Agency
The government has increased the national wage bill by UGX 724.7 billion in the 2025/2026 financial year to support salary enhancements for selected public servants, including Chief Administrative Officers (CAOs), police and prison officers, and senior civil servants in local governments.
According to Circular Standing Instruction No. 01 of 2025 issued by the Ministry of Public Service, the enhancements—effective July 1, 2025—are part of a phased government plan to address persistent wage disparities in the public service.
The government continues to fulfill its commitment to enhancing the salaries of all public officers in a phased manner.
Accordingly, UGX 57 billion has been allocated for salary enhancement,” the circular states.
Under the revised salary structure, CAOs will now earn UGX 12.75 million, up from UGX 2.37 million, a more than fivefold increase.
Town Clerks of City Councils, Deputy Directors, Commissioners, Undersecretaries, and Foreign Service Officers (Grade I)—whose previous salaries ranged from UGX 1.86 million to UGX 2.08 million—have also been moved to the same UGX 12.75 million bracket.
Senior police and prison officers also received substantial raises.
Assistant Inspectors General of Police (AIGPs) and their prisons counterparts will now earn UGX 12.75 million, up from UGX 7–8.8 million.
Senior Commissioners and Commissioners have also been elevated to that bracket.
Assistant Commissioners’ salaries jumped from UGX 1.6 million to UGX 3.8 million, while Superintendents now earn UGX 2.05 million, up from UGX 990,000.
Police Constables saw more modest increases—from UGX 466,000 to UGX 583,000—while Special Constables rose from UGX 375,000 to UGX 469,000.
Public Service Minister Muruli Mukasa said the enhancements are part of a strategy launched in the 2018/2019 financial year, which has so far seen UGX 2.4 trillion invested in improving salaries, particularly in critical sectors.
The announcement comes amid ongoing concerns about wage disparities, particularly among non-science civil servants.
In recent months, secondary school arts teachers staged a strike demanding salary parity with science teachers.