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CS Ruku Confirms Salary Increase for All Civil Servants from August 1

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All civil servants expecting salary increases this month will have to wait a little longer after the government moved the timeline for the pay increase by 16 days on Wednesday, July 16.

The pay rise that was to be affected from July 1 has now been moved to August 1 as announced by the Cabinet Secretary for the Ministry of Public Service, Human Capital Development and Special Programs, Geoffrey Ruku.

Speaking during a public function in Londiani, Kericho County, on July 15, CS Ruku confirmed that thousands of government workers across the country will soon see fatter paycheques.

“The pay increase will be increased, and the commute allowance will be increased from August 1, so that all the civil servants in the Republic of Kenya can be able to continue earning a salary increment in the Republic of Kenya,” stated CS Ruku.

He noted that the pay review had been directed by President William Ruto and that its rollout was now firmly on the calendar.

This means workers can expect a broader financial boost, rather than a small adjustment limited to their base pay alone. Ruku explained that the pay rise was actually announced back in January this year and had been backdated to July 2025.

“President William Ruto and his government are increasing the salaries of all public servants in July this year. It will be gross pay, housing allowance, and commuter allowance, which will be increased once more in July this year,” stated CS Ruhu.

Adding, “As we know, the pay increase was announced in January and was backdated to July 2025.”

This means that once the plan comes into effect, about 1,054,400 workers in the public service sector will be smiling all the way to the bank, including Teachers Service Commission (TSC) staff, county workers, and state corporation employees, and around 124,000 on permanent and pensionable terms, according to the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC).

Beyond the salary talk, the CS used the same forum to issue a fresh directive to all government institutions, reiterating his previous order of all government institutions to immediately migrate their payroll systems onto the government’s Human Resource Information System (HRIS) without further delay or else risk of salary nonpayment from the state.

This migration, he said, is meant to seal loopholes that have long allowed ghost workers to syphon public funds meant for genuine employees, a problem that the public service has long been suffering from-Kenyans.co.ke.

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