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eu pay transparency directive 2026 employers

The EU Pay Transparency Directive in 2026: What Employers Must Do Now the Deadline Has Passed

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The EU Pay Transparency Directive transposition deadline passed on 7 June 2026, and the obligations it creates for employers across the European Union are now live. For businesses operating in Italy and other Member States, the shift from preparation to compliance is immediate: pay-range disclosure in recruitment, a ban on salary-history questions, gender pay-gap reporting for larger employers, and the right of every worker to request pay information for comparable roles. This guide provides a practical, Italy-focused summary of what the EU pay transparency directive 2026 employers must do, covering reporting thresholds, recruitment changes, joint pay assessments, cross-border coordination and a step-by-step action checklist for HR and legal teams.

Whether you are an in-house counsel at a multinational with Italian operations, an HR director updating hiring processes, or an employment adviser guiding clients through national transposition, the sections below translate the Directive’s requirements into concrete, auditable actions.

What the EU Pay Transparency Directive Requires, the Minimum Standard for Employers

Core Obligations at a Glance

The Directive (Directive (EU) 2023/970) establishes a floor of obligations that every Member State must implement, though national laws may go further. According to the European Commission’s official summary, the rules aim to increase pay transparency, enforce the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value, and improve access to justice for victims of pay discrimination. The core employer obligations are:

  • Pay-range disclosure in recruitment. Every job posting must include a salary range or a reference to the applicable pay scale, ensuring candidates can negotiate from an informed position before the job interview or at the point of offer.
  • Ban on pay-history questions. Employers may not ask candidates about their current or previous remuneration at any stage of the recruitment process.
  • Gender pay-gap reporting. Employers above specified employee thresholds must periodically report detailed gender pay-gap data to a designated national authority.
  • Employee right to pay information. Any worker can request, and must receive, information on average pay levels, broken down by sex, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value.
  • Joint pay assessment. Where reporting reveals an unexplained gender pay gap of 5 % or more in any category of workers, the employer must conduct a joint pay assessment with worker representatives.
  • Enforcement and remedies. Member States must provide effective penalties, compensation mechanisms and a shifted burden of proof in equal-pay disputes.

Legal Basis and Timeline

The Directive was adopted by the European Parliament and the Council in 2023 and published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Under its terms, all EU Member States were required to transpose its provisions into national law by 7 June 2026. The European Commission confirmed this deadline in its explanatory press release of 5 June 2026. As the Council of the EU’s policy page notes, EU companies are now required to share information on salaries and take action if their gender pay gap exceeds 5 %. The Directive does not replace existing national equal-pay legislation, it supplements it, setting a higher common floor across the single market.

Who, When and What to Report, Thresholds and Timelines for EU Pay Transparency Directive 2026 Employers

One of the most operationally demanding elements of the Directive is the phased introduction of gender pay-gap reporting. According to the EY implementation guide and the Ius Laboris country-by-country tracker, the Directive establishes minimum thresholds linked to employer size, but individual Member States may adopt stricter timelines or lower thresholds in their national transpositions. The table below summarises the Directive’s baseline framework.

Employer Size First Reporting Period (Directive Baseline) Key Reporting Features
250+ employees 2027 (annually thereafter) Full gender pay-gap report: mean and median pay gap, gap in variable pay (bonuses), pay distribution by quartile, gap by occupational category. Annual reporting cycle.
150–249 employees 2027 (every three years thereafter) Same data points as 250+ but on a three-year cycle. Some Member States may require annual reporting, confirm under national law.
100–149 employees 2031 (every three years thereafter) Same metrics, phased entry. Member States may bring this date forward.
Fewer than 100 employees No mandatory reporting under the Directive (Member States may opt in) No formal gap-reporting obligation under the Directive, but pay-range disclosure, pay-history ban and employee information rights still apply in full.

Data Points Required in Reports

The Directive specifies a minimum dataset that employers must compile and submit to the relevant national monitoring body. Industry observers expect that many employers will need to overhaul their payroll and HRIS systems to extract these data accurately. Required metrics include:

  • Mean and median gender pay gap across the entire workforce.
  • Mean and median gender pay gap in complementary or variable components (bonuses, allowances, benefits in kind).
  • Proportion of female and male workers in each pay quartile.
  • Gender pay gap by occupational category using objective, gender-neutral job evaluation or classification criteria.

Employers must ensure that data is disaggregated using consistent occupational categories. Where a national collective bargaining agreement or statutory job-classification system exists, as is common in Italy, that framework typically serves as the reference point. Employers without such a framework must develop their own gender-neutral job-evaluation methodology.

Pay Transparency in Recruitment, What HR Must Change

Pay-Range Disclosure in Job Adverts and Offers

Under the Directive, employers must provide applicants with information about pay or pay ranges in a manner that ensures a transparent and informed negotiation on pay prior to the job interview or otherwise before the employment relationship begins. According to Papaya Global’s implementation analysis, from 7 June 2026 every job posting must include a salary range or a reference to the applicable pay scale. For employers operating in Italy, this means that every advertisement, whether published on the company’s career page, on third-party job boards or through recruitment agencies, must now contain a clear indication of the starting salary or its range.

Ban on Asking Pay History

The ban on pay-history questions is one of the Directive’s most immediately visible changes to the recruitment process. Employers may no longer ask candidates, directly or through intermediaries, about their salary, bonus or benefits package in their current or any previous employment. This prohibition extends to application forms, interview scripts, reference-check templates and any communication by external recruiters acting on the employer’s behalf.

Practical compliance requires a systematic audit of every touchpoint in the hiring funnel:

  • Application forms. Remove any field requesting current or past salary details.
  • Interview guides. Replace pay-history questions with questions about salary expectations within the disclosed range.
  • Recruiter briefing packs. Update agency agreements and search mandates to expressly prohibit pay-history enquiries.
  • ATS (Applicant Tracking System) configuration. Disable or remove salary-history data fields; add mandatory pay-range fields to vacancy templates.
  • Careers pages. Ensure every listed vacancy displays the applicable pay range or pay-scale reference.

Equal Pay for Equal Work or Work of Equal Value, Tests and Evidence

Applying the Test in Practice

The Directive reinforces the Treaty principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value. To comply, employers must be able to demonstrate, using objective, gender-neutral criteria, how they determine pay for each role and why any differences between male and female workers in comparable positions are justified. The practical starting point is a robust job-evaluation or job-architecture exercise that maps every role against criteria such as skill requirements, effort, responsibility and working conditions.

In Italy, many employers already operate within sector-specific collective bargaining frameworks (contratti collettivi nazionali di lavoro, or CCNLs) that classify roles into levels and pay bands. These frameworks provide a useful foundation, but the Directive requires employers to go further: they must verify that the classification criteria themselves are gender-neutral and that actual pay, including variable components, does not diverge unjustifiably from the classification structure.

Documenting Objective Justifications

Where pay differences exist between men and women performing the same work or work of equal value, the employer bears the burden of demonstrating that the difference is attributable to objective, gender-neutral factors. Commonly cited justifications include seniority, individual performance metrics, market-rate adjustments and specific professional qualifications. The likely practical effect will be that employers need to maintain contemporaneous documentation, rather than retroactive rationalisations, for every pay-setting decision. A defensible record should include:

  • Job evaluation records showing how each role is scored against gender-neutral criteria.
  • Individual pay-setting memos recording the factors considered at hire and at each salary review.
  • Market-benchmarking data used to justify any market-premium adjustments.
  • Performance and progression records linked to clear, measurable objectives.

Joint Pay Assessments, Triggers, Process and Practical Steps

What Triggers a Joint Pay Assessment

The joint pay assessment process is triggered when an employer’s gender pay-gap report reveals an unexplained pay gap of 5 % or more in any category of workers performing the same work or work of equal value, and the employer cannot justify that gap on the basis of objective, gender-neutral criteria. This 5 % threshold is established by the Directive itself and confirmed by the Council of the EU’s policy summary.

How the Assessment Is Conducted

Once triggered, the employer must carry out the assessment in cooperation with worker representatives. The joint pay assessment process typically involves the following stages:

  1. Data assembly. Compile detailed pay data for the affected worker categories, broken down by sex, including base salary, variable pay, allowances and benefits in kind.
  2. Root-cause analysis. Identify and evaluate the reasons for the pay gap, structural (e.g., occupational segregation within the category), individual (e.g., seniority, qualifications) or procedural (e.g., discretionary pay decisions lacking documentation).
  3. Worker-representative engagement. Share findings with the relevant employee representatives, trade union delegates or works council and invite their analysis and proposals.
  4. Remediation plan. Develop a time-bound action plan to close unjustified gaps, specifying measures such as pay adjustments, revised pay-setting guidelines, targeted recruitment or promotion initiatives.
  5. Monitoring and reporting. Implement the plan and report on progress in the next reporting cycle.

Outcomes and Remedial Measures

Industry observers expect that joint pay assessments will become a significant driver of pay-equity adjustments across the EU. Employers that complete the process transparently and implement measurable corrective action are better positioned to defend against individual or collective equal-pay claims. Failure to conduct the assessment when triggered, or to engage meaningfully with worker representatives, may itself constitute a breach of national implementing legislation and expose the employer to penalties.

National Transposition Snapshot, Italy, France, Poland, Germany and Others

The Directive required all Member States to transpose its provisions by 7 June 2026. As the Ius Laboris implementation tracker documents, the pace and detail of transposition varied significantly. Only a small number of countries met the deadline in full. The table below provides a high-level snapshot.

Country Transposition Status (as at June 2026) Key National Differences for Employers
Italy Transposition legislation adopted; builds on existing equal-pay and gender-reporting framework (including Law No. 162/2021 on gender certification) Pay transparency directive implementation Italy integrates with existing CCNL classification systems. Gender-gap reporting threshold and frequency aligned with Directive minimums; existing gender-equality certification scheme may interact with new reporting obligations. Employers should verify alignment with Ministry of Labour guidance.
Germany Transposition enacted, expanding the existing Entgelttransparenzgesetz (Pay Transparency Act) Pre-existing employee right to pay information (for employers with 200+ workers) extended; reporting thresholds lowered to align with Directive. Works council (Betriebsrat) involvement in joint pay assessments is mandatory.
France Implementing legislation adopted, complementing the existing Index de l’égalité professionnelle France’s professional equality index (75-point minimum score) pre-dates the Directive. Transposition adds pay-range disclosure in recruitment and strengthens sanctions for non-compliance with reporting.
Poland Draft legislation advanced but full transposition pending at deadline Limited pre-existing pay-transparency framework. Employers should monitor legislative progress and prepare for accelerated implementation once the law is enacted.
Other EU Member States Mixed, early indications suggest only a small number met the 7 June 2026 deadline in full Multinational employers must track transposition status in every jurisdiction of operation. National thresholds, reporting frequencies and enforcement mechanisms vary.

For employers with Italian operations, the intersection of the Directive with Italy’s existing gender-equality certification (Certificazione della parità di genere) and sector-specific collective agreements creates both complexity and opportunity. Organisations that have already pursued gender-equality certification hold a compliance head start, but must still ensure their reporting and recruitment practices meet the Directive’s specific requirements.

Cross-Border Compliance: Building a Flexible Single Framework

Principles for a Common Approach

Multinational employers operating across several EU Member States face the challenge of complying with a patchwork of national transpositions while maintaining consistent internal standards. The most effective approach is to build a single pay-transparency framework at group level that accommodates local variations through modular components. This means establishing:

  • A unified data model that captures pay information in a consistent format across all jurisdictions, enabling both group-level analysis and country-specific reporting.
  • Common policy templates for recruitment (pay-range disclosure, pay-history ban) that can be localised with jurisdiction-specific language and legal references.
  • Local legal checklists, maintained by each country’s HR or legal lead, that map the group framework to national requirements and flag any deviations.

Governance Model

Early indications suggest that employers with clear governance structures are implementing the Directive more efficiently. A practical governance model for cross-border pay transparency compliance includes three roles: a central policy owner (typically the group head of compensation and benefits or group employment counsel), a local HR/legal lead in each Member State responsible for transposition monitoring and national reporting, and a data-privacy liaison who ensures that pay-data collection, storage and reporting comply with GDPR and any additional national data-protection requirements.

Employee Pay Information Requests, Data Governance and Response Template

What Employees Can Request

The Directive grants every worker the right to request and receive written information on their individual pay level and on the average pay levels, broken down by sex, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Employers must respond within a reasonable timeframe, typically specified by national law, but the Directive sets a maximum of two months. The information must be provided in writing and in an accessible format.

Responding Compliantly, Checklist and Privacy Safeguards

Handling pay-information requests requires balancing transparency with data protection. The GDPR applies to all personal data processing involved, including the aggregation and anonymisation of pay data. A compliant response process should follow this checklist:

  • Log the request. Record the date received, the employee’s name and the specific information requested.
  • Identify the comparator group. Determine which roles constitute “the same work or work of equal value” using the employer’s job-evaluation framework.
  • Extract and aggregate data. Calculate average pay levels for the comparator group, broken down by sex. Ensure individual employees cannot be identified from the aggregate data, where the comparator group is very small, apply statistical disclosure controls or explain why individual-level data cannot be provided.
  • Draft the response letter. Provide the requested information in clear, non-technical language. Include a reference to the legal basis under which the data is provided and a brief explanation of the methodology used.
  • Deliver within the deadline. Ensure the written response reaches the employee within the timeframe specified by national law (and in any event within two months).
  • Retain a copy. Keep a record of the request and the response for the period specified by applicable data-retention rules.

Liability, Enforcement and Practical Risk Mitigation for EU Pay Transparency Directive 2026 Employers

The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non-compliance. Enforcement mechanisms vary by jurisdiction but may include administrative fines, orders to disclose information, injunctions requiring pay adjustments and, critically, a shifted burden of proof in equal-pay litigation. Under the Directive, where an employer has failed to comply with its transparency obligations, it is for the employer to prove that there has been no discrimination in relation to pay.

Practical risk mitigation steps for employers include:

  • Conduct a pay-equity audit now. Identify and address unjustifiable pay gaps before they appear in mandatory reports or are surfaced by employee requests.
  • Document every pay decision. Maintain contemporaneous records of the objective factors considered when setting, adjusting or reviewing pay.
  • Train hiring managers and recruiters. Ensure everyone involved in recruitment understands the pay-history ban and the pay-range disclosure requirement.
  • Engage worker representatives early. Where joint pay assessments are likely, proactive engagement reduces adversarial risk and accelerates resolution.
  • Monitor national enforcement developments. Penalty regimes and enforcement intensity will evolve as national authorities gain experience; designate a compliance lead to track developments in each jurisdiction.

Action Checklist for HR and Legal, 12-Step Compliance Plan

The following implementation plan organises compliance actions into three phases. Employers that have not yet begun should treat the immediate phase as urgent.

Immediate (0–30 days)

  1. Confirm the transposition status and specific requirements in every EU Member State where you employ staff.
  2. Remove all salary-history questions from application forms, interview scripts and recruiter briefing packs.
  3. Add pay-range or pay-scale references to all active job postings.
  4. Designate a central compliance owner and local leads for each Member State.

Short-term (30–90 days)

  1. Audit your job-evaluation or job-architecture framework for gender neutrality and completeness.
  2. Map payroll and HRIS data fields to the Directive’s mandatory reporting metrics.
  3. Build or update an employee pay-information request response process, including templates and GDPR safeguards.
  4. Train HR teams, hiring managers and external recruiters on the new requirements.

Medium-term (3–9 months)

  1. Run a preliminary gender pay-gap analysis using the Directive’s metrics; identify gaps exceeding 5 % and begin root-cause analysis.
  2. Prepare the first gender pay-gap report for submission within the applicable national reporting window.
  3. Where gaps exceed 5 %, initiate joint pay assessment discussions with worker representatives.
  4. Establish an ongoing monitoring calendar aligned with national reporting deadlines and review cycles.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stefanie Lebek at DM&P Legal&Tax, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Resources, Templates and Further Reading

Employers seeking the full text of the Directive and official guidance should consult the sources listed below. For jurisdiction-specific advice on pay transparency directive implementation Italy, including alignment with Italian collective agreements and the gender-equality certification scheme, consult a qualified employment law adviser with Italian practice experience.

Sources

  1. European Commission, New EU rules on pay transparency explained
  2. Council of the EU, Pay transparency in the EU
  3. Ius Laboris, EU Pay Transparency Directive: which countries have implemented
  4. EY, How to prepare for the EU Pay Transparency Directive
  5. Littler Mendelson, The EU Pay Transparency Directive
  6. WTW, Pay Transparency Legislation
  7. Papaya Global, EU Pay Transparency Directive

FAQs

What is the effective date of the EU Pay Transparency Directive?
The transposition deadline was 7 June 2026. From that date, all EU Member States were required to have national legislation in place implementing the Directive’s provisions. Employers in Member States that met the deadline are subject to the new obligations immediately. In Member States where transposition is still pending, employers should prepare for imminent implementation.
Under the Directive’s baseline framework, employers with 250 or more employees must report annually beginning in 2027. Employers with 150–249 employees must report every three years, also starting in 2027. Employers with 100–149 employees will be required to report from 2031. Member States may adopt lower thresholds or earlier deadlines, employers should verify the specific requirements under their applicable national law.
No. The Directive requires aggregated gender pay-gap reporting and pay-range disclosure in recruitment, not the publication of individual employees’ salaries. Employee pay-information requests are answered with average pay levels for comparable worker categories, not with named individuals’ compensation data. National data-protection rules and the GDPR continue to govern the handling of personal pay data.
No. The Directive prohibits employers, and any intermediaries acting on their behalf, from asking candidates about their current or previous remuneration at any stage of the recruitment process. Employers should remove salary-history fields from all application forms and update interview protocols and recruiter agreements to reflect this ban.
A joint pay assessment is triggered when an employer’s gender pay-gap report reveals an unexplained pay difference of 5 % or more in any category of workers performing the same work or work of equal value, and the employer cannot justify the gap on the basis of objective, gender-neutral criteria. The assessment is conducted in cooperation with worker representatives and must result in a time-bound remediation plan to close unjustified gaps.
Acknowledge the request promptly, identify the comparator group using your job-evaluation framework, extract and aggregate pay data broken down by sex, and provide a written response within the timeframe specified by national law, in any event within two months. Ensure that the response is compliant with GDPR requirements, including data minimisation and anonymisation where necessary to protect individual privacy.
All processing of personal pay data, whether for mandatory reporting, employee information requests or internal pay-equity audits, must comply with the GDPR. Employers need a lawful basis for processing (typically a legal obligation under the national implementing legislation), must apply data minimisation principles, and should implement technical measures to prevent individual employees from being identifiable in aggregated datasets. Consultation with a data-protection officer or privacy counsel is advisable before establishing new data flows.
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The EU Pay Transparency Directive in 2026: What Employers Must Do Now the Deadline Has Passed

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