[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to implement working time registration Belgium

How to Implement Working‑time Registration in Belgium, Employer Step‑by‑step (deadline: 1 Jan 2027)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

From 1 January 2027, every employer in Belgium must maintain an objective, reliable and accessible record of the daily working time of each employee, a requirement introduced by federal measures adopted in 2025–2026 and published in the Moniteur Belge. The obligation applies across all sectors, replacing the patchwork of industry‑specific rules that previously governed attendance registration in areas such as cleaning and construction. This guide explains, step by step, how to implement working time registration in Belgium: which employees are covered, what your system must capture, how to update work regulations, and how to prepare for a labour inspectorate audit.

Whether you run a five‑person SME or a multinational with Belgian operations, the procedure below gives you a concrete 90‑day roadmap to reach compliance before the deadline.

Overview of Working Time Registration in Belgium and Who It Applies To

The new obligation requires employers to record the start time, end time, breaks and total hours worked for every employee on every working day. The record must be objective, meaning it cannot depend solely on the employee’s or employer’s unverified declaration, and it must be reliable, accessible to the employee concerned, and exportable on demand for inspection by the Federal Public Service Employment, Labour and Social Dialogue (FPS Employment) or its labour inspectorate.

Prior to this reform, mandatory attendance registration existed only in specific sectors. The cleaning sector, for example, already required check‑in and check‑out registration under programme‑law provisions enforced via the Working in Belgium portal. Construction similarly operated under sector‑specific badge systems. The 2027 obligation extends these principles to all employers, irrespective of sector or company size, unless a narrow statutory exemption applies.

The inspectorate risk is real. Employers who cannot produce compliant records on request face administrative fines, ordered remediation and, in serious or repeated cases, criminal prosecution under the Social Criminal Code. Early indications suggest that inspectors will focus initial enforcement on sectors with high overtime exposure and on employers who have made no visible effort to implement a system.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Working Time Registration in Belgium

Covered Employee Types

The obligation covers all employees subject to Belgian labour law, including full‑time permanent staff, part‑time employees, fixed‑term contract holders, on‑call workers whose hours vary and temporary agency workers during their assignment. The scope also extends to posted workers performing services in Belgium, where recording obligations run in parallel with LIMOSA declaration requirements. In practice, any worker whose working time is governed by the Belgian Working Time Act (Arbeidswet / Loi sur le travail) falls within scope.

Exemptions and Special Regimes

Belgian labour law has traditionally exempted certain categories from standard working‑time rules. Senior management personnel who exercise genuine autonomous decision‑making authority and are not subject to fixed schedules are not covered by the working‑time registration requirement, consistent with their exclusion from the Working Time Act itself. Certain categories of mobile workers and workers in specific transport sectors may be subject to separate EU recording requirements (e.g., tachograph regulations) rather than the general Belgian system. Employers should verify any claimed exemption against the statutory text and take legal advice before excluding any worker category.

Intersection with Posting Rules and LIMOSA/DmfA

Employers who post workers to Belgium must complete a LIMOSA declaration before work commences. The working‑time registration obligation operates alongside, not in place of, that administrative requirement. Where posted workers are concerned, employers must link their daily working‑time records with the corresponding LIMOSA declaration and ensure both datasets are available for inspectorate review. Separately, quarterly DmfA declarations to the ONSS (National Social Security Office) must reflect actual hours worked, reinforcing the need for accurate underlying records.

How to Implement Working Time Registration in Belgium, Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The implementation procedure below is designed as a 90‑day accelerated plan. Depending on organisational complexity, certain steps may overlap. The timeline table at the end of this section summarises ownership and typical durations.

Step 1: Conduct a Gap Analysis and Map Stakeholders

Owner: HR lead, with Legal and Payroll review.

Begin by inventorying every existing time‑recording mechanism in your organisation, spreadsheets, badge systems, manual attendance sheets, payroll clock‑in tools and any sector‑specific systems already in use. Document which employee groups are currently covered and which are not. Review your work regulations (arbeidsreglement / règlement de travail), individual employment contracts and any applicable collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) for clauses addressing working‑time recording.

Produce a stakeholder map identifying HR, Payroll, IT, Legal, the works council or trade union delegation (if applicable), and the data protection officer or GDPR contact. Each will have a role in later steps. The gap analysis should result in a written report listing: (a) employee groups not yet covered; (b) system deficiencies (e.g., no tamper log, no export capability); and (c) policy gaps in work regulations. This report becomes the first item in your inspectorate evidence pack.

Step 2: Select Your System and Define the Data Model

Owner: IT/Procurement and Payroll, with Legal input on time registration requirements.

The legislation does not mandate a specific technology. Employers may use physical badge terminals, mobile applications, web‑based time‑tracking platforms or even structured manual timesheets, provided the system meets four non‑negotiable criteria:

  • Objectivity. The record must be generated or validated by means that do not rely solely on one party’s unverified statement. A system where only the employer fills in hours, with no employee confirmation mechanism, will not satisfy the test.
  • Reliability. The system must produce a tamper‑evident audit trail. Every edit, corrections, late entries, manager overrides, must be logged with a timestamp and user ID.
  • Accessibility. Employees must be able to consult their own records. Inspectors must be able to request and receive exports without unreasonable delay.
  • Exportability. Records must be available in a structured, readable format (CSV, PDF or equivalent) for inspectorate review. A system that stores data only in a proprietary format with no export function is non‑compliant.

When evaluating SaaS platforms against on‑premises solutions, consider GDPR implications: where will data be hosted, who is the data processor, and does the vendor provide a compliant data processing agreement? An EU comparative briefing on recording working hours across the EU notes that GDPR and the ePrivacy framework apply in full to working‑time data, requiring purpose limitation, data minimisation and defined retention periods. If your organisation processes time data that reveals patterns of behaviour (e.g., biometric clock‑in), a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) may be required under Article 35 GDPR.

Step 3: Update Work Regulations and Consult the Works Council

Owner: Legal, in coordination with employee representatives.

Belgian law requires that material changes to working conditions, including the introduction of a new time‑registration system, be reflected in the employer’s work regulations. The procedure for amending work regulations involves posting a draft for a 15‑day consultation period, during which employees may submit observations. Where a works council exists, the amendment must be adopted by agreement within the council. Where no works council exists but a trade union delegation is present, the employer must follow the applicable consultation procedure under the relevant CBA.

The updated work regulations should include, at minimum:

  • A description of the time‑registration system in use (type, access method).
  • The data captured (start time, end time, breaks, total hours).
  • Employee rights to consult and contest their own records.
  • The retention period and deletion schedule for working‑time data.
  • Consequences for non‑compliance by employees (e.g., failure to clock in).
  • The procedure for reporting system errors or missed entries.

Keep a record of the entire consultation process, posted drafts, employee observations, works council minutes and final signed version. This documentation forms a critical part of your inspectorate readiness pack.

Step 4: Pilot the System, Train Staff and Roll Out

Owner: HR and IT, with Payroll validation.

Before full deployment, run a pilot with a representative employee group, ideally spanning different contract types, shift patterns and locations. During the pilot, test every workflow: standard clock‑in/clock‑out, break registration, late corrections, manager approvals, mobile access for remote workers, and the export function. Validate that the audit log captures all edits accurately.

Prepare training materials in the languages used in your workplace (Dutch, French, German, and English for international staff where applicable). Training should cover: how to clock in and out, how to record breaks, how to view and dispute entries, and the fallback procedure (manual sign‑in sheet) if the system is temporarily unavailable. Collect signed or digitally logged employee acknowledgements confirming that training was received. These records serve as evidence that employees were informed of the new obligation.

Step 5: Establish Ongoing Maintenance, Audit Routines and Inspectorate Readiness

Owner: HR, Legal and Compliance (ongoing).

Compliance does not end at go‑live. Establish a monthly review cycle in which HR or payroll checks a sample of working hours records for completeness and accuracy. Set up automated alerts for anomalies, missed clock‑ins, shifts exceeding legal maximum hours, missing break entries. Conduct a full internal audit at least once per year, producing a written report that confirms system integrity, reviews the audit log for tampering indicators, and verifies that retention and deletion policies are being followed.

When a labour inspector requests working‑time records, you should be able to produce a complete, structured export within a working day. Designate a named contact person (or role) authorised to respond to inspectorate data requests, and ensure that person knows how to generate exports and locate supporting documentation (work regulations, training acknowledgements, system audit logs).

Implementation Timeline Table

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Gap analysis and stakeholder sign‑off HR + Legal + Payroll 1–3 weeks
System selection and procurement IT/Procurement + Payroll + Legal 3–8 weeks
Update work regulations and consult works council/unions Legal + Employee representatives 4–12 weeks
Pilot and staff training HR + IT + Payroll 2–6 weeks
Full roll‑out and retention setup HR + IT + Payroll 1–2 weeks
Ongoing monitoring and inspectorate readiness HR + Legal + Compliance Ongoing (monthly/annual checks)

Required Documents and Information for Your Working Hours Register

The following table sets out the documents and data elements employers must maintain. Together, these form the employer obligations for the working hours record under the new rules.

Document Notes
Daily working‑time record (per employee, per day) Must show: date, employee ID, start time, end time, break start/end times, total hours worked. Must be exportable in a structured format (CSV or PDF) and accessible to the employee and inspectorate.
System audit log / tamper log System‑generated log recording every edit, correction or override with timestamp, user ID and reason. Required to demonstrate the reliability of the working hours register.
Updated work regulations Employer‑issued document reflecting the time‑registration system, data captured, employee rights and retention schedule. Must include evidence of the consultation process (works council minutes, posted drafts, observations).
Employee acknowledgement records Signed or digitally logged confirmation that each employee received training on the system. Digital acknowledgement (e.g., e‑learning completion log) is acceptable.
Data retention and deletion policy GDPR‑aligned schedule specifying how long working‑time data is retained, the legal basis for processing (compliance with a legal obligation) and the deletion procedure after expiry.
LIMOSA / posting records (where applicable) For posted workers: LIMOSA declaration evidence linked to the daily working‑time data for the relevant posting period.

On GDPR compliance specifically: working‑time data constitutes personal data. The legal basis for processing is typically compliance with a legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c) GDPR). Employers should apply data minimisation, capture only the fields listed above and avoid collecting location data, biometric data or other information beyond what is strictly necessary. Where biometric identification is used (e.g., fingerprint scanners), a DPIA under Article 35 GDPR is likely required. Implement role‑based access controls so that only authorised HR, payroll and compliance personnel can view or export records. The working time record template should be designed with these principles built in from the start.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Mandatory Time Tracking in Belgium 2027

Date / Period Action Required
Immediately (Q3 2026) Begin gap analysis; appoint project lead; budget for system procurement and legal review.
By 30 September 2026 Complete system selection; initiate work regulations amendment process and works council consultation.
By 30 November 2026 Complete pilot testing; finalise updated work regulations; train all staff; collect acknowledgement records.
By 31 December 2026 Full system roll‑out complete; retention and export procedures tested; inspectorate evidence pack assembled.
1 January 2027 Legal compliance date. System must be operational and producing objective, reliable working‑time records for all covered employees.
Ongoing from January 2027 Monthly data‑quality checks; annual internal audit; respond promptly to inspectorate requests.

The milestones above assume a project start in July 2026, giving approximately 90 working days of lead time. Employers starting later will need to compress the schedule, in particular, running system procurement and works council consultation in parallel rather than sequentially. If your organisation has not yet begun, the single most valuable immediate action is to complete the gap analysis (Step 1) within one week and issue a procurement specification within two weeks.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Implementation costs vary significantly depending on organisation size, existing IT infrastructure and the chosen system model. The table below provides indicative cost bands based on market conditions.

Item Typical Cost (EUR, band) Notes
SaaS time‑tracking subscription €2–€8 per user / month Varies by feature set (GDPR controls, audit logs, export functions, multi‑language support).
One‑off implementation / integration €1,500–€25,000 Lower range for small SMEs with standalone deployment; higher range for enterprises integrating with HRIS or ERP systems.
Hardware (badge readers / terminals) €200–€2,000 per terminal Optional. Not required if using mobile or web‑based applications.
Legal review and work regulations update €800–€5,000 Covers drafting, counsel review, and works council consultation support.
Staff training materials and rollout €500–€5,000 Depends on workforce size and whether external trainers are engaged.
Ongoing maintenance and support €500–€10,000 / year System upgrades, data exports, annual compliance checks.

From a tax perspective, the classification of implementation costs as capital expenditure (depreciable asset) or operating expenditure (fully deductible service cost) depends on the procurement model. A perpetual licence with on‑premises hardware is typically capitalised, while a SaaS subscription is treated as an operating expense. Employers should consult their tax adviser on the correct treatment for their specific situation.

What Changed in 2026: The Legislative Basis for Working Time Registration in Belgium

The requirement for mandatory time tracking in Belgium from 2027 did not emerge in isolation. It follows a trajectory that began with the Court of Justice of the European Union’s 2019 ruling in CCOO v Deutsche Bank (Case C‑55/18), which held that EU Member States must require employers to set up an objective, reliable and accessible system for measuring daily working time. While several Member States acted promptly, Belgium initially relied on its existing sectoral mechanisms.

The federal legislative package adopted in 2025–2026, reflected in measures published in the Moniteur Belge and documented in Chamber of Representatives reports, converted the CJEU mandate into a general, sector‑neutral obligation. Before this reform, only specific sectors had mandatory attendance registration. The cleaning sector, for instance, required check‑in and check‑out registration under programme‑law provisions, while construction operated badge‑based systems administered through the Constructiv framework.

The 2026 measures eliminate this fragmented approach. From 1 January 2027, every employer, regardless of sector, size or workforce composition, must operate a compliant system. The FPS Employment oversees implementation guidance, while enforcement falls to the labour inspectorate operating under the Social Criminal Code. Industry observers expect that a Royal Decree may still clarify certain implementing details (such as prescribed data formats or specific retention periods), and employers should monitor the FPS Employment website and the Moniteur Belge for updates through the remainder of 2026.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

Implementing working time registration in Belgium appears straightforward in concept, but practical failures are common. The following pitfalls emerge repeatedly in inspectorate enforcement and industry experience.

  • Selecting a system without a tamper‑evident audit trail. Some entry‑level time‑tracking tools allow managers to edit or delete entries without any logged record of the change. This directly undermines the reliability requirement. Require, as a procurement condition, that every system edit is logged with a timestamp, user ID and reason code. Test this during the pilot phase.
  • Failing to consult the works council or union delegation. Introducing a time‑registration system is a change to working conditions that triggers consultation obligations. Skipping or shortcutting this step can invalidate the amended work regulations and expose the employer to both social dialogue complaints and inspectorate criticism. Begin the consultation process as early as possible, it is the single longest lead‑time item in the implementation plan.
  • Over‑collecting personal data in breach of GDPR. Some systems capture GPS location, biometric data or keystroke patterns alongside working hours. Unless each additional data category has a separate, documented legal basis and passes the data minimisation test, this creates significant exposure to enforcement by the Belgian Data Protection Authority (GBA/APD). Conduct a DPIA where high‑risk processing is involved, and strip out any data fields not strictly required for working‑time compliance.
  • Not linking LIMOSA records for posted workers. Employers with posted workers must be able to demonstrate consistency between LIMOSA declarations and working‑time records. A mismatch, for example, hours recorded in the time system that fall outside the declared posting period, will attract inspectorate scrutiny. Map posting workflows explicitly and cross‑reference LIMOSA declarations with time data during your monthly review cycle.
  • Inadequate employee training leading to inaccurate records. A system is only as good as the data entered. If employees do not understand how to clock in, record breaks or report errors, the resulting records will be incomplete and unreliable. Provide practical, language‑appropriate training before go‑live, and maintain a manual fallback procedure (paper sign‑in sheet) for system outages. Define an exception workflow for missed or incorrect entries that routes corrections through a manager approval with audit‑log capture.
  • Ignoring inspectorate readiness until an inspection occurs. The labour inspectorate can request working‑time records at any time, without prior notice. Employers who have not designated a contact person, tested their export function, or assembled their evidence pack (work regulations, training records, audit logs) will struggle to respond within the expected timeframe. The likely practical effect of an unprepared response is an escalated investigation and a formal demand for remediation, potentially accompanied by administrative fines under the Social Criminal Code.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. FPS Employment, Labour and Social Dialogue, Registre du personnel / Documents sociaux
  2. Federal Public Service, Working in Belgium: Check‑in and Check‑out at Work
  3. Belgian Official Gazette / Moniteur Belge, Published Acts (30.12.2025)
  4. Chamber of Representatives, Legislative Documents (Doc 56 1353/001)
  5. FPS Social Security / ONSS, DmfA Declaration Instructions
  6. Better Regulation, Recording Working Hours: Requirements Across the EU (February 2024)

FAQs

How must employers register working time in Belgium under the new rules?
Employers must operate an objective, reliable and accessible system that records the start time, end time, breaks and total hours worked per employee per day. The system must produce a tamper‑evident audit log and allow records to be exported in a structured format (CSV or PDF) for inspectorate review. The system may be digital (SaaS platform, mobile app, badge terminal) or structured manual timesheets, provided it meets the objectivity and reliability criteria. FPS Employment publishes guidance on the required content of personnel and working‑time records.
All employees subject to Belgian labour law are covered, including full‑time, part‑time, fixed‑term, on‑call and temporary agency workers, as well as posted workers during their assignment in Belgium. Senior management personnel who exercise genuine autonomous authority and are excluded from the Working Time Act are exempt. Certain transport‑sector workers covered by separate EU tachograph requirements may also fall outside the general system. Employers should verify any claimed exemption against the statutory text.
Each daily record must contain: the date, employee identification, start time, end time, break start and end times, and total hours worked. Records must be stored in a format accessible to the employee and exportable for inspectorate review. Storage must comply with GDPR, purpose limitation, data minimisation, defined retention periods and role‑based access controls. An EU‑level comparative briefing on recording working hours across Member States confirms that GDPR applies in full to working‑time data.
The labour inspectorate may request working‑time records at any time without prior notice. A typical review involves requesting data exports, examining the system audit log for completeness and tamper evidence, and interviewing employees. Non‑compliance can result in administrative fines under the Social Criminal Code, a formal order to implement a compliant system within a set deadline, and, in serious or repeated cases, criminal prosecution. The likely practical effect for employers who demonstrate good‑faith implementation efforts is a corrective order rather than immediate sanctions.
Yes, provided the manual system meets the same substantive requirements: objectivity (employee and manager both verify entries), reliability (corrections are recorded rather than overwritten), accessibility (the employee can consult their records) and exportability (structured data can be produced for an inspection). In practice, industry observers expect that digital systems will be more cost‑effective and easier to defend during an inspection, but manual timesheets with appropriate controls, such as dual sign‑off and a correction log, are not prohibited.
Employers who are not compliant by 1 January 2027 should prioritise emergency implementation: complete the gap analysis immediately, select and deploy a system (even an interim manual solution), and begin the work regulations amendment process. Document every mitigation step taken, this evidence of good faith may influence the inspectorate’s response. Consult a labour law specialist to assess enforcement risk and develop a remediation plan.
The LIMOSA declaration, required before a foreign employer posts workers to Belgium, covers the identity of the worker, the posting period and the place of work. Working‑time records must cover the same period and must be consistent with the information declared in LIMOSA. Employers should cross‑reference both datasets during monthly reviews and ensure both are available in a single inspectorate evidence pack. The ONSS provides guidance on DmfA declarations that must also reflect actual hours worked.
Legal advice is valuable at three points: during the gap analysis (to identify which CBAs or statutory provisions apply to your workforce), when drafting the updated work regulations (to ensure compliance with consultation rules), and when responding to an inspectorate request or sanction. Employers with posted workers, complex shift patterns or biometric data processing should consider engaging a lawyer experienced in Belgian labour law from the outset to manage regulatory and GDPR risk.
greece golden visa
By Jonathon Richards

posted 4 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

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.

About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Implement Working‑time Registration in Belgium, Employer Step‑by‑step (deadline: 1 Jan 2027)

Send welcome message

Custom Message