Recent Dearness Allowance (DA) figures have given central government employees their first clear signal about what the fitment factor under the upcoming 8th Pay Commission might look like, with early indications showing it is unlikely to be below 1.60. While the government has not yet formally announced the new pay panel or its implementation timeline, current inflation-linked DA levels point to a significant base adjustment in salary structures when the commission’s recommendations are finally adopted. Central government staff and pensioners are interpreting these numbers as a key benchmark in broader expectations of salary revision after the 7th Pay Commission cycle.
Why Dearness Allowance Points To 1.60 Fitment Floor
The Dearness Allowance, a cost-of-living adjustment paid to central government employees to offset inflation, has reached over 60 per cent under the existing 7th Pay Commission structure. Latest data from the Labour Bureau shows the All-India Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers (CPI-IW) stood at 148.2 points in December 2025, supporting a further 2 per cent DA hike for January-June 2026. When aggregated, this brings cumulative DA to about 60.34 per cent, which will likely be rounded to 60 per cent for payout purposes.
Under the standard pay commission methodology, the fitment factor acts as a multiplier applied to existing basic pay to determine revised basic salaries. For example, if an employee’s starting basic salary was “100” at the beginning of a pay commission cycle, adding a DA of 60 per cent effectively brings their total to “160”. That calculation translates mathematically to a fitment factor of 1.60, setting a clear baseline that experts say the 8th Pay Commission is unlikely to go below.
Factors That Could Push The Fitment Higher
Although 1.60 appears to be the minimum mathematical benchmark, several factors suggest the final fitment factor could be significantly higher. During the COVID-19 period, three scheduled DA instalments were frozen for about 18 months and were never restored later. Analysts argue that if those deferred DA increases had been paid on time, the current DA level would likely be well in excess of 60 per cent, strengthening demands for a higher fitment multiplier.
Furthermore, even if the 8th Pay Commission is assumed to take effect from January 1, 2026, historical experience suggests that the commission’s recommendations could take up to two years or more to be finalised and implemented. During that period, inflation and further DA hikes could continue, pushing cumulative DA levels into the 80–90 per cent range. Should this happen, analysts say, a fitment factor of 1.8 or 1.9-and possibly even higher-may become more realistic once the final pay structure is recommended.
What Employees & Pensioners Should Watch For
Central government employees and pensioners are closely watching how these DA trends shape discussions around the 8th Pay Commission. The fitment factor will be a crucial determinant of new basic pay levels, which in turn influence pensions, allowances such as House Rent Allowance (HRA) and Transport Allowance, and overall take-home remuneration once the new pay structure is implemented.
Unions and employee organisations are also actively advocating for higher fitment factors based on both cumulative inflation adjustments and economic arguments. Some groups are pushing for figures well above the minimum mathematical baseline, citing the need to address lost DA hikes from the pandemic period and to ensure that salary revisions fully reflect rising living costs.

