In a development that has rippled waves through India’s salaried class, the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) brought back its “Higher Pension” choice. After years of legal wrangling and administrative uncertainty, it provides a way for a specific group of employees to link their pension contributions to the level of basic pay they actually receive rather than the longstanding statutory limit on wages.
The Employees’ Pension Scheme 1995 (EPS-95) has remained the bulwark for post retirement social security of private sector employees over last six decades. But for many, that “security” was small change because of a stiff cap on pensionable salary. With the 2026 reversion, the talk has turned from “How little will I get?” to “Am I eligible for more?”
Breaking the Ceiling: What Is Different?
For a long time since September 2014, the pensionable salary has been effectively capped at ₹15,000 per month by the EPFO. It also meant that even if an employee was paid ₹1.5 lakh, his or her pension would be calculated as though he or she had been paid a tenth of that — ₹15,000 — giving the retiree a maximum payout of about ₹7,500 every month.
The reintroduction in 2026 reverts to an earlier section which permits pay to be calculated on the actual basic salary plus Dearness Allowance (DA). This is not a wholesale distribution, but instead, it’s an about-turn of liabilities which were stripped away over fifteen years ago.
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The “Surprising” Shift in Calculation
Arguably the most important technical element of this 2026 revision is the pensionable salary average period. Although the benefit was always computed on an average of the final 60 months (5 years) of service, under this latest clarification — setting the IRS rules in line with recent court decisions — those eligible retirees whose last year’s earnings were higher than their 4-year average can have site specifics initially calculated on those higher base pay. This is because the majority of employees are at their highest earning in the years just prior to retirement, and this one change could increase an employee’s monthly pension benefit dramatically.
Who Stands to Benefit? (The “Yes” List)
The reinstatement is a win for certain groups of the workforce. If you find yourself among those groups, you may very well enjoy a substantial bump in your retirement years:
- Pre-2014 Entrants: Those who were covered under EPS -95 before September 1, 2014 and continued to be in service on or after that date.
- Opt-ins in the past: Members who had opted earlier for the “Joint option” to contribute on higher wages, but their requests were not responded or accepted by the EPFO in the past.
- So to summarize: Long serving veterans of 20+ years will benefit most because the “weightage (essentially two additional year added for pensionable service) will be added.
Who is Left Behind? (The “No” List)
Open door for whom? Although the 2026 reinstatement make headlines, it’s not an open door to everyone. Several groups remain excluded:
- For “New Joinees” (Post-Sept 2014): If you joined the pool of workforce and EPF scheme after September 1, 2014 with basic salary over ₹15,000 then under current rules, typically this higher pension option isn’t available to you.
- Low Wage Earners: If what you typically earn is already below ₹15,000 or at the cap then nothing changes for you with this modification.
- Early Exiters Those who left the scheme or retired before 1 September 2014, without taking an enhanced pension at that time.
- The “Lump Sum” Loyalist: To opt for the higher pension, a portion of your existing EPF (Provident Fund) corpus is credited to EPS (Pension) fund. Anyone who sticks to a preference for a large tax-free lump sum at retirement might not like this trade-off.

