France is transposing the EU Pay Transparency Directive (Directive (EU) 2023/970) into national law, and the 7 June 2026 deadline is now imminent. For HR directors, general counsel and employment lawyers France‑wide, the new rules impose mandatory salary‑range disclosure in job adverts, formal employee pay‑information rights and structured gender pay‑gap reporting, all of which demand immediate action on CSE consultations, union negotiations and internal pay‑data audits. This compliance playbook, prepared for labour lawyers France practitioners and the in‑house teams they advise, sets out every step employers must take, the documents they must produce and the sanctions they face for non‑compliance.
Directive (EU) 2023/970 on pay transparency was adopted on 10 May 2023 and entered into force on 6 June 2023. Its stated objective is to strengthen the application of the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value between men and women through pay transparency mechanisms and enforcement provisions. All EU Member States are required to transpose the Directive into national law by 7 June 2026, as confirmed by the French government’s official guidance on the Service‑public platform.
French labour law already contains gender‑equality mechanisms, notably the Index de l’égalité professionnelle (workplace gender‑equality index), but the Directive goes considerably further. It introduces pre‑employment salary disclosure, individual pay‑information request rights, mandatory joint pay assessments above certain thresholds, and a reversal of the burden of proof in pay‑discrimination disputes. The French preliminary draft law (avant‑projet de loi) transposing the Directive was circulated in early 2026, with key provisions reported by Capstan and Kliemt.blog. Certain implementation details, including the precise employer response timeframe for pay‑information requests, remain subject to decree (décret d’application).
Industry observers expect the final French text to build on the existing Index framework while adding new, stand‑alone obligations that mirror the Directive’s structure. Employers should not wait for every decree to be published: the Directive itself has direct effect on several core obligations from 7 June 2026, regardless of the progress of national transposition.
| Date | Event | Employer action required |
|---|---|---|
| 10 May 2023 | Directive (EU) 2023/970 adopted | Begin impact assessment and gap analysis |
| Early 2026 | French preliminary draft law (avant‑projet de loi) circulated | Review draft provisions; map to internal policies |
| 7 June 2026 | Transposition deadline, first phase of obligations applies to all EU employers | Salary‑band disclosure, pay‑information request procedures and CSE consultations must be operational |
| 7 June 2027 | First reporting deadline for employers with ≥ 250 employees (subject to French decree) | Submit gender pay‑gap report covering defined pay categories |
| 7 June 2031 | First reporting deadline for employers with 100–249 employees (subject to French decree) | Submit first gender pay‑gap report; thereafter report every three years |
The pay transparency law France employers must comply with applies broadly: the Directive covers all employers in the public and private sectors, regardless of size, for at least the core recruitment‑disclosure and individual pay‑information obligations. However, the more intensive reporting and joint pay assessment duties are staggered by workforce size. The scope of “pay” encompasses not only base salary but also variable and complementary components, bonuses, overtime rates, benefits in kind, allowances and any other consideration received directly or indirectly by the worker.
Applicants are explicitly covered: employers may not ask candidates about their current or historical pay. Instead, the employer must proactively provide the initial pay level or pay range for the advertised role. Current employees gain the right to request pay‑level and average‑pay information, broken down by sex and by category of workers performing the same work or work of equal value.
| Employer size | Obligations (summary) | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| < 50 employees | Salary‑band disclosure to candidates; respond to individual pay‑information requests; limited reporting obligations (subject to national law) | From 7 June 2026 for disclosure and information‑request duties; reporting obligations may be phased or exempted |
| 50–249 employees | All of the above, plus CSE consultation required on pay‑policy changes; increased documentation; joint pay assessment triggered if unjustified gap ≥ 5 % found (for employers with 100+ employees) | Phased per French transposition decrees; prepare by 7 June 2026 |
| ≥ 250 employees | Full reporting duties; mandatory joint pay assessments; formal remediation obligations; increased public reporting; CSE information‑consultation and union negotiation required | Earliest full reporting obligations; first report due by 7 June 2027 (subject to French decree) |
Salary range disclosure France‑wide is among the most immediately visible obligations. From 7 June 2026, employers must provide applicants with the initial pay or salary range for every advertised position, either in the job advertisement itself or, at the latest, before the first interview. The range must be based on objective, gender‑neutral criteria. Employers who currently publish only vague phrases such as “competitive remuneration” or “salary to be discussed” will need to overhaul their recruitment communications.
Designing defensible salary bands requires a structured methodology. The following approach reflects the best practices described by labour lawyers France practitioners advise on:
| Job family | Level | Band floor (gross annual, €) | Band midpoint (€) | Band ceiling (€) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marketing, Manager | M2 | 52 000 | 60 000 | 68 000 |
| Customer Service, Team Lead | P4 | 38 000 | 43 000 | 48 000 |
| Software Engineering, Senior | IC3 | 58 000 | 67 000 | 76 000 |
Example job‑ad text (management role): “Gross annual salary range for this position: €52 000 – €68 000, determined by experience, qualifications and internal levelling within our Marketing Manager job family. Additional variable compensation of up to 10 % of base salary may apply. Benefits include [list]. Salary placement within the range will be discussed during the recruitment process.”
Common pitfalls to avoid:
The introduction of salary‑band frameworks, new pay‑information procedures and any modification of the employer’s remuneration policy constitute a material change that triggers the CSE information‑consultation process under the French Labour Code. Experienced French labour lawyers consistently emphasise that getting the CSE process right is essential, procedural defects can delay implementation and expose the employer to legal challenge.
The employer must supply the CSE with a comprehensive evidence pack, delivered in advance of the consultation meeting with sufficient time for members to review. The recommended contents include:
Under the French Labour Code, the CSE must receive the documentation a minimum number of days before the consultation meeting, typically 15 calendar days for a standard consultation, although this may vary depending on the complexity of the subject and any applicable collective agreement provisions. Best practice is to allow at least three weeks and to offer a preliminary information session before the formal consultation meeting.
The recommended meeting agenda for a CSE consultation on pay transparency covers:
The CSE may request additional data, challenge the methodology or ask for an expert review (expertise). Employers should anticipate these scenarios and prepare detailed written responses. Under the French Labour Code, the CSE’s opinion is consultative, the employer is not bound to follow it, but failure to engage meaningfully with objections can be cited in subsequent litigation as evidence of procedural bad faith. All meeting minutes should be signed and retained for at least five years.
Where employees exercise their right to request individual pay‑information, the employer must respond within a timeframe to be defined by decree. Early indications suggest the French draft law requires the employer to remind employees annually of this right.
In companies with established union representation, the transposition of EU Directive 2023/970 creates a natural subject for collective bargaining. Trade‑union negotiation on pay transparency can shape several aspects of implementation, including the methodology for salary bands, the scope and frequency of pay audits, and the specific remediation measures for identified gaps, provided that negotiated terms do not fall below the minimum protections set by the Directive and French law.
Key strategic considerations for employers entering these negotiations include:
Industry observers expect that companies with a history of constructive social dialogue will find the transition smoother, and that a well‑negotiated agreement can provide a measure of legal comfort if the employer’s pay‑transparency framework is later challenged.
Gender pay‑gap reporting obligations under the Directive require covered employers to produce regular reports on pay gaps between male and female workers, broken down by category of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Where reporting reveals an unjustified gap of 5 % or more in any category that cannot be explained by objective, gender‑neutral criteria, a joint pay assessment must be conducted in cooperation with employee representatives.
Employers must maintain robust records to demonstrate compliance and to defend against potential claims. The minimum documentation set includes:
Where an unjustified gap is identified, the joint pay assessment must include a remediation plan. The plan should contain:
The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non‑compliance with pay transparency obligations. While the precise French sanctions framework is subject to the final transposition law and implementing decrees, the Directive itself sets a clear floor: employers must face real consequences for failures in disclosure, reporting and remediation.
| Breach type | Likely sanction | Mitigation strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Failure to disclose salary range in job adverts | Administrative fine; potential withdrawal of job postings by enforcement authority | Implement salary‑band disclosure immediately; audit all active job listings |
| Failure to respond to employee pay‑information request | Adverse inference in litigation; administrative penalty | Establish a documented response procedure with tracked deadlines |
| Failure to conduct joint pay assessment (where required) | Mandatory corrective order; increased fines; reputational exposure via public reporting | Proactively conduct pay audits before reporting deadlines; engage employee representatives early |
| Failure to remediate unjustified pay gaps | Individual employee claims (including back‑pay and damages); collective action by unions; administrative sanctions | Adopt and fund a written remediation plan; monitor and document progress |
| Procedural defect in CSE consultation | Suspension of implementation by court order; unfair labour practice claims | Follow CSE procedural checklist rigorously; retain all minutes and evidence |
A critical feature of the Directive is the reversal of the burden of proof: in pay‑discrimination claims, where an employee demonstrates facts that suggest a breach, it falls to the employer to prove that no direct or indirect discrimination occurred. This makes robust documentation not merely good practice but an essential litigation defence.
To support immediate compliance efforts, the following templates and tools are referenced throughout this guide. Employers and their labour lawyers France advisers should adapt each to their organisation’s size, sector and existing social‑dialogue structures:
With the 7 June 2026 deadline approaching, the following phased plan provides a structured path to compliance. Employment lawyers France‑wide are advising clients to treat this as a matter of immediate operational priority.
Employers who have not yet begun this process should seek specialist guidance without delay. The pay transparency France 2026 framework is not a future concern, it is a current compliance obligation that demands documented, defensible action now.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Henri Guyot at aerige, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 18 minutes ago
posted 40 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message