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Historical Pay Commission Data

1st CPC (1946) to 7th CPC (2016)

A comprehensive timeline of all Pay Commissions in India and their impact on government employee salaries.

7th Pay Commission (Current)

Implemented: January 1, 2016
Fitment Factor: 2.57x
Minimum Salary: ₹18,000
Maximum Salary: ₹2,50,000

Highlights: Abolished Grade Pay system, introduced Pay Matrix with 18 levels, increased HRA to 24%/16%/8%

6th Pay Commission

Implemented: January 1, 2006
Fitment Factor: 1.86x
Minimum Salary: ₹7,000
Maximum Salary: ₹80,000

Highlights: Introduced Grade Pay system, revised pension rules, merged DA with basic pay

5th Pay Commission

Implemented: January 1, 1996
Fitment Factor: 2.54x
Minimum Salary: ₹2,550
Maximum Salary: ₹26,000

Highlights: Significant increase in basic pay, revised allowances structure, modernized pay scales

4th Pay Commission

Implemented: January 1, 1986
Fitment Factor: ~2.3x
Minimum Salary: ₹750
Maximum Salary: ₹9,000

Highlights: Major pay revision, introduced new allowances, improved pension benefits

3rd Pay Commission

Implemented: January 1, 1973
Minimum Salary: ₹185
Maximum Salary: ₹3,500

Highlights: Focused on reducing disparities, improved allowances, interim relief granted

2nd Pay Commission

Implemented: July 1, 1959
Minimum Salary: ₹80
Maximum Salary: ₹2,250

Highlights: Rationalized pay structure, introduced dearness allowance system

1st Pay Commission

Implemented: April 1, 1946
Minimum Salary: ₹55
Maximum Salary: ₹2,000

Highlights: First systematic pay structure for central government employees post-independence era

📅 Implementation Pattern

Pay Commissions are typically constituted every 10 years:

  • 1st CPC: 1946 (Post-Independence)
  • 2nd CPC: 1959 (13 years gap)
  • 3rd CPC: 1973 (14 years gap)
  • 4th CPC: 1986 (13 years gap)
  • 5th CPC: 1996 (10 years gap)
  • 6th CPC: 2006 (10 years gap)
  • 7th CPC: 2016 (10 years gap)
  • 8th CPC: Expected 2026 (10 years gap)
Calculate 8th CPC Salary