Order Code 97-1011 GOV
Updated March 29September 21, 2007
Salaries of Members of Congress: A List of
Payable Rates and Effective Dates, 1789-2007
Paul E. Dwyer
SpecialistIda A. Brudnick
Analyst in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Summary
Congress is required by Article I, Section 6, of the Constitution to determine its
own pay. Prior to 1969, Congress did so by enacting stand-alone legislation. From
1789 through 1968, Congress raised its pay 22 times using this procedure.
Congressional salaries initially were $1,500. By 1968, they had risen to $30,000.
Stand-alone legislation may still be used to raise Member pay, as it was most recently
in 1982, 1983, 1989, and 1991, but two other methods are now also available, an
— including an automatic annual
adjustment procedure and a commission process — are now also available.
Under the annual adjustment procedure, Members are scheduled to receive a 2.7%
increase in January 2008, unless modified by Congress, or limited by the rate of increase
in the base pay of General Schedule(GS) federal employees. Congress voted to deny the
scheduled January 2007 adjustment. Members last received a pay increase (1.9%) in
January 2006, increasing their salary to the current rate of $165,200.
Background
There are three basic ways to adjust Member pay.1 Stand-alone legislation has
frequently and primarily been used to raise Member pay throughout most of U.S. history,
1789 to the present. However, two other methods are also available.
The second method by which Member pay can be increased is pursuant to
recommendations from the President, based on those made by a quadrennial salary
commission. In 1967, Congress established the Commission on Executive, Legislative,
and Judicial Salaries to recommend salary increases for top-level federal officials
(P.L.
90-206). Three times (in 1969, 1977, and 1987) Congress received pay increases made
made under this procedure; on three occasions it did not. Effective with passage of the Ethics
Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (P.L. 101-194), the commission ceased to exist. Its authority was
1
This report was originally written by Paul E. Dwyer, formerly a Specialist in American National
Government at CRS, who has since retired.
CRS-2
was assumed by the Citizens’ Commission on Public Service and Compensation. Although
Although the first commission under the 1989 Act was to have convened in 1993, it did
not meet.
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The third method by which the salary of Members can be changed is by annual
adjustments. Prior to 1990, the pay of Members, and other top-level federal officials, was
tied to the annual comparability increases provided to General Schedule (GS) federal
employees. This procedure was established in 1975 (P.L. 94-82). Such increases were
recommended by the President, subject to congressional acceptance, disapproval, or
modification. Congress accepted five such increases for itself — in 1975, 1979 (partial),
1984, 1985, and 1987 — and declined 10 since this method was authorized (1976, 1977,
1978, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1988, and 1989).
The Ethics Reform Act of 1989 changed the method by which the annual adjustment
is determined for Members and other senior officials, based on a formula using changes
in private sector wages and salaries as measured by the Employment Cost Index. Under
this revised method, annual adjustments were accepted 11 times (those scheduled for
January 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006) and
denied six times (those scheduled for January 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, and 2007).2
The annual adjustment automatically goes into effect unless :
(1) Congress statutorily prohibits the adjustment;
(2) Congress statutorily revises the adjustment; or
(3) the annual base pay1pay3 adjustment of GS employees is established at a rate less
than than
the scheduled increase for Members, in which case Members would be
paid the
lower rate.24
Pending January 2008 Member Pay Increase of 2.7%
Under the annual pay adjustment procedure, Members are scheduled to receive a
2.7% increase in January 2008, based upon the formula mandated under the procedure.3
The scheduled increase may be adversely affected by two set forth in the Ethics Reform Act
of 1989.5 The scheduled Member increase may be affected by factors related to the
pending increase in the base pay of GS employees. First, the Member pay increase may
be lower since the rate of increase in the base pay of GS employees, also scheduled for
January 2008, is 2.5%.4 By law, Members may not receive an increase greater than the
1
Base pay is the pay rate before locality pay is added.
2
P.L. 103-356, 108 Stat. 3410-33411, Oct. 13, 1994.
3General Schedule (GS) employees.
By law, Members may not receive an increase greater than the increase in the base
pay of GS employees. The Member pay increase may be lower than 2.7% since the
scheduled January 2008 across-the-board increase in the base pay of GS employees under
2
For additional information on these adjustments, see CRS Report 97-615, Salaries of Members
of Congress: Congressional Votes, 1990-2007, by Ida A. Brudnick.
3
Base pay is the pay rate before locality pay is added.
4
P.L. 103-356, 108 Stat. 3410-33411, October 13, 1994.
5
The annual Member pay adjustment was determined by a formula using the Employment Cost
Index (private industry wages and salaries, not seasonally adjusted), based on the percentage
change reflected in the fourth quarter (ending December 31) of for the two preceding years, minus
0.5%.
The 2.7% adjustment was determined by taking the percentage increase in the Index
between the
quarters ending December 2005 and December 2006, which was 3.2%, and
subtracting 0.5%.
4
See CRS Report RL33732, Federal White-Collar Pay: FY2008 Salary Adjustments, by Barbara
Schwemle. The annual GS pay adjustment was determined by a formula using the Employment
Cost Index (private industry wages and salaries, not seasonally adjusted), based on the percentage
change reflected in the fourth quarter (ending September 31) of the two preceding years, minus
0.5%. The 2.5% adjustment was determined by taking the percentage increase in the Index
between the quarters ending September 2005 and September 2006, which was 3.0%, and
(continued...)
CRS-3
increase in the base pay of GS employees. If Congress does not modify the scheduled
2.5% GS base pay adjustment, and it becomes effective, Members will be limited to a
subtracting 0.5%.
CRS-3
the adjustment formula is 2.5%.6 A scheduled GS annual pay increase may be altered
only if the President issues an alternative plan or if Congress legislates a different
increase. If the scheduled 2.5% GS base pay adjustment becomes effective, Members will
be limited to a 2.5% increase, in lieu of the scheduled 2.7% increase.
Second, the Member pay increase may be less than 2.7% due to a proposal of the
PresidentThis limitation means that actions of both the President and Congress may affect
Member pay. The President indicated his preference for a 3.0% average increase in the
pay of GS employees. The President’s
recommendation, contained, in histhe FY2008 U.S. Budget,.7 This recommendation contains both
base and locality
pay increases. By law, the President’s proposal overrides the GS annual increase that is
dictated by the annual pay adjustment formula, unless Congress directs differently.
If Congress does not alter the President’s 3.0% proposal, the President will issue an
executive order allotting a percentage for base pay and a percentage for locality pay later
in 2007. Usually, the executive order is issued near the end of December.
How the President makes this allotment can have a direct impact on the amount of
the Member pay adjustment. As stated above, if the annual base pay adjustment for GS
employees is less than the scheduled Member increase, Members would be paid the lower
rate. The base pay component of the President’s pending 3.0% GS adjustment scheduled
for January 2008 most likely would be lower than the pending Member 2.7% increase.
The base pay component may be lower since 1.0% typically has been allocated for
locality pay in the past. In the case of a 3.0% adjustment, this would put the base pay
allotment at 2.0%, thereby limiting Members to a 2.0% increase.
It is possible, however, the President might make an exception to the customary
1.0% locality pay designation and allocate a lesser percentage for locality pay. For
example, a possible scenario might be an allocation by the President of 0.5% for locality
pay and 2.5% for base pay. In this case, Members would then receive a 2.5% increase.
Table 1 provides a history of the salaries of Members of Congress, 1789-2007. For
each salary rate, both the effective date and the statutory authority are indicated. From
1976 to 1983, the salary actually paid to Members was less than the salary to which
Members were entitled. This was so because Members were entitled to salaries
authorized pursuant to the annual comparability pay procedure (P.L. 94-82). However,
on several occasions Congress did not appropriate funds to pay any or some of the new
salary increases mandated by P.L. 94-82. Accordingly, the salaries shown in this table
are the payable rates, the salaries actually paid to Members of Congress.
4
(...continued)
subtracting 0.5%.
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Table 1. Salaries of Members of Congress, 1789-2007
Payable Salarya
Effective Date
Statutory Authority
$1,500b
March 4, 1789
1 Stat. 70-71
(September 22, 1789)
$1,500b
March 4, 1795
1 Stat. 70-71
(September 22, 1789)
$1,500b
March 3, 1796
1 Stat. 448
(March 10, 1796)
$1,500
December 4, 1815
3 Stat. 257
(March 19, 1816)
$1,500b
March 3, 1817
3 Stat. 345
(February 6, 1817)
$2,000b
March 3, 1817
3 Stat. 404
(January 22, 1818)
$3,000
December 3, 1855
11 Stat. 48
(August 16, 1856)
$3,000c
December 23, 1857
11 Stat. 367
(December 23, 1857)
$5,000
December 4, 1865
14 Stat. 323
(July 28, 1866)
$7,500
March 4, 1871
17 Stat. 486
(March 3, 1873)
$5,000
January 20, 1874
18 Stat. 4
(January 20, 1874)
$7,500
March 4, 1907
34 Stat. 993
(February 26, 1907)
$10,000
March 4, 1925
43 Stat. 1301
(March 4, 1925)
$9,000
July 1, 1932
47 Stat. 401
(June 30, 1932)
$8,500
April 1, 1933
48 Stat. 14
(March 20, 1933)
$9,000d
February 1, 1934
48 Stat. 521
(March 28, 1934)
$9,500
July 1, 1934
48 Stat. 521
(March 28, 1934)
$10,000
April 4, 1935
49 Stat. 24
(February 13, 1935)
$12,500
January 3, 1947
60 Stat. 850
(August 2, 1946)
$22,500
March 1, 1955
69 Stat. 11
(March 2, 1955)
$30,000
January 3, 1965
78 Stat. 415
(August 14, 1964)
$42,500
March 1, 1969
81 Stat. 642
(December 16, 1967)
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Payable Salarya
Effective Date
Statutory Authority
$44,600
October 1, 1975
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
$57,500
March 1, 1977
81 Stat. 642
(December 16, 1967)
$60,662.50
October 1, 1979
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
$69,800
December 18, 1982, for
Representatives;
July 1, 1983, for Senators
96 Stat. 1914
(December 21, 1982)
97 Stat. 338
(July 30, 1983)
$72,600
January 1, 1984
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
$75,100
January 1, 1985
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
$77,400
January 1, 1987
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
$89,500
February 4, 1987
81 Stat. 642
(December 16, 1967)
$96,600e
(Representatives)
February 1, 1990
103 Stat. 1767-1768
(November 30, 1989)
$98,400e
(Senators)
February 1, 1990
103 Stat. 1767-1768
(November 30, 1989)
$125,100
(Representatives)
January 1, 1991
103 Stat. 1768-1769
(November 30, 1989)
$101,900
(Senators)
January 1, 1991
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$125,100
(Senators)
August 14, 1991
105 Stat. 450
(August 14, 1991)
$129,500
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 1992
103 Stat.1769
(November 30, 1989)
$133,600
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 1993
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$136,700
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 1998
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$141,300
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2000
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$145,100
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2001
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$150,000
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2002
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$154,700
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2003
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$158,100
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2004
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
$162,100
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2005
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
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Payable Salarya
Effective Date
Statutory Authority
$165,200
(Reps. and Sens.)
January 1, 2006
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
a. From 1976 to 1983, the salary actually paid to Members was less than the salary to which Members were
entitled. This was so because Members were entitled to salaries authorized pursuant to the annual
comparability pay procedure (P.L. 94-82). However, on several occasions Congress did not
appropriate funds to pay any or some of the new salary increases mandated by P.L. 94-82.
Accordingly, the salaries shown in this table are the payable rates, the salaries actually paid to
Members of Congress.
b. Per diem rates have been converted to per annum rates based on a hypothetically possible 250-day
session. From 1789 to 1856, Senators and Representatives received a per diem pay rate while
Congress was in session, except for the period December 1815 — March 1817, when they received
$1,500 a year. First established at $6 a day in 1789 ($7 for Senators from March 4, 1795 — March
3, 1796), the per diem was raised to $8 in 1818 and remained there until 1856, when Members of
Congress were placed on annual salaries.
c. In 1857, Congress provided for pay at the rate of $250 per month while in session, or a maximum of
$3,000 per annum.
d. The act authorized the restoration of pay as of February 1, 1934, and the restoration of pay as of July
1, 1934.
e. The Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (103 Stat. 1767-1768) increased pay for Representatives and Senators
at different rates. The pay of Representatives was increased to reflect the previously denied 1989 and
1990 pay adjustments (4.1% and 3.6%), compounded at 7.9%, effective February 1, 1990. The act
further provided for a 25% increase in Representatives’ pay, effective January 1, 1991. As a result,
the pay of Representatives increased from $89,500 to $96,600 on February 1, 1990, and increased
to $125,100 pay increases. Under the Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act
(FEPCA) of 1990,8 the President has until September 1 of each year to issue an alternative
proposal for GS pay that uses a different percentage increase from the one based on
changes in the Employment Cost Index. The President did not issue an alternative plan
for the January 2008 annual pay adjustment.
Member pay may be affected if Congress alters the scheduled GS annual pay
increase. The Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act for
FY2008 (H.R. 2829), as passed by the House of Representatives on June 28, 2007, and
as reported to the Senate by the Committee on Appropriations on July 13, 2007, provides
a 3.5% average pay adjustment for federal civilian employees. If Congress retains this
provision and it is enacted into law, Member pay may be affected by the President’s
decision regarding the allocation of this increase between annual and locality pay. As
stated above, if the annual base pay adjustment for GS employees is less than the
scheduled Member increase, Members would be paid the lower rate. If 1.0% of this
increase is allocated for locality pay adjustments, for example, the Member pay increase
would then be limited to 2.5%. The President will issue an executive order authorizing
the percentage increases in annual and locality pay later in 2007.
Table 1 provides a history of the salaries of Members of Congress from 1789 through
2007 in current dollars. For each salary rate, both the effective date and the statutory
authority are provided. The salaries shown are the payable salaries, indicating the rate
actually paid to Members of Congress. From 1976 to 1983, the salary actually paid to
Members was less than the salary to which Members were entitled. The difference arose
because Members were entitled to salaries authorized pursuant to the annual pay
comparability procedure (P.L. 94-82). However, on several occasions Congress did not
appropriate funds to pay any or a portion of the new salary increases authorized by P.L.
94-82.
6
The annual GS pay adjustment was determined by a formula using the Employment Cost Index
(private industry wages and salaries, not seasonally adjusted), based on the percentage change
reflected in the quarter ending September 30 for the two preceding years, minus 0.5%. The 2.5%
adjustment was determined by taking the percentage increase in the Index between the quarters
ending September 2005 and September 2006, which was 3.0%, and subtracting 0.5%. For
additional information, see CRS Report RL33732, Federal White-Collar Pay: FY2008 Salary
Adjustments, by Barbara Schwemle.
7
U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the
United States Government Fiscal Year 2008; Analytical Perspectives (Washington: GPO,
2006), p. 168.
8
P.L. 101-509, Nov. 5, 1990, 104 Stat. 1427.
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Table 1. Salaries of Members of Congress, 1789-2007
Payable Salary
(Current Dollars)a
Effective Date
Statutory Authority
$6 per diemb
March 4, 1789
1 Stat. 70-71
(September 22, 1789)
March 4, 1795
1 Stat. 70-71
(September 22, 1789)
March 3, 1796
1 Stat. 448
(March 10, 1796)
December 4, 1815
3 Stat. 257
(March 19, 1816)
March 3, 1817
3 Stat. 345
(February 6, 1817)
March 3, 1817
3 Stat. 404
(January 22, 1818)
$6 per diem
(Representatives)
$7 per diem
(Senators)b
$6 per diem
(Representatives and
Senators)b
$1,500
$6 per diem
(Representatives)
$7 per diem
(Senators)b
$6 per diem
(Representatives and
Senators)b
$3,000
December 3, 1855
$3,000c
December 23, 1857
$5,000
December 4, 1865
$7,500
March 4, 1871
$5,000
January 20, 1874
$7,500
March 4, 1907
$10,000
March 4, 1925
$9,000
July 1, 1932
$8,500
April 1, 1933
$9,000d
February 1, 1934
$9,500
July 1, 1934
$10,000
April 4, 1935
$12,500
January 3, 1947
11 Stat. 48
(August 16, 1856)
11 Stat. 367
(December 23, 1857)
14 Stat. 323
(July 28, 1866)
17 Stat. 486
(March 3, 1873)
18 Stat. 4
(January 20, 1874)
34 Stat. 993
(February 26, 1907)
43 Stat. 1301
(March 4, 1925)
47 Stat. 401
(June 30, 1932)
48 Stat. 14
(March 20, 1933)
48 Stat. 521
(March 28, 1934)
48 Stat. 521
(March 28, 1934)
49 Stat. 24
(February 13, 1935)
60 Stat. 850
(August 2, 1946)
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Payable Salary
(Current Dollars)a
Effective Date
$22,500
March 1, 1955
$30,000
January 3, 1965
$42,500
March 1, 1969
$44,600
October 1, 1975
$57,500
March 1, 1977
$60,662.50
October 1, 1979
$69,800
December 18, 1982
(Representatives)
July 1, 1983
(Senators)
$72,600
January 1, 1984
$75,100
January 1, 1985
$77,400
January 1, 1987
$89,500
February 4, 1987
$96,600e
(Representatives)
$98,400e
(Senators)
$125,100
(Representatives)
$101,900
(Senators)
$125,100
(Senators)
$129,500
(Reps. and Sens.)
$133,600
(Reps. and Sens.)
$136,700
(Reps. and Sens.)
$141,300
(Reps. and Sens.)
$145,100
(Reps. and Sens.)
$150,000
(Reps. and Sens.)
February 1, 1990
February 1, 1990
January 1, 1991
January 1, 1991
August 14, 1991
January 1, 1992
January 1, 1993
January 1, 1998
January 1, 2000
January 1, 2001
January 1, 2002
Statutory Authority
69 Stat. 11
(March 2, 1955)
78 Stat. 415
(August 14, 1964)
81 Stat. 642
(December 16, 1967)
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
81 Stat. 642
(December 16, 1967)
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
96 Stat. 1914
(December 21, 1982)
97 Stat. 338
(July 30, 1983)
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
89 Stat. 421
(August 9, 1975)
81 Stat. 642
(December 16, 1967)
103 Stat. 1767-1768
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1767-1768
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1768-1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
105 Stat. 450
(August 14, 1991)
103 Stat.1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
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Payable Salary
(Current Dollars)a
$154,700
(Reps. and Sens.)
$158,100
(Reps. and Sens.)
$162,100
(Reps. and Sens.)
$165,200
(Reps. and Sens.)
Effective Date
January 1, 2003
January 1, 2004
January 1, 2005
January 1, 2006
Statutory Authority
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
103 Stat. 1769
(November 30, 1989)
Notes:
a. From 1976 to 1983, the salary actually paid to Members was less than the salary to which Members were
entitled. The difference arose because Members were entitled to salaries authorized pursuant to the
annual pay comparability procedure (P.L. 94-82). However, on several occasions Congress did not
appropriate funds to pay any or part of the new salary increases authorized by P.L. 94-82.
Accordingly, the salaries shown in this table are the payable rates, indicating the salaries actually paid
to Members of Congress.
b. From 1789 to 1856, Senators and Representatives received a per diem pay rate for their attendance while
Congress was in session, except for the period December 1815 — March 1817, when they received
$1,500 a year. First established at $6 a day in 1789 for Senators and Representatives, the per diem
for Senators was increased to $7 beginning March 4, 1795, pursuant to language in the 1789 act. A
March 10, 1796, act returned the per diem for Senators to $6 for each day of attendance while the
Senate was in session. Although a law providing for annual salaries was enacted during the 14th
Congress, it was repealed on February 6, 1817, and pay reverted to a per diem basis. The per diem
rate was raised to $8 in 1818 (retroactive to March 3, 1817) and remained there until 1856, when
Members of Congress began to receive annual salaries. A list of all sessions dates and lengths is
available at [http://clerk.house.gov/art_history/house_history/Session_Dates/sessionsAll.html].
c. In 1857, Congress provided for pay at the rate of $250 per month while in session, or a maximum of
$3,000 per annum.
d. The act authorized the restoration of pay as of February 1, 1934, and the restoration of pay as of July 1,
1934.
e. The Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (103 Stat. 1767-1768) increased pay for Representatives and Senators
at different rates.
The pay of Representatives was increased to reflect the previously denied 1989 and 1990 pay
adjustments (4.1% and 3.6%), compounded at 7.9%, effective February 1, 1990. The act further
provided for a 25% increase in Representatives’ pay, effective January 1, 1991. As a result, the pay
of Representatives increased from $89,500 to $96,600 on February 1, 1990, and increased to $125,100
on January 1, 1991.
The pay of Senators was increased to reflect the previously denied 1988, 1989, and 1990
comparability pay adjustments (2%, 4.1%, and 3.6%), compounded at 9.9%, effective February 1,
1990. As a result, the pay of Senators increased from $89,500 to $98,400 on February 1, 1990. The
Ethics Act did not provide for any other pay increase for Senators, as it did in providing a 25%
increase for Representatives. The reason is that Senators elected to deny themselves the 25%
increase increase
while retaining the ability to receive honoraria. Subsequently, the Senate voted to increase
its pay rate
to that of Representatives and to prohibit receipt of honoraria by Senators, effective
August 14, 1991.
As a result, Senate pay increased from $101,900 to $125,100 per annum.