8th Pay Commission delay impact: Which arrears central government employees could miss due to 8th CPC report submission delay

Central government employees await the 8th Pay Commission report, anticipating arrears from January 1, 2026. While dearness allowance arrears are expected due to recalculation on revised basic pay, house rent and transport allowance arrears are un...

ET Online
Once the 8th CPC report is approved by the central cabinet and the government notifies its rules, employees will see their payouts increase.
Are central government employees going to receive 8th Pay Commission (8th CPC) arrears for allowances like house rent allowance, dearness allowance (DA), and transport allowance (TPTA), or will it be just on their salary?

With the 8th Pay Commission consulting with various stakeholders to finalise its recommendations, many central government employees are eagerly awaiting the report’s implementation, trying to figure out which of their payouts will rise- salary or other allowances as well.

Once the central cabinet approves the 8th CPC report and the government notifies its rules, employees can expect a boost in their payouts. They are expected to get arrears from January 1, 2026, since the 7th CPC tenure ended in December 2025.


Also Read: 8th Pay Commission implementation date: When can you get salary hike with arrears?

With the 8th Pay Commission’s report submission deadline set for May 2027, and the rule notification taking another 3-6 months, central government employees might end up receiving 20-24 months of arrears. But the big question is which arrears will they actually get?

Will central government employees get arrears for HRA, TA, etc?

Financial expert Ramachandran Krishnamoorthy told ET Wealth Online that based on past pay commission practises-

• Dearness allowance (DA) arrears are paid as they are recalculated month-wise on the revised basic pay.

• HRA arrears are usually not paid as HRA is revised prospectively.

• Transport allowance arrears are generally not paid, since it is a fixed amount.
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What he meant to say is that DA is calculated on the basis of the basic salary of an employee. Since the basic salary of an employee increases in a new pay commission, the amount of DA also increases automatically.

Also Read: Can Rs 2 crore retirement corpus generate Rs 2 lakh monthly income for 20 years after retirement?
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As far as HRA is concerned, it’s also based on the basic salary of an employee. The current HRA rates are 10% (Z-category cities), 20% (Y-category cities) and 30% (X-category cities) of the basic pay. These rates used to be 8%, 16% and 24% and were increased after DA reached 50%. The current DA rate is 60%.

Likewise, transport allowance is also based on the basic salary of an employee and the city of transport. For the 7th Pay Commission, the TPTA range for central government employees is Rs 1,350-Rs 7,200. TPTA also increased by 25% when DA reached 50%.

TPTA rates are also revised by a pay commission.

When HRA and TPTA rates are revised in a new pay commission, central employees get them as per new rates, but they won’t get arrears for these allowances as per the past practices.

“Employees should not expect arrears on fixed or policy-driven allowances unless explicitly notified,” says Krishnamoorthy.



For how many months, can central government employees get arrears?

In November 2025, the 8th Pay Commission was given 18 months to submit its report. It means it has time till May 2027 to submit the report unless it asks for an extension of the deadline from the Centre.

Once the report is ready, a group of ministers will study it and provide inputs. After that, the cabinet will approve the final draft of the 8th Pay Commission report. If this process takes another 3-6 months, the implementation date may be in the second half of 2027. That means central government employees may get arrears for 20-24 months.

How are arrears for central government employees calculated?

Arrears can be calculated as:

Monthly pay difference (between 8th and 7th CPC basic pays)× number of delayed months

The revised pay is derived by applying the approved fitment factor to the existing 7th CPC basic pay. A fitment factor is a multiplier of the salary and pension. A 2.0 fitment factor means the basic salary of an employee will be doubled in a new pay commission.

Examples of arrears for Level 6 employee at 2.0, 2.15 and 2.28 and 2.57 fitment factors

A Level 6 employee’s minimum basic salary in the 7th Pay Commission is Rs 35,400

Level 6 employee’s estimated revised salary as per 2, 2.15, 2.28 and 2.57 fitment factors

Current basic pay (L6)

₹ 35,400

Revised pay at 2.0 fitment factor

₹ 70,800

Revised pay at 2.15 fitment factor

₹ 76,110

Revised pay at 2.28 fitment factor

₹ 80,712

Revised pay at 2.57 fitment factor

₹ 90,978


Monthly increase for Level 6 employee at 2.0, 2.15, 2.28 and 2.57 fitment factors

Fitment factors

Monthly increase for L6 employee with Rs 35,400 basic pay

2

₹ 35,400

2.15

₹ 40,710

2.28

₹ 45,312

2.57

₹ 55,578



Level 6 employee’s estimated arrears as per 2, 2.15, 2.28 and 2.57 fitment factors (for 20 months)

Fitment factor

Arrear estimates for L6 employee with Rs 35,600 current basic pay

2

₹ 7,08,000

2.15

₹ 8,14,200

2.28

₹ 9,06,240

2.57

₹ 11,11,560


However, the real magnitude of the arrears will be known only when the 8th Pay Commission decides on the fitment factor and the government notifies the rules of the new pay commission.
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