Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) has reportedly introduced changes to its employee-compensation framework, restructuring how portions of variable pay are calculated and distributed. The move comes alongside the company’s annual appraisal cycle and broader salary revisions for employees in India.
According to reports, the revised structure alters the way performance-linked compensation is paid by separating it into different components. Parts of the payout that were earlier distributed quarterly have now reportedly shifted to an annual schedule, leading to changes in monthly take-home salaries for some employees.
Under the new framework, employee variable compensation has reportedly been divided into two categories. The first is a monthly performance-linked component that remains connected to attendance and deployment measures. The second is a performance bonus that may now be paid annually rather than every quarter.
Employees cited in reports indicated that while attendance continues to influence the monthly component, the annual bonus structure is not directly tied to office attendance requirements. Some employees also claimed that a portion of compensation previously received through quarterly payouts now appears to have moved into annual disbursement cycles.
The restructuring comes as TCS resumes its regular appraisal process after delays during the previous cycle. Salary increments have reportedly varied widely across performance groups. Employees in top performance categories are said to have received stronger hikes, while lower-rated categories saw comparatively modest increases.
The company has linked the compensation changes to preparations around India’s new labour codes and broader standardisation efforts across its workforce. TCS has stated that the revised salary structure is intended to support regulatory compliance while maintaining consistency and offering flexibility in employee compensation.
The development reflects a wider trend across the technology sector, where companies are reassessing compensation structures, tightening performance- management systems, and increasingly linking workplace attendance and productivity measures with employee rewards.



