India's provident fund framework is undergoing one of its biggest structural updates in decades with the notification of the Employees' Provident Funds Scheme, 2026, replacing the EPF Scheme of 1952 under the Code on Social Security, 2020. While most EPF rules remain unchanged, one provision could have a significant impact on both employers and employees earning above the statutory wage ceiling.
The biggest change is that EPF contributions on wages above ₹15,000 per month will no longer be mandatory. Instead, higher contributions will become voluntary and can continue only if both the employer and employee agree.
The change could reduce provident fund costs for companies while giving employees greater flexibility over their retirement savings and monthly take-home salary.
What Has Changed?
Under the earlier framework, many companies that enrolled employees earning above ₹15,000 continued calculating EPF contributions on the employee's actual basic salary, even though the statutory wage ceiling remained ₹15,000.
The new EPF Scheme changes that approach.
The mandatory contribution continues to be 12% of the statutory wage ceiling of ₹15,000, which works out to ₹1,800 each from the employee and employer every month. Any contribution beyond this amount will now be voluntary and will require mutual consent between both parties.
Why Companies Could Save Money
For employers, the amendment creates an opportunity to lower recurring salary costs.
Consider an employee with a basic salary of ₹60,000. Earlier, if the company contributed on the full basic salary:
Employer EPF contribution = ₹7,200 per month (12% of ₹60,000)
Under the new framework, if both employer and employee choose to restrict mandatory contributions: Employer contribution = ₹1,800 per month
That represents a potential saving of ₹5,400 per employee every month, or nearly ₹64,800 annually for that single employee.
For organisations with hundreds or thousands of employees contributing on actual salaries, the cumulative savings could be substantial.

What It Means For Employees
The impact depends largely on how an employer structures compensation.
Option 1: Continue Higher PF Contributions
If both parties agree, EPF contributions can continue on actual wages or at any mutually agreed higher level.
This helps employees accumulate a larger retirement corpus while continuing to benefit from tax-efficient long-term savings.
Option 2: Restrict Contributions To ₹15,000
If both sides choose to contribute only on the statutory ceiling:
Employee contribution remains ₹1,800
Employer contribution also remains ₹1,800
Employees who were previously contributing on higher salaries could see an increase in their monthly take-home pay.
However, the trade-off would be lower retirement savings over the long term.
Greater Flexibility Under The New Scheme
One of the notable features of the new framework is flexibility. Employees and employers can mutually decide whether to continue higher contributions or limit them to the statutory ceiling.
If higher voluntary contributions are being made, they can later be revised or discontinued through mutual agreement rather than continuing indefinitely.
What Has Not Changed?
Despite the headline change, many important EPF features remain intact. These include:
EPF contribution rate of 12%
Existing wage ceiling of ₹15,000
Universal Account Number (UAN)
Voluntary Provident Fund (VPF)
EPF interest mechanism
Employee Pension Scheme (EPS) structure
The government has clarified that the objective is to modernise the legal framework rather than fundamentally alter retirement benefits.
Should Employees Choose Higher Contributions?
The answer depends on individual financial goals.
Higher EPF contributions may be suitable for employees who:
Want a larger retirement corpus
Prefer low-risk long-term savings
Value guaranteed retirement discipline
Have sufficient monthly cash flow
Limiting contributions to the statutory ceiling may appeal to employees who:
Prefer higher take-home salary
Need greater liquidity
Invest independently through mutual funds or other assets
Are focused on short-term financial goals
What Employers Need To Consider
Although the rule provides an opportunity to reduce PF-related costs, employers may not immediately revise salary structures. Companies will need to evaluate:
Existing employment contracts
HR policies
Compensation structures
Employee expectations
Talent retention considerations
Many organisations may continue higher contributions as part of their employee benefits programme, particularly for senior professionals.
The Bottom Line
The new EPF rules do not reduce the statutory provident fund contribution. Instead, they change how contributions above the ₹15,000 wage ceiling are treated.
Companies may now save significantly if they limit contributions to the statutory ceiling, while employees earning above ₹15,000 will have to weigh an important trade-off: higher take-home salary today versus a larger retirement corpus tomorrow.
The amendment gives both employers and employees more flexibility, but the right choice will depend on individual financial planning, salary structures and long-term retirement objectives.




