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Belgium’s general prohibition on night work ended on 1 June 2026, fundamentally changing the compliance landscape for every employer that operates, or plans to operate, evening and overnight shifts. Night work in Belgium is defined as work performed between 20:00 and 06:00, and the abolition of the longstanding ban means employers now face an immediate set of decisions: whether to introduce night rosters, how to amend employment contracts or negotiate collective agreements, and what consultation steps must be completed with works councils and joint committees. This guide delivers the practical tools HR directors, general counsel and in‑house employment lawyers need, a step‑by‑step implementation checklist, model contract and collective‑agreement clauses, and a clear compliance timeline aligned with the 2026 reforms.
The abolition of night work Belgium’s employers have anticipated for years became effective on 1 June 2026, when the amended provisions of the Labour Act (Arbeidswet / Loi sur le travail) came into force following publication in the Moniteur Belge. Before this date, night work was prohibited as a general principle, with limited exceptions for sectors such as healthcare, hospitality and continuous‑process manufacturing. The 2026 reform removes that default prohibition entirely, replacing it with a permissive framework: employers across all sectors may now organise night work, provided they comply with specific procedural, health‑and‑safety, and consultation requirements.
The statutory definition of night work remains anchored to the 20:00–06:00 window. Special protections continue to apply to young workers (under 18) and pregnant or breastfeeding employees, for whom night work is either restricted or subject to mandatory medical clearance. Sectoral collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) may supplement or refine the new rules, industry observers expect several joint committees to adopt transitional provisions during the second half of 2026.
| Date | Reform or Event | Employer Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| 1 June 2026 | Abolition of general prohibition on night work; statutory redefinition confirmed (20:00–06:00) | Review existing contracts and work rules; draft night‑work policy; initiate consultation with works council or joint committee |
| Q3–Q4 2026 (sector‑dependent) | Sectoral CBAs may set phased implementation dates or additional premium requirements | Check applicable joint‑committee decisions; align employer policy with sectoral CBA timelines |
| Ongoing | Post‑implementation monitoring, reporting and enforcement inspections | Maintain working‑time records; audit pay and hours; update payroll systems for night‑shift premiums |
Understanding the working time rules Belgium employers must observe is essential before layering night‑shift rosters on top of existing schedules. The standard working week remains 38 hours, though sectoral CBAs may set a lower effective limit (for example, 37 hours in certain white‑collar sectors). Employers introducing night work must ensure that the total hours worked, including night hours, do not exceed the applicable weekly ceiling without triggering overtime obligations.
Daily working time may not exceed 8 hours as a default (or 9 hours where the work schedule is spread across fewer than 5 days per week), and every employee is entitled to a minimum of 11 consecutive hours of daily rest. A weekly rest period of at least 35 consecutive hours (including Sunday as a rule) must also be guaranteed. When night shifts bridge the transition between calendar days, employers need to track hours carefully to avoid inadvertently breaching daily or weekly rest thresholds.
The overtime rules Belgium applies remain in force after the 2026 reform. Any hours worked beyond the standard daily or weekly limits constitute overtime and generally require prior authorisation (either through a CBA, works‑council agreement or social‑inspectorate approval). Overtime attracts a statutory supplement of 50 % on regular working days and 100 % on Sundays and public holidays. For night work specifically, the overtime calculation starts from the moment night hours push total weekly hours above the 38‑hour (or CBA‑defined) threshold.
Worked example: An employee on a standard 38‑hour contract works five day shifts of 7.5 hours (37.5 hours) plus one 6‑hour night shift (22:00–04:00). Total weekly hours reach 43.5, meaning 5.5 hours qualify as overtime and attract at least a 50 % premium.
Night hours count as normal working time for the purposes of social‑security contributions and annual‑holiday accrual. Employers should confirm that payroll systems correctly categorise night hours so that holiday pay, calculated on the preceding year’s earnings, reflects any night‑shift premiums paid. The minimum weekly working time Belgium guarantees for part‑time employees (one‑third of a full‑time schedule, with a minimum of 3 hours per individual work period) also applies to night rosters, meaning employers cannot schedule isolated 2‑hour night stints for part‑time staff.
The employer obligations night work triggers extend well beyond contractual amendments. A structured compliance process protects both the workforce and the organisation from regulatory exposure.
Health and safety risk assessment. Before any employee begins night work, the employer must conduct, or update, a formal risk assessment under the Welzijnswet / Loi sur le bien‑être. The assessment should address fatigue‑related risks, workplace lighting, lone‑worker protocols (if applicable), ergonomic considerations for overnight tasks, and psychosocial risks associated with disrupted sleep patterns.
Occupational medicine. Employees assigned to night work must undergo a pre‑assignment medical examination by the employer’s external prevention service. Periodic health surveillance follows, typically on an annual basis, to monitor sleep disorders, cardiovascular indicators and mental‑health markers. The occupational physician may declare an employee temporarily or permanently unfit for night work, and the employer must then offer a reasonable daytime alternative.
Protected categories. Young workers under 18 remain subject to a near‑total prohibition on night work, with narrow exceptions for apprenticeships in specific sectors. Pregnant employees and those who are breastfeeding may not perform night work if their occupational physician advises against it, and employers must offer transfer to a day role or, if no day role is available, grant work‑incapacity leave.
Employers should verify that their occupational‑accident insurance (arbeidsongevallenverzekering) covers night‑time operations and that the policy reflects revised headcount projections. The external prevention service contract may also need to be renegotiated to include additional health‑surveillance slots for night workers.
The introduction of night work arrangements Belgium employers plan must pass through a formal consultation process. The specific body involved depends on the company’s size and sector.
In enterprises with 50 or more employees, the works council (ondernemingsraad / conseil d’entreprise) has competence over changes to work rules, and introducing night shifts inherently modifies those rules. Where no works council exists, the trade‑union delegation fulfils the consultation role. In the absence of both, the employer consults directly with employees but must follow the statutory posting‑and‑objection procedure for amending work rules.
Collective agreement night work provisions become mandatory where the relevant sectoral joint committee (paritair comité) has issued a CBA that conditions night work on enterprise‑level collective agreement. In such sectors, the employer cannot implement night shifts through individual contract amendments alone. Even where collective bargaining is not strictly mandatory, early indications suggest that negotiating a company‑level CBA offers the strongest legal foundation, reducing the risk of individual disputes and establishing uniform premium and scheduling terms.
The following items should feature on the consultation agenda presented to the works council or trade‑union delegation:
The employer should provide this information package to employee representatives at least 15 working days before the scheduled consultation meeting, allowing adequate time for review and counter‑proposals.
Moving from consultation to implementation requires precise contractual language. The model clauses below are designed as starting points, each should be tailored to the employer’s sector, applicable joint‑committee decisions and specific operational requirements.
Use this clause when amending an existing employment contract to include night‑work duties, with the employee’s individual written consent.
“The Parties agree that, with effect from [date], the Employee’s duties may include work performed during the night period (20:00–06:00) in accordance with the schedules set out in the Company’s work rules. The Employee acknowledges that this amendment has been entered into freely and confirms receipt of the updated work rules, including the applicable night‑shift premium and rest arrangements. The Employee retains the right to request reassignment to a daytime schedule, subject to the procedure set out in Article [X] of the work rules.”
Drafting note: Where individual consent cannot be obtained, the employer should pursue the collective‑agreement route (Model Clause B) rather than attempting unilateral contract modification, which carries significant litigation risk.
Use this clause in a company‑level CBA negotiated with the trade‑union delegation or concluded at sectoral joint‑committee level.
“Article [X], Night Work. 1. The Employer may organise work during the night period (20:00–06:00) for all functions identified in Annex [Y]. 2. Night‑shift schedules shall be communicated at least [7/14] calendar days in advance and shall comply with the daily and weekly rest periods prescribed by law. 3. Employees assigned to night work shall receive the night‑shift premium set out in Article [Z]. 4. An employee may request transfer to a daytime role; such request shall be assessed within [30] calendar days and may only be refused on objective operational grounds, communicated in writing.”
Use this clause (in the employment contract or CBA) to define the financial terms of night shift compensation Belgium employers must offer.
“For each hour of work performed between 20:00 and 06:00, the Employee shall receive a night‑shift premium of [X] % above the applicable gross hourly base rate. This premium is payable in addition to any overtime supplement that may be due under law or collective agreement. Where a shift straddles the 20:00 or 06:00 boundary, only the hours falling within the night period attract the premium.”
| Base Hourly Rate (€) | Premium (%) | Resulting Hourly Pay (€) |
|---|---|---|
| 18.00 | 15 % | 20.70 |
| 18.00 | 20 % | 21.60 |
| 18.00 | 30 % | 23.40 |
| 24.00 | 15 % | 27.60 |
| 24.00 | 20 % | 28.80 |
| 24.00 | 30 % | 31.20 |
Market practice across Belgian sectors currently ranges from 15 % to 30 %, with logistics and manufacturing at the higher end and professional‑services back‑office functions at the lower end. The likely practical effect of the 2026 reform will be increased competition for night workers, pushing premiums toward the upper end of that range in tight labour markets.
Use this clause to trial night work before committing to a permanent arrangement.
“The night‑work arrangements set out in this agreement shall apply on a pilot basis for a period of [3/6] months commencing [date]. At the end of the pilot period, the Employer and employee representatives shall conduct a joint review assessing operational efficiency, employee well‑being indicators, absenteeism data and compliance with rest‑period obligations. The Parties shall then decide whether to continue, modify or discontinue the night‑work arrangements.”
The checklist below covers the full implementation cycle, from initial legal review through to ongoing monitoring. Employers should adapt timelines to their size and sectoral CBA requirements.
Phase 1, Preparation (Days 0–30)
Phase 2, Consultation and Drafting (Days 30–90)
Phase 3, Launch and Ongoing Monitoring
Belgium’s social inspectorate (Toezicht op de Sociale Wetten / Contrôle des lois sociales) has the authority to inspect working‑time records, employment contracts and work rules without prior notice. Employers introducing night work should maintain the following records in readily accessible form:
Non‑compliance can result in administrative fines, criminal sanctions in serious cases, and orders to cease night operations until deficiencies are remedied. Industry observers expect enforcement activity to intensify during the first year of the new regime as the inspectorate tests employer readiness. A six‑monthly internal audit cycle, covering records, premiums, rest compliance and medical surveillance, is the recommended minimum.
The 2026 reform marks a historic shift in night work Belgium employers must now navigate with care. From risk assessments and works‑council consultations to contract drafting and payroll configuration, each step demands precision and proper documentation. Employers who act early, using structured checklists, legally sound model clauses and robust consultation processes, will be best positioned to capture the operational benefits of night‑shift flexibility while remaining fully compliant. For tailored guidance, consult a qualified Belgium labour and employment lawyer.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maxim Korthoudt at Bannister Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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