Belgium’s 2026 wave of labour reforms has reshaped the rules governing collective redundancies Belgium employers must follow when restructuring operations, terminating employees at scale, or moving staff across borders. New notice-period caps, higher voluntary overtime quotas, revised student-work limits and updated minimum salary thresholds for international mobility all took effect during the first half of 2026, creating compliance risks that demand immediate action from general counsel and HR leadership. This guide delivers a practical, step-by-step playbook, including timelines, checklists and sample calculations, so employers can restructure lawfully under the reformed Belgium employment law 2026 framework.
The 2026 Belgian labour reforms do not merely adjust figures in the statute books. They alter the operational calculus behind every restructuring decision, every cross-border secondment and every individual termination. The interaction between these changes and the existing collective dismissal procedure Belgium employers are already required to follow means that a single miscalculation, on notice, on headcount thresholds, on salary floors, can expose an organisation to significant financial liability and reputational harm.
Employers should treat the following three priorities as non-negotiable:
Industry observers expect enforcement activity to intensify through the second half of 2026 as Belgian labour inspectorates and regional employment services adapt their monitoring to the new framework. Early compliance is the most cost-effective risk-management strategy available.
Several distinct legislative measures, published in the Belgian Official Gazette (Moniteur Belge) and transposing, in part, evolving EU-level guidance, came into force across the first and second quarters of 2026. While each reform addresses a different facet of the employment relationship, they converge when an employer begins planning a restructuring. The key changes are summarised below, followed by a compliance timeline.
Notice-period cap. The 2026 legislative measure introduces an effective ceiling on the notice period (or corresponding severance indemnity in lieu) that employers must grant to white-collar employees with long service. Before this reform, notice periods for senior employees could extend well beyond 20 months, accumulating on the basis of seniority, age and remuneration under the Law of 3 July 1978 on Employment Contracts. The cap now limits employer exposure for terminations initiated on or after the effective date. Employers must recalculate every pending termination and update template letters accordingly.
Voluntary overtime quota increase. Belgium raised the annual ceiling on voluntary overtime hours an employee may work without compensatory rest. This change is relevant to restructuring because it allows employers to absorb short-term workload peaks with fewer headcount additions, but it also introduces a consent requirement and record-keeping obligations that, if neglected, create liability.
Student work quota changes. Revised annual limits on student employment hours affect employers that rely on student labour to supplement their workforce. During a restructuring, employers must ensure that student hours are not used to circumvent obligations to retain or redeploy permanent staff.
Minimum salary threshold for mobility. The minimum gross salary that an employer must pay to qualify for certain international mobility exemptions and favourable immigration processing was adjusted upward in 2026. This directly affects the cost and structure of cross-border secondment packages.
| Reform | Effective Date | Immediate Employer Action |
|---|---|---|
| Notice-period cap (2026 legislative measure amending the Law of 3 July 1978) | 1 January 2026 | Recalculate notice/severance for any termination initiated on or after 1 January 2026; update HR templates within 30 days of the effective date. |
| Voluntary overtime quota increase | 1 January 2026 | Review overtime policies and headcount projections before the next payroll cycle; obtain written employee consent for additional voluntary hours. |
| Student work quota revision | 1 January 2026 | Audit student employment contracts and ensure annual hour limits comply with the revised ceiling; adjust workforce planning models. |
| Minimum salary threshold for international mobility | 1 January 2026 (indexed annually) | Reassess secondment packages, single-permit applications and Limosa declarations for any cross-border moves on or after the effective date. |
The practical effect of these reforms arriving simultaneously is that employers planning a restructuring in 2026 must model the financial impact of each change as part of a single integrated exercise rather than treating them in isolation.
Belgian law defines a collective dismissal as any series of employer-initiated terminations that meets specific numerical thresholds within an uninterrupted 60-day period, provided the dismissals are driven by economic, technical or organisational reasons unrelated to the individual employees concerned. The primary statutory framework is Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) No. 24, supplemented by the Act of 13 February 1998 (the so-called “Renault law”) and EU Directive 98/59/EC on collective redundancies.
The thresholds vary by the size of the employer’s workforce:
The 60-day reference period is calculated as a continuous, rolling window. Following the ECJ clarifications, now formally incorporated into Belgian legislation, the period is not tied to calendar months or payroll cycles. Every new employer-initiated termination restarts the analysis. This means that an employer who dismisses five employees in week one and six in week eight has triggered the collective threshold for a company of 20–99 employees, even if the employer did not intend a mass layoff.
Small employer (55 employees): If eight staff are dismissed in March 2026 and three more in April 2026, all within 60 days, the total of 11 exceeds the threshold of 10. The collective dismissal procedure Belgium mandates is triggered and the employer must retrospectively comply or face sanctions.
Mid-size employer (180 employees): Ten per cent of 180 is 18. If the employer dismisses 12 employees in February and seven in March (within 60 days), the total of 19 exceeds 18. The Renault procedure applies.
Large employer (500 employees): The threshold is 30. Even phased layoffs of 15 per month can aggregate to 30 within 60 days, triggering full information-and-consultation obligations.
Running a collective dismissal procedure Belgium law recognises as compliant requires meticulous planning across four sequential phases. Skipping or abbreviating any phase exposes the employer to judicial challenge, financial penalties and, in the worst case, an order to reinstate dismissed employees or restart the entire process.
Before any formal notification, the employer must establish and document the economic, technical or organisational grounds for the proposed redundancies. Belgian courts scrutinise whether the employer genuinely considered alternatives before proceeding to collective dismissal. Key steps include:
The Renault law requires the employer to provide the works council (or, where no works council exists, the trade-union delegation, or failing that, the employees directly) with a written information pack before any final decision on collective dismissals is taken. The pack must contain:
The consultation that follows is not a formality. Belgian case law requires that the employer engage in a genuine exchange of views aimed at reaching an agreement, or, at minimum, at reducing the number and mitigating the consequences of the dismissals. Employers should budget a minimum of 30 days for meaningful consultation, though complex restructurings often take considerably longer.
Once consultation concludes, the employer must notify the regional public employment service (VDAB in Flanders, Actiris in Brussels, Le Forem in Wallonia) and the Federal Public Service Employment, Labour and Social Dialogue. The notification must include all information from the consultation pack, plus a summary of the consultation process and its outcome.
A statutory waiting period of 30 days follows the notification. During this period, no dismissals may take effect. The public employment service may extend the waiting period by up to 30 additional days if it considers that further measures could reduce the number of redundancies. In practice, this extension is most commonly applied to large-scale restructurings in sensitive sectors.
| Entity / Authority | Who to Notify | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Works council / trade-union delegation / employees | Employer provides written information pack | Before any decision is taken, allow minimum 30 days for consultation |
| Regional public employment service (VDAB / Actiris / Le Forem) | Employer sends formal notification after consultation | Immediately after consultation concludes; 30-day waiting period begins on receipt |
| Federal Public Service Employment | Employer sends copy of notification | Same date as regional notification |
| Individual employees | Employer serves individual notice of termination | Only after 30-day (or extended) waiting period expires |
After the waiting period expires, the employer may begin issuing individual termination notices. Each notice must comply with the statutory notice-period rules, including the 2026 cap, and must be served in the language of the region where the employee’s place of work is located (Dutch in Flanders, French in Wallonia, French or Dutch in Brussels). Failure to use the correct language renders the notice null and void under Belgian language legislation.
Employers should maintain a comprehensive restructuring file that includes: the original business case, the consultation pack, minutes of every consultation meeting, the notification letters to the public employment service, proof of receipt and all individual termination letters. This file is the employer’s primary defence in any subsequent litigation.
Under the Law of 3 July 1978 on Employment Contracts, the notice period an employer must observe, or pay in lieu as a severance indemnity, depends principally on the employee’s seniority, though remuneration level and, for contracts predating 1 January 2014, the employee’s status (blue-collar or white-collar) also play a role. The unified rules introduced from 2014 onward apply a progressive scale that increases steeply with seniority.
The 2026 notice-period cap limits the maximum notice for new terminations, curbing what had become open-ended exposure for employers terminating very senior employees. The likely practical effect will be a reduction in termination costs for employees with 20 or more years of service, though the cap does not affect the statutory minimum notice periods for shorter-tenured employees.
The following table illustrates three representative scenarios under the 2026 rules:
| Employee Profile | Gross Annual Salary | Seniority | Statutory Notice Period (2026 Rules) | Estimated Severance Indemnity in Lieu |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junior analyst | €45,000 | 3 years | 13 weeks | Approx. €11,250 |
| Mid-senior manager | €85,000 | 12 years | 42 weeks | Approx. €68,650 |
| Long-service director | €130,000 | 25 years | Subject to 2026 cap, capped notice period applies | Reduced from pre-2026 calculation; verify exact cap figure with current legislation |
The severance indemnity in lieu of notice is calculated by multiplying the applicable notice period (in weeks) by the employee’s weekly remuneration, including base salary, variable pay, employer pension contributions, benefits in kind and any other contractual entitlements that form part of “remuneration” under Belgian law. Social-security contributions and withholding tax apply to the indemnity at the rates applicable to ordinary wages, though special tax optimisation mechanisms, such as spreading the indemnity over fictitious working periods, may mitigate the employee’s tax burden. Employers should seek actuarial and tax advice before finalising severance packages in collective redundancies Belgium operations involve.
The 2026 increase to the voluntary overtime quota Belgium now permits allows employees to work a higher number of additional hours per calendar year on a purely voluntary basis, without the employer being required to grant compensatory rest. Before the reform, the annual voluntary overtime ceiling stood at 120 hours (extendable to 220 by sectoral CBA). The 2026 measure raises the base statutory ceiling, giving employers more flexibility to absorb workload spikes without recruiting additional headcount.
For employers in the midst of, or contemplating, a restructuring, this change has two important operational consequences. First, higher overtime capacity may allow the employer to maintain output with a smaller post-restructuring workforce, which in turn affects the business case presented during the consultation phase. Second, reliance on voluntary overtime requires the written, prior consent of each individual employee for every six-month period, a compliance step that is frequently overlooked in practice.
Early indications suggest that Belgian labour inspectorates will pay close attention to whether employers are using the increased overtime quota as a substitute for proper workforce planning or as a mechanism to avoid triggering collective dismissal thresholds by retaining a skeleton staff and filling gaps with overtime rather than hiring.
The revised minimum salary threshold Belgium applies to international mobility arrangements affects employers that post workers into Belgium, second Belgian employees abroad, or employ foreign nationals under Belgium’s combined single-permit system. The 2026 adjustment, indexed annually to reflect wage inflation, raises the gross annual salary an employee must earn in order for the employer to qualify for streamlined immigration processing, certain social-security exemptions and the favourable treatment of expatriate allowances.
Employers planning cross-border moves must verify that each affected employee’s total remuneration package meets or exceeds the updated threshold. Falling below the floor can result in refusal of a single-permit application, loss of social-security certificate A1 validity, and, in the most serious cases, reclassification of the employee’s status with retroactive social-security and tax consequences.
When a restructuring involves terminating expatriate employees stationed in Belgium, additional layers of complexity arise. The employer must determine which country’s dismissal law applies (governed by Rome I Regulation principles and the habitual place of work), whether the Belgian collective redundancy procedure is triggered for the Belgian establishment, and how severance is allocated between home-country and host-country obligations.
Consider a multinational that decides to consolidate its Benelux operations in the Netherlands, requiring 12 Belgian-based employees to either relocate or face redundancy. The compliance checklist includes:
Belgian employment courts have developed a body of case law that penalises employers who attempt to circumvent collective redundancy obligations. The most common pitfalls include:
The recommended mitigation for every risk listed above is the same: document comprehensively, calculate conservatively and engage specialist legal counsel before launching the procedure.
The following sample texts are provided as starting points. They must be adapted to the specific circumstances of each restructuring and reviewed by qualified Belgian employment counsel before use.
Sample 1, Notification to works council / trade-union delegation (opening paragraph):
“In accordance with the Act of 13 February 1998 and Collective Bargaining Agreement No. 24, [Company Name] hereby informs the works council / trade-union delegation that it is considering a restructuring that may result in the collective dismissal of [number] employees over the period [start date] to [end date]. The grounds for the proposed restructuring, the categories of employees concerned and the proposed selection criteria are set out in the attached information pack. [Company Name] invites the works council / trade-union delegation to a first consultation meeting on [date] at [time and location].”
Sample 2, Individual termination letter (key clause):
“We regret to inform you that your employment contract with [Company Name] is hereby terminated with effect from [date], subject to a notice period of [X] weeks in accordance with the Law of 3 July 1978 on Employment Contracts, as amended. [Alternatively: in lieu of notice, you will receive a severance indemnity equal to [X] weeks’ remuneration, payable on [date].] This termination forms part of the collective restructuring announced on [date] and does not reflect any assessment of your individual performance.”
Sample 3, International secondment compliance checklist (key items):
The 2026 Belgian labour reforms require employers to act on three fronts simultaneously. First, update every termination template, severance model and HR policy document to reflect the notice-period cap and the revised overtime and student-work quotas. Second, implement continuous monitoring of the 60-day rolling reference period so that individual dismissals do not inadvertently trigger the collective dismissal procedure. Third, audit all international mobility arrangements against the updated minimum salary threshold before filing any new single-permit applications or secondment agreements.
These reforms reward employers who prepare early and penalise those who react only after a restructuring is already under way. Specialist legal guidance, grounded in current Belgian statute, case law and administrative practice, is essential for any employer planning a restructuring, a collective redundancy or a cross-border workforce move in 2026.
This article provides general information on Belgian employment law as of May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Employers should consult qualified Belgian employment counsel before taking any action based on the information presented here.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Koen De Bisschop at Reliance, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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