Federal civilian employees to receive pay hike, 2.7% on average

President Joe Biden signed an executive order on Wednesday that makes federal pay raises for many civilian employees effective in 2022. The raises go into effect on January 1st, or during the first pay period of the year.

A 2.7% federal pay raise ordered on an average. Some civilian employees, depending on where in the country they work, may receive slightly more based on their locality pay area, while some may technically see a slightly lower figure.

General Schedule employees will receive a 2.2 percent federal pay raise across the board in 2022, plus a 0.5 percent locality pay adjustment, for a total 2.7 percent average increase.

An official from the Office of Personnel Management confirmed the 2.7 percent federal pay increase to Federal News Network on Wednesday evening. The agency has yet to post detailed pay tables that describe pay rates for each locality pay area.

Biden announced plans in August to give civilian employees a 2.7 percent pay increase on average. Wednesday’s order was the last step the president must take to finalize pay adjustments of any kind for General Schedule employees.

Congress has, on a few occasions in recent years, broken away from the president’s plan and included its own federal pay raise proposal for civilian employees in an omnibus spending package at the end of the calendar year. But Congress hasn’t passed any spending bills for 2022 yet, and House and Senate Democrats indicated they would support Biden’s planned 2.7% federal pay raise even if they had managed to finish their appropriations work this year.

A 2.7% average federal pay raise is well above the 1% bump civilian employees received in 2021, but it falls below the 3.2% increase employees got back in 2020.

Those differences may seem especially noticeable this time after the Trump administration froze locality pay adjustments for 2021.

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