EPF wage ceiling raised to ₹25,000 effective July 2026: contribution math and employer cost impact
By Tejaswi Pandya & Ishita Chatterjee · · Payroll
The Employees Provident Fund Organisation issued Notification GSR 304(E) dated May 20, 2026 raising the wage ceiling for mandatory EPF coverage from ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per month, effective July 1, 2026. This is the first revision of the EPF wage ceiling since 2014, and it brings approximately 12-15 million additional workers within the EPF coverage perimeter.
The mandatory coverage ceiling rises from ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per month basic wages from July 1, 2026. For new joiners across all EPF-covered establishments, the enrolment threshold check now applies up to ₹25,000 basic wages. The Section 6 wage definition rules established by the Vivekananda Vidyamandir Supreme Court ruling continue to apply: basic wages must include all emoluments paid universally, necessarily, and ordinarily to all employees, including special allowance, fixed dearness allowance, and retention allowance.
The contribution math at the new ceiling produces a per-employee cost materially higher than the previous ceiling. For a new joiner with ₹25,000 basic wages, employer EPF contribution is 12 percent equal to ₹3,000 per month, of which ₹2,083 flows to EPS (8.33 percent of ₹25,000) and ₹917 to EPF. Employer also pays 0.5 percent EPF admin charges (₹125) and 0.5 percent EDLI premium (₹125). Total employer EPF cost per new joiner at the ceiling is ₹3,250 per month, or ₹39,000 annually. Additional cost compared to old ceiling is ₹13,000 per employee per year.
The employee-side contribution at the new ceiling is 12 percent of basic wages equal to ₹3,000 per month, which flows entirely to the employee EPF account. The take-home pay reduction for employees at the new ceiling is ₹3,000 per month compared to a wage-ceiling-exempted regime, which has implications for collective wage negotiations in sectors with concentrated workforce in this salary band.
The EPS pension wage ceiling also rises to ₹25,000 from July 1, 2026. The pension formula under Paragraph 12 of the EPS Scheme is (pensionable salary × pensionable service years) / 70. At the new ceiling, an employee with 35 years of pensionable service can receive a pension of ₹12,500 per month, against ₹7,500 at the old ceiling. The catch-up provision for existing pensioners is not part of the notification.
The transition framework for existing exempted employees is specifically addressed in the notification. Employees who joined when their basic wages exceeded ₹15,000 and who were excluded from EPF on that basis through Form 11 declaration can choose to opt in under the new ceiling if their current basic wages are at or below ₹25,000. The opt-in requires a fresh Form 11 declaration and employer concurrence.
KAMRIT's payroll and labour compliance desk handles EPF wage ceiling transition including the new joiner enrolment workflow, the opt-in administration for existing employees, and the employer cost impact modelling.
Co-Author - Ishita Chatterjee, Associate, Corporate Compliance
Frequently asked
What changes from July 1, 2026 under the new ceiling?
The mandatory EPF coverage ceiling rises from ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 per month basic wages. New joiners earning basic wages up to ₹25,000 must be enrolled in EPF. Existing employees with basic wages between ₹15,000 and ₹25,000 who were earlier exempted continue to be exempted unless they opt in. The EPS pension wage ceiling also rises to ₹25,000.
What is the employer cost impact?
For a new joiner with ₹25,000 basic wages, employer EPF contribution is 12% = ₹3,000 per month. Plus 0.5% EPF admin (₹125) and 0.5% EDLI premium (₹125). Total employer EPF cost per new joiner at the ceiling: ₹3,250 per month, or ₹39,000 annually. Additional cost vs old ceiling is ₹13,000 per employee per year.
How does the transition work for existing exempted employees?
Employees who joined when their basic wages were above ₹15,000 and were excluded from EPF can choose to opt in if their current basic wages are at or below ₹25,000. Opt-in requires a fresh Form 11 declaration and employer concurrence. The employer cannot force opt-in. Employees with current basic wages above ₹25,000 remain exempted unless they specifically choose to be covered.
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