commission adopted a fitment factor of 2.57. For the 8th CPC, various estimates and demands range from 2.28 to 3.83, while some employee unions are seeking an aggressive factor of 3.83.
Example Calculation
| Existing Basic Pay | 2.57 Factor | 2.92 Factor | 3.50 Factor | 3.80 Factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹30,000 | ₹77,100 | ₹87,600 | ₹1,05,000 | ₹1,14,000 |
| ₹45,000 | ₹1,15,650 | ₹1,31,400 | ₹1,57,500 | ₹1,71,000 |
| ₹60,000 | ₹1,54,200 | ₹1,75,200 | ₹2,10,000 | ₹2,28,000 |
Actual take-home pay would be higher after recalculation of HRA, TA and other allowances.
8th Pay Commission: How Much Salary Hike Can Railway Employees Expect Under 2.92, 3.50 And 3.80 Fitment Factors?
The Indian Railways Technical Supervisors’ Association (IRTSA) has proposed differentiated fitment factors rather than a uniform multiplier. Their recommendations include:
- 2.92 for Level 1 to Level 5 employees
- 3.50 for Levels 6, 7 and 8
- 3.80 for Levels 9 to 12
The association argues that technical and safety-category employees in Railways carry greater responsibility and therefore deserve higher indexing.
Illustration For Railway Employees
| Current Basic Pay | At 2.92 | At 3.50 | At 3.80 |
|---|---|---|---|
| ₹35,400 | ₹1,03,368 | ₹1,23,900 | ₹1,34,520 |
| ₹44,900 | ₹1,31,108 | ₹1,57,150 | ₹1,70,620 |
| ₹56,100 | ₹1,63,812 | ₹1,96,350 | ₹2,13,180 |
If accepted, the proposal could result in substantially larger salary increases for railway technical supervisors compared with a uniform fitment factor approach.
8th Pay Commission Explained: From Fitment Factor To Salary Hikes, What Employees Expect
The major expectations of central government employees include:
1. Higher Minimum Pay
The current minimum basic pay of ₹18,000 is expected to be revised significantly. Some employee bodies have demanded a minimum pay of ₹52,600 to ₹69,000 depending upon the fitment methodology adopted.
2. Better Fitment Factor
Employee organizations are demanding fitment factors ranging from 2.86 to 3.83, significantly above conservative estimates.
3. DA Merger
Dearness Allowance is expected to be merged with basic pay before applying the new pay structure.
4. Revised Pension Benefits
Pensioners are seeking parity and improved pension calculations under the new framework.
5. Arrears
If implementation occurs after January 2026, employees may receive arrears for the intervening period.
8th Pay Commission Salary Calculator: Can Top Central Government Employees Get Up To ₹93 Lakh In Arrears?
According to recent estimates, senior-most central government officers could receive arrears approaching ₹93 lakh if:
- The 8th CPC recommendations are implemented retrospectively from 1 January 2026.
- There is a significant delay in implementation.
- Salary increases are around 25% or more.
- Arrears are accumulated over a long period before payment.
How Arrears Are Calculated
Arrears = Monthly Salary Increase × Number of Delayed Months
For example, a Level-4 employee with a substantial salary revision and about 20 months of delay could receive arrears running into several lakhs. Senior officers at higher pay levels may see arrears reaching tens of lakhs.
The fitment factor will be the single most important determinant of salary growth under the 8th Pay Commission. While estimates currently range from conservative projections around 2.0–2.57 to employee demands of 3.83, the final recommendation will depend on the Commission’s assessment of inflation, fiscal capacity, and employee welfare. Until then, central government employees—including Railway staff—are closely watching the evolving discussions and memorandum submissions that will shape the future pay structure.
