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france pay transparency law 2026

France Pay Transparency Law 2026, Practical Checklist for HR & Works Councils (CSE)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 3 May 2026

France is required to transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive (Directive 2023/970) into national law by 7 June 2026, and the French government’s draft bill, circulated for social-partner consultation on 30 March 2026, signals obligations that go beyond what many employers have in place today. The France pay transparency law 2026 will replace the existing Professional Equality Index with a broader set of pay indicators, introduce mandatory salary ranges in job adverts, grant employees new rights to request pay data, and require documented remediation plans wherever unjustified gender pay gaps exceed defined thresholds.

For HR directors, general counsel and CSE members, the window for preparation is narrow: audits, consultation processes and reporting infrastructure all need to be operational before, or immediately after, the transposition deadline takes effect.

TL;DR, What Employers Must Do Now Under France Pay Transparency Law 2026

If you read nothing else, act on these three priorities before the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline:

  1. Launch a pay audit immediately. Collect and analyse payroll data by job category, gender and seniority band. Identify any unjustified gaps of 5 % or more and begin drafting remediation plans.
  2. Prepare formal CSE consultation. Under French labour law, any change to remuneration policy or reporting obligations triggers CSE information-consultation duties. Schedule an initial meeting, set the agenda, and provide the CSE with the draft pay-audit findings before the transposition date.
  3. Update recruitment and reporting practices. Review every active job posting to add salary ranges. Instruct recruiters to stop asking candidates about salary history. Map your current Professional Equality Index metrics to the new indicators outlined in the draft bill, so reporting can switch over without delay.

The remainder of this guide provides the legal background, step-by-step compliance checklists, pay-audit methodology, CSE consultation roadmap, GDPR safeguards and enforcement risk analysis needed to implement these actions with confidence.

Legal Background and Key Dates for the France Pay Transparency Law 2026

EU Directive 2023/970 on pay transparency was adopted on 10 May 2023. Under Article 34 of the Directive, all EU Member States must adopt the laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with the Directive by 7 June 2026. The European Commission’s transposition guidance makes clear that Member States are legally bound to meet this deadline and must notify the Commission of the measures taken. France confirmed this timeline through its government information portal, entreprendre.service-public.fr, which identifies 7 June 2026 as the date by which French law must incorporate the Directive’s requirements.

The French government released its pay transparency draft law for social-partner consultation on 30 March 2026, as reported by Le Monde and subsequently analysed by several international law firms. The draft goes further than the minimum Directive requirements in certain areas, while aligning closely with the Directive’s core architecture in others.

Timeline of Key Events

Date Event Practical Impact for Employers
10 May 2023 EU Directive 2023/970 adopted Three-year transposition clock begins; employers should start gap analysis
8 March 2026 French government unveils new plan to address gender wage inequality Political commitment signals that transposition will proceed on schedule
30 March 2026 French draft bill circulated for social-partner consultation Draft text available for review; employer associations and unions provide feedback
7 June 2026 Transposition deadline, French law must be in force All employer obligations become enforceable; reporting cycles begin
7 June 2027 First annual reporting cycle (employers ≥250 employees) Pay indicators must be published; remediation plans filed if gaps exceed thresholds

What the Draft Changes

The pay transparency draft law France proposes several key departures from the existing framework. The Professional Equality Index, a scoring system introduced in 2019 that rates employers on a 100-point scale, would be replaced by a more granular set of pay indicators aligned with the Directive’s requirements. The draft also introduces an explicit prohibition on salary-history enquiries during recruitment, strengthens employees’ individual right to request pay information by category and gender, and establishes remediation obligations with defined thresholds.

Where to Watch for Updates

The final text will be published in the Journal Officiel de la République Française once adopted. In the meantime, employers should monitor communications from the Ministry of Labour (Ministère du Travail) and the official government portal at entreprendre.service-public.fr. Because the draft is still subject to amendment following social-partner consultation, certain operational details, including precise indicator formulas and reporting templates, may change before formal adoption.

Employer Obligations Pay Transparency, Step-by-Step Checklist

This section breaks down each core obligation under the Directive and the French draft into actionable steps with assigned roles, timeframes and deliverables. Treat this as your operational compliance checklist for the France pay transparency law 2026.

Recruitment and Adverts: Salary Ranges

Under Article 5 of Directive 2023/970, employers must ensure that applicants receive information about the initial pay or pay range for a position, either in the job vacancy notice or before the job interview. The French draft aligns with this and requires salary ranges to be included directly in published job adverts.

  • Action: Audit all active and template job postings. Add a salary range (minimum to maximum) or starting salary for every role.
  • Responsible: Talent acquisition / HR operations, with sign-off from compensation and benefits.
  • Timeframe: Complete for all new postings by 7 June 2026; retrospective update of live adverts within 30 days.
  • Deliverable: Updated job-posting template with mandatory salary-range field; written policy for determining and disclosing ranges.

Prohibition on Salary-History Requests

Article 5(2) of the Directive prohibits employers from asking applicants about their pay history with current or former employers. The French draft incorporates this prohibition directly.

  • Action: Remove salary-history questions from all application forms, interview scripts and recruiter briefing documents.
  • Responsible: HR operations and external recruitment agencies (update agency agreements accordingly).
  • Timeframe: Immediate, implement before the transposition date.
  • Deliverable: Revised interview guide; updated recruiter compliance policy; addendum to agency contracts.

Individual Pay Information Requests: Process and Template

Under Articles 6 and 7 of the Directive, workers have the right to request and receive written information on their individual pay level and on the average pay levels, broken down by gender, of categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. The French draft reinforces this right and introduces procedural safeguards.

  • Action: Design a standardised request-and-response process. Prepare a template response letter that provides the employee’s pay level and the average pay by gender for their job category.
  • Responsible: HR shared services or payroll, with legal review.
  • Timeframe: Process operational by transposition date; response deadline set within a reasonable period (the Directive specifies two months).
  • Deliverable: Employee-facing request form; internal workflow document; template response letter.

Sample response wording: “In accordance with [applicable legislation], we confirm that your current annual gross remuneration is €[X]. The average annual gross remuneration for employees performing the same work or work of equal value within your category, broken down by gender, is: Female, €[Y]; Male, €[Z].”

Company Reporting and Indicators, Professional Equality Index Replacement

The French draft proposes replacing the Professional Equality Index with new reporting indicators that align with Article 9 of the Directive. Industry observers expect the new indicators to cover the gender pay gap (mean and median), the gender bonus gap, the proportion of women and men in each pay quartile, and the gender pay gap by category of workers performing work of equal value.

  • Action: Map your current Professional Equality Index data fields to the new indicator requirements. Identify gaps in data collection, particularly around bonus and variable pay, and update payroll reporting accordingly.
  • Responsible: Compensation and benefits lead, supported by HRIS / payroll.
  • Timeframe: Mapping exercise completed within 60 days; data-collection infrastructure updated before first reporting cycle.
  • Deliverable: Indicator mapping document; updated payroll data-extraction specifications; draft report template.

Remediation Obligations and Action Plans

Article 10 of the Directive requires that where pay reporting reveals a gender pay gap of 5 % or more in any category of workers, and the employer cannot justify the gap on the basis of objective, gender-neutral factors, the employer must carry out a joint pay assessment in cooperation with workers’ representatives and take remedial action. The French draft incorporates this threshold.

  • Action: After completing the pay audit, identify every job category with an unjustified gap of 5 % or more. Draft a remediation action plan with specific measures (pay adjustments, promotion pathways, policy changes) and a timeline for closing the gap.
  • Responsible: HR director and CSE joint working group.
  • Timeframe: Action plan drafted within 90 days of identifying unjustified gaps; remediation measures to begin within the first reporting cycle.
  • Deliverable: Written joint pay assessment report; signed remediation action plan; progress-tracking dashboard.

Recordkeeping and Documentation

Employers must maintain records demonstrating compliance with pay transparency obligations. This includes job-classification criteria, pay-structure documentation, audit results, CSE consultation minutes and remediation plans.

  • Action: Establish a central compliance file for all pay-transparency documentation. Define a retention schedule aligned with employment-law limitation periods (typically five years for pay disputes in France).
  • Responsible: Legal / compliance function.
  • Timeframe: Filing system operational before transposition date.
  • Deliverable: Document retention policy; indexed compliance file; access-control matrix.

How to Run a Pay Audit in France, Methodology and KPIs

A rigorous pay audit is the foundation of compliance with the France pay transparency law 2026. The audit must be defensible, reproducible and aligned with the indicators specified in the Directive. Below is a step-by-step methodology.

Step 1, Define scope. Determine which entities, business units and worker categories fall within scope. Include all employees regardless of contract type (CDI, CDD, temporary).

Step 2, Collect data fields. Extract from payroll and HRIS: base salary, bonuses, variable pay, benefits in kind, contractual hours, job title, job-classification level, seniority, gender, age and location.

Step 3, Anonymise and pseudonymise. Before analysis, replace personal identifiers with pseudonymous codes. Restrict access to the raw dataset to authorised personnel only (see GDPR section below).

Step 4, Match jobs. Group employees into categories of “same work or work of equal value” using objective criteria: job classification, skills, responsibilities, working conditions and qualifications. Industry observers expect that the Directive’s emphasis on objective, gender-neutral classification criteria will require many French employers to revisit legacy job-grading systems.

Step 5, Calculate KPIs. For each matched category, calculate the following indicators:

  • Median gender pay gap, the difference in median pay between men and women as a percentage of male median pay.
  • Mean gender pay gap, the same calculation using mean (average) pay.
  • Adjusted pay gap, the residual gap after controlling for legitimate factors (seniority, qualifications, location) using regression analysis.
  • Bonus gap, the difference in mean and median bonus pay between men and women.
  • Pay-quartile distribution, the proportion of men and women in each quartile of the pay distribution.

Step 6, Validate. Cross-check results against known benchmarks, spot-check individual records and have findings reviewed by an external statistical expert where the dataset is complex or the organisation is large.

Sample Output Table

Job Category Median Gender Pay Gap Mean Gender Pay Gap Adjusted Gap (Post-Regression) Action Required?
Engineering, Level 3 7.2 % 8.1 % 5.4 % Yes, exceeds 5 % threshold
Sales, Level 2 3.1 % 4.0 % 2.8 % No, monitor
Administration, Level 1 1.5 % 1.9 % 0.9 % No, compliant

For a detailed pay-audit methodology with downloadable KPI spreadsheets, see the forthcoming guide: How to run a pay audit in France: methodology, KPIs and sample spreadsheets.

CSE Consultation Pay Transparency, Roadmap and Sample Meeting Agenda

French labour law requires employers to inform and consult the Comité Social et Économique (CSE) on any policy change affecting remuneration structure and working conditions. The implementation of pay transparency obligations falls squarely within this consultation duty. Failure to consult the CSE before rolling out new reporting frameworks or remediation plans exposes the employer to the risk of having measures declared legally inoperative.

Consultation Timeline

  1. T-minus 8 weeks (before transposition): Send a written information notice to the CSE secretary announcing the pay-transparency compliance project, its scope and timeline.
  2. T-minus 6 weeks: Provide the CSE with the draft pay-audit results, the proposed new indicators and any remediation action plan. Allow sufficient time for review.
  3. T-minus 4 weeks: Hold a formal CSE meeting. Present the audit findings, explain the legal framework, discuss the remediation plan and invite questions.
  4. T-minus 2 weeks: Issue the CSE’s formal opinion (avis). Document the opinion in the meeting minutes, along with any reservations or counter-proposals.
  5. Transposition date: Implement measures, incorporating CSE feedback where feasible. File the signed consultation record in the compliance file.

Sample CSE Meeting Agenda, Pay Transparency

  • Item 1: Overview of EU Directive 2023/970 and French transposition obligations.
  • Item 2: Presentation of pay-audit methodology and key findings (summary dashboard).
  • Item 3: Comparison of current Professional Equality Index metrics with new draft indicators.
  • Item 4: Discussion of categories with unjustified pay gaps ≥ 5 % and proposed remediation plan.
  • Item 5: Proposed changes to recruitment practices (salary ranges, salary-history prohibition).
  • Item 6: GDPR safeguards for pay data processing, DPO briefing.
  • Item 7: Questions, union-representative positions and negotiation of any supplementary measures.
  • Item 8: Vote on CSE opinion and next steps.

A detailed CSE consultation roadmap with editable agenda templates is covered in the forthcoming guide: Pay transparency and the CSE: consultation roadmap and sample meeting agenda.

Payroll and Privacy, GDPR Considerations When Processing Pay Data

Running a pay audit means processing sensitive GDPR payroll data on a significant scale. Employers must identify a lawful basis for this processing, implement appropriate safeguards and document their compliance decisions.

  • Lawful basis: Processing is likely justified under Article 6(1)(c) GDPR (legal obligation, compliance with pay-transparency legislation) and, in some cases, Article 6(1)(f) (legitimate interest in equal-pay compliance). Where special categories of data are involved (e.g., disability status used as a control variable), Article 9 conditions must also be met.
  • Data minimisation: Collect only the data fields strictly necessary for the audit. Do not extract health data, ethnic origin or other sensitive attributes unless specifically required by the reporting framework and legally justified.
  • Pseudonymisation: Replace employee names and identification numbers with pseudonymous codes before any analytical processing. Maintain the key separately under restricted access.
  • Access controls: Limit access to the raw audit dataset to the HR analytics team and the DPO. CSE members should receive aggregated, anonymised results only.
  • Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA): The CNIL recommends conducting a DPIA for any large-scale processing of employee data that could result in significant effects on individuals. A pay-transparency audit in an organisation with several hundred employees or more will typically meet this threshold. The DPIA should document the processing purpose, necessity, proportionality, risks and mitigation measures.
  • Retention: Define a retention schedule aligned with employment-law limitation periods. Pay-audit data should generally be retained for the duration required to defend against potential equal-pay claims, typically five years in France, and then securely deleted.
  • Employee communication: Issue a clear, written notice to employees explaining that payroll data will be processed for pay-transparency compliance purposes, identifying the legal basis, the categories of data involved, the retention period and their rights under the GDPR.

For a comprehensive treatment of GDPR payroll data handling in the audit context, see the forthcoming guide: Handling payroll data under GDPR when conducting pay transparency audits.

Enforcement, Sanctions and Risk Mitigation

The Directive requires Member States to lay down effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non-compliance. While the French draft has not yet published the final sanctions schedule, the Directive’s framework, and early indications from comparative transpositions, suggests employers should anticipate the following enforcement mechanisms:

  • Administrative fines for failure to report, failure to disclose salary ranges or failure to respond to individual pay-information requests within the statutory timeframe.
  • Orders to remedy, labour inspectors or equality bodies may require employers to conduct joint pay assessments and implement remediation plans within defined deadlines.
  • Civil claims, employees who suffer pay discrimination will have access to compensation, with the burden of proof shifted to the employer to demonstrate that no breach of the equal-pay principle has occurred (Article 18 of the Directive).
  • Reputational damage, public reporting of pay indicators means that significant gender pay gaps will be visible to employees, candidates, investors and the media.

Risk-mitigation checklist: Document every step of your compliance process (audit methodology, CSE consultation, remediation actions). Maintain an evidence trail that demonstrates good faith and proactive effort. Where gaps are identified, begin remediation immediately, do not wait for the reporting deadline. Proactive correction substantially reduces both litigation exposure and the likely severity of sanctions for non-compliance.

Implementation Timeline and Obligations by Employer Size

The table below summarises the expected reporting obligations under the French draft, segmented by employer size, along with the recommended start date for preparation.

Employer Size Reporting Obligations (Expected Under Draft) Recommended Start Date
< 50 employees Basic individual rights to request pay info; salary ranges in adverts; internal pay-gap remediation on request Start immediately (May 2026)
50–249 employees Regular pay audit annually; reporting of defined indicators; CSE consultation required Start within 1 month
≥ 250 employees Full public reporting on pay indicators and remedial action plans; statutory sanctions apply; joint pay assessment if gap ≥ 5 % Start now, complete audit and plan within 3 months

Six-Month Operational Plan

Month Action Owner
Month 1 (May 2026) Launch pay audit; update job postings; issue CSE information notice HR Director / Compensation Lead
Month 2 (June 2026) Complete data collection and KPI calculation; conduct DPIA; begin CSE consultation HR Analytics / DPO / CSE Secretary
Month 3 (July 2026) Finalise audit report; hold formal CSE meeting; obtain CSE opinion HR Director / Legal Counsel
Month 4 (August 2026) Draft remediation action plans for categories exceeding 5 % threshold Compensation Lead / Joint Working Group
Month 5 (September 2026) Begin implementing pay adjustments and policy changes; update HRIS reporting Payroll / HR Operations
Month 6 (October 2026) First internal compliance review; prepare for annual reporting cycle; file documentation Legal / Compliance

Conclusion, Five Immediate Actions Under the France Pay Transparency Law 2026

The France pay transparency law 2026 is not a distant regulatory prospect, it is an operational reality requiring action now. To summarise, every employer operating in France should take these five steps immediately:

  1. Start the pay audit. Extract payroll data, match jobs by equal value and calculate the required KPIs.
  2. Notify and consult the CSE. Schedule the information-consultation process with sufficient lead time for a meaningful exchange.
  3. Update recruitment practices. Add salary ranges to adverts and remove salary-history questions from all touchpoints.
  4. Implement GDPR safeguards. Conduct a DPIA, pseudonymise data and define access controls before processing audit data.
  5. Prepare remediation plans. For any job category with an unjustified pay gap of 5 % or more, draft and begin implementing corrective measures.

Employers who act proactively will not only reduce their enforcement exposure but will also strengthen their employer brand in an increasingly transparency-driven labour market. For organisations seeking specialist guidance on CSE consultation, pay-audit methodology or compliance strategy, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects you with experienced France labour-law practitioners.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. European Commission, Transposition of directives guidance
  2. EU Directive 2023/970 (Pay Transparency), official text
  3. Entreprendre / Service‑Public, “Wage transparency: what will change”
  4. Lewis Silkin LLP, France draft analysis
  5. DLA Piper, Draft bill summary
  6. CNIL, France data protection authority
  7. Aon, EU Pay Transparency Directive guide
  8. Le Monde, French government plan on gender wage gap

FAQs

Q1: When must France transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive?
France must transpose Directive 2023/970 into national law by 7 June 2026. The Directive was adopted on 10 May 2023, giving Member States a three-year transposition window.
Run an urgent pay audit, stop asking candidates about salary history, add salary ranges to all job adverts and begin formal CSE consultation on the new compliance framework.
The French draft proposes replacing the Professional Equality Index with new pay indicators aligned with the Directive, including mean and median gender pay gaps, bonus gaps and pay-quartile distribution. Companies should map their existing index metrics to the new indicators.
Employees have the right to request the average pay levels, broken down by gender, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Individual colleagues’ salaries are not disclosed; only aggregated, anonymised averages are provided.
Conduct a DPIA if the processing is high-risk, pseudonymise payroll data, define your legal basis (legal obligation or legitimate interest), restrict dataset access and document your retention schedule in line with CNIL guidance.
The Directive requires effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties. Early indications suggest administrative fines, orders to remedy pay gaps, and exposure to civil claims with a reversed burden of proof. Reputational risk from public reporting is also significant.
Yes. Under the Directive, employers must provide pay information to candidates before the interview stage. The French draft requires salary ranges to be stated directly in job adverts.

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France Pay Transparency Law 2026, Practical Checklist for HR & Works Councils (CSE)

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