[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
pay transparency france

Our Expert in France

Implementing Pay Transparency in France: Practical Steps for Employers, the CSE and Trade Unions

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Pay transparency in France is about to undergo its most significant transformation in a generation. Under Directive (EU) 2023/970, the EU Pay Transparency Directive, every Member State, including France, must transpose binding pay-transparency obligations into national law by 7 June 2026. For employers operating in France, this means mandatory salary-range disclosure in job advertisements, expanded employee information rights, new gender pay-gap reporting indicators that will likely replace or augment the existing Index de l’égalité professionnelle, and structured consultation with employee representative bodies. Draft French proposals are already circulating, and the compliance window is closing rapidly, making a clear, step-by-step implementation plan essential for every HR director, general counsel and CSE representative in the country.

What to Do Now, 30 / 90 / 180-Day Checklist

Before diving into the legal detail, employers should anchor their planning around three immediate milestones. Early action reduces the risk of rushed compliance, strained CSE relationships and GDPR missteps.

  • Next 30 days, Map and assess. Identify all job families, pay components and data sources. Catalogue existing pay-gap metrics from the Index de l’égalité professionnelle and flag gaps between current reporting and the new Directive requirements.
  • Next 90 days, Engage the CSE and plan the audit. Schedule the first CSE information-consultation meeting on pay transparency. Appoint a cross-functional project team (Legal, HR, Payroll, DPO) and commission a GDPR-compliant pay-equity audit.
  • Next 180 days, Implement, communicate and publish. Finalise salary bands for all open and future vacancies. Update recruitment policies to prohibit salary-history questions. Publish the first set of new pay-gap indicators internally and, where required, externally. Present corrective action plans to the CSE.

Legal Background and Timeline: The EU Pay Transparency Directive and French Transposition

Directive (EU) 2023/970, adopted on 10 May 2023 and published in the Official Journal of the European Union, establishes binding minimum standards to strengthen the application of the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value between men and women. Member States must transpose these rules by 7 June 2026, as confirmed by the French government’s official notice on entreprendre.service-public.gouv.fr.

In France, draft national proposals anticipate replacing or materially upgrading the existing Index de l’égalité professionnelle with a broader set of pay indicators aligned to the Directive’s requirements. Industry observers expect the French transposition to include mandatory salary-range disclosure in job advertisements, a prohibition on salary-history enquiries during recruitment, expanded individual employee information rights, and phased reporting obligations tied to employer size, all of which go substantially further than the current Index framework.

Key Definitions Under the Directive

  • “Pay” covers the ordinary basic or minimum wage and any other consideration, whether in cash or in kind, that a worker receives directly or indirectly from the employer in respect of employment.
  • “Work of equal value” is determined using objective, gender-neutral criteria including skills, effort, responsibility and working conditions.
  • “Employer” for reporting purposes encompasses any natural or legal person who has employees, the size thresholds for phased reporting depend on headcount (discussed below).
Milestone Date / Period Expected Employer Action
Directive (EU) 2023/970 adopted 10 May 2023 Begin monitoring transposition developments
French draft proposals circulated 2025 – early 2026 Assess gap between current Index obligations and new requirements
Transposition deadline 7 June 2026 Full compliance: salary-range disclosure, reporting, CSE consultation operational
First reporting cycle (≥250 employees) Expected 7 June 2027 Publish first set of Directive-aligned pay-gap indicators

Employer Obligations: Salary Transparency in France for Recruitment, Job Ads and Internal Disclosure

The employer obligations under pay transparency in France fall into three overlapping categories: pre-employment disclosure, individual employee information rights, and ongoing internal transparency. Each requires distinct operational adjustments.

Disclosure of Salary Ranges in Job Advertisements

Under the Directive, employers must provide information about the initial pay level or the pay range, based on objective, gender-neutral criteria, for every advertised position. This information must be included in the job vacancy notice or communicated to the candidate before the job interview. The practical effect for French employers will be to embed salary bands in every published job advertisement, whether posted internally, on the company website or on third-party recruitment platforms.

Sample salary-range wording for a job advertisement:

“This position is classified within pay band C3 of our internal grading structure. The gross annual salary range is €48,000 – €58,000, determined by experience, qualifications and scope of responsibilities, in accordance with objective, gender-neutral criteria.”

Employers should develop standardised salary-band language approved by Legal and HR, calibrated to each job family. Where collective agreements set minimum rates, the advertisement should reference both the collective agreement floor and the employer’s applied range.

Employee Information Rights

Once the transposition is effective, employees will have the right to request, and receive in writing, information on their individual pay level and the average pay levels, broken down by sex, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. The Directive requires employers to respond within two months. Employers should prepare template response letters now, ensuring that comparative data is presented in aggregate, anonymised form to prevent identification of individual colleagues, a critical GDPR consideration.

Recruitment Practices: The Salary-History Ban

Article 5(2) of Directive 2023/970 prohibits employers from asking applicants about their pay history in current or previous employment relationships. Early indications suggest French transposition will embed this prohibition directly in national law. Employers should update HR manuals, interview guides and third-party recruiter contracts immediately with a model policy line such as:

“Interviewers and recruitment partners must not request, directly or indirectly, information about a candidate’s current or previous remuneration. Salary offers must be based solely on the applicable pay band and the candidate’s qualifications, skills and experience.”

Reporting and Public Disclosure: Who Reports What, and When

The Directive introduces phased reporting obligations based on employer size. While the exact thresholds in the final French transposition text remain subject to confirmation, the Directive establishes the following baseline framework, which industry observers expect France to follow closely or strengthen.

Employer Size (Headcount) Reporting Obligations (Summary) Suggested Employer Action / Timeline
Fewer than 50 employees No mandatory external reporting under the Directive baseline; however, salary-range disclosure in job ads and employee information rights still apply. French transposition may introduce additional obligations, monitor closely. Prepare internal pay mapping; include salary ranges in all job advertisements immediately; establish a process for responding to employee information requests.
50 – 249 employees Periodic reporting on gender pay-gap indicators to a designated national body. Reporting likely required every three years initially. Must provide information to employee representatives. Run a pay-equity audit within the next 90 days. Present findings and methodology to the CSE. Prepare a publishable summary of pay indicators.
250 or more employees Annual reporting on gender pay-gap indicators. Public disclosure of results. Where the pay gap exceeds 5% and cannot be justified by objective, gender-neutral criteria, the employer must conduct a joint pay assessment with employee representatives. Commence an immediate audit. Establish a joint CSE working group on pay transparency. Publish the first set of Directive-aligned indicators and a corrective action plan where gaps exceed the threshold.

Note: these thresholds reflect the Directive baseline. The final French transposition text, once published, may adjust reporting frequency or add supplementary indicators. Employers should treat this table as minimum compliance and check Legifrance for updates.

Reporting indicators under the Directive include the gender pay gap (mean and median), the gender pay gap in complementary or variable pay, the proportion of female and male workers in each pay quartile, and the gender pay gap by categories of workers performing equal work or work of equal value. These indicators will likely replace or augment the five components of the current French Index de l’égalité professionnelle.

Role of the CSE and Trade Unions in Implementing Pay Transparency

CSE pay transparency obligations are not limited to passive receipt of data. Under both the Directive and existing French labour law, the Comité Social et Économique and representative trade unions have an active role in shaping how pay-transparency measures are designed, communicated and enforced within the organisation.

Structuring the Consultation Process

Employers should adopt a three-phase engagement model:

  • Phase 1, Information sharing. Provide the CSE with a written briefing at least 15 days before the first meeting. The briefing should cover: the legal framework (Directive 2023/970 and the draft French transposition), the planned scope and methodology of the pay-equity audit, the data categories to be collected, and a proposed project timeline.
  • Phase 2, Joint working group. Establish a dedicated working group comprising CSE members, trade union delegates (where applicable), HR leadership and the Data Protection Officer. The group’s mandate should include reviewing audit methodology, examining anonymised findings, proposing corrective actions and drafting the employee communication plan.
  • Phase 3, Formal consultation and opinion. Present the final audit results and proposed action plan to the full CSE for formal consultation. Record the CSE’s reasoned opinion and any reservations. Publish the summary report and action plan internally (and externally where required).

Practical Template: First CSE Meeting Agenda

  • Item 1. Presentation of the legal framework, Directive (EU) 2023/970 and French transposition status.
  • Item 2. Scope of the proposed pay-equity audit: job families, pay components, data sources and anonymisation approach.
  • Item 3. GDPR safeguards, role of the DPO, data minimisation, retention periods and access controls.
  • Item 4. Proposed project timeline and milestones.
  • Item 5. Q&A, CSE members’ questions and preliminary observations.
  • Item 6. Next steps, schedule for working group meetings and formal consultation date.

Managing confidentiality is essential. When sharing audit data with CSE members or union delegates, employers must ensure that individual employees cannot be identified. Aggregate data should be presented at a level of granularity that prevents re-identification, typically a minimum cell size of five employees per reported category. The employer remains the data controller and must document the lawful basis for each data-sharing step.

How to Run a GDPR-Compliant Pay Equity Audit in France

A pay equity audit in France sits at the intersection of labour law and data protection law. Getting the GDPR compliance framework right from the outset is non-negotiable, errors risk both CNIL enforcement action and the invalidation of audit findings in any subsequent equal-pay dispute.

Pre-Audit Steps

  • Identify the lawful basis. For most employers, compliance with a legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c) GDPR, read together with the transposed Directive) will be the primary basis. Where national law has not yet been transposed, a legitimate interest basis (Article 6(1)(f)) may be relied upon, supported by a balancing test documented in the DPIA.
  • Conduct a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA). Processing pay data at scale, particularly when combined with gender and job classification data, is likely to constitute high-risk processing under CNIL guidance. A DPIA is strongly recommended and may be mandatory.
  • Appoint roles. The employer is the data controller. Where an external consultant runs the audit, they act as a data processor and must sign a compliant Article 28 processing agreement.

Data Fields, Purpose and Retention

Data Item Purpose Suggested Retention Period
Base salary, variable pay, bonuses, benefits in kind Calculate mean and median gender pay gaps Duration of audit cycle + 3 years (limitation period for equal-pay claims)
Gender Mandatory disaggregation variable Same as above
Job classification, grade, job family Identify categories of equal work / work of equal value Same as above
Seniority, qualifications, experience Assess objective justifications for pay differences Same as above
Employee identifier (pseudonymised) Enable data integrity checks without direct identification Delete or anonymise upon audit completion

Pseudonymisation Workflow and Access Controls

Extract payroll and HR data into a dedicated, access-controlled audit environment. Replace direct identifiers (name, employee number) with a pseudonymous key held separately by the DPO or a designated custodian. Grant audit team members access only to pseudonymised datasets. Record all access in an audit log. Upon completion, delete the pseudonymous key and retain only anonymised, aggregated results for reporting and CSE consultation purposes.

The GDPR HR pay audit process should be documented in a standard operating procedure, reviewed by the DPO, and made available to the CNIL upon request. Employers should also include a brief privacy notice informing employees that their pay data will be processed for the purpose of the pay-equity audit, citing the relevant lawful basis.

Practical Implementation: Project Plan, Templates and Communications

Translating legal obligations into operational reality requires a structured project plan. The following 90-day and 180-day frameworks allocate responsibilities across Legal, HR, Payroll and the CSE liaison function.

90-Day Implementation Plan

  • Weeks 1–2 (Legal + HR): Review Directive text and available French draft provisions. Brief the executive team and the DPO. Confirm project governance and budget.
  • Weeks 3–4 (HR + Payroll): Map all job families, pay bands and variable pay components. Identify data sources and extract a preliminary dataset for the DPIA.
  • Weeks 5–6 (Legal + DPO): Complete the DPIA. Finalise the pseudonymisation workflow. Draft the Article 28 processing agreement if using an external auditor.
  • Weeks 7–8 (HR + CSE Liaison): Deliver the written briefing to the CSE. Hold the first information meeting using the template agenda above.
  • Weeks 9–12 (Audit Team): Execute the pay-equity audit. Produce anonymised findings. Prepare a preliminary report for the CSE working group.

180-Day Implementation Plan (Continued)

  • Months 4–5 (HR + Legal): Finalise salary bands for all job families. Update job advertisement templates with standardised salary-range wording. Revise recruitment policies to include the salary-history ban.
  • Month 5 (CSE Liaison): Present final audit results and proposed corrective action plan to the full CSE for formal consultation. Record the CSE’s reasoned opinion.
  • Month 6 (Communications + HR): Issue an employee communication explaining the new pay-transparency measures. Publish pay-gap indicators internally (and externally where required). Archive documentation for regulatory audit purposes.

Sample Internal Policy Extract: Salary-History Ban

“Effective [date], it is the policy of [Company] that no employee, manager, recruiter or external recruitment partner shall request, directly or indirectly, information about a candidate’s current or previous remuneration at any stage of the recruitment process. All salary offers must be determined exclusively by reference to the applicable internal pay band, the candidate’s qualifications, skills, experience and the objective requirements of the role. Breach of this policy may result in disciplinary action.”

Sample Employee Communication (Email Template)

Subject: New pay-transparency measures at [Company]

Dear colleagues, As part of our commitment to fair and transparent pay practices, and in compliance with the EU Pay Transparency Directive as transposed into French law, we are introducing the following changes: (1) All job advertisements will now include a salary range. (2) Every employee has the right to request information about their individual pay level and the average pay levels, broken down by gender, for comparable roles. (3) We will publish pay-gap indicators annually / every three years [adjust by employer size]. A dedicated Q&A document is available [link]. If you have questions, please contact [HR contact].

Downloadable Toolkit

Employers implementing pay transparency in France should prepare the following documents as part of their compliance toolkit:

  • GDPR-safe pay-audit checklist, covering lawful basis, DPIA steps, pseudonymisation workflow and retention schedule.
  • Sample CSE meeting agenda, first information meeting on pay transparency (see template above).
  • Sample job advertisement salary-band wording, adaptable template with collective agreement reference.
  • Employee information request response template, compliant two-month response letter with anonymised comparative data.
  • Salary-history ban policy insert, ready-to-paste clause for HR manuals and recruiter contracts.

Enforcement, Penalties and Preventing Disputes

The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non-compliance. Early analysis of the French draft proposals suggests that penalties could include administrative fines and, for persistent non-compliance, financial sanctions calculated as a percentage of payroll. Some law-firm briefings have reported potential fines ranging from 1% to 2% of annual payroll for the most serious breaches, although these figures remain subject to confirmation in the final French legislative text.

Beyond regulatory fines, employers face the risk of individual and collective equal-pay claims. The Directive shifts the burden of proof: where an employee establishes facts from which a pay-discrimination breach may be presumed, it falls to the employer to prove that no direct or indirect discrimination has occurred. Robust documentation, including the pay-equity audit methodology, objective justification for pay differentials, CSE consultation records and corrective action plans, is the single most effective tool for dispute prevention.

Best practices to reduce enforcement risk include: engaging the CSE early and documenting every consultation step; maintaining a clear, written record of how each pay band was determined; running the pay-equity audit on a regular cycle (not just once); and updating salary-range disclosures whenever job requirements or market benchmarks change materially.

Conclusion: Immediate Steps for Pay Transparency in France

The 7 June 2026 transposition deadline for pay transparency in France is not a future planning horizon, it is an operational reality. Employers who begin now will have time to conduct a rigorous, GDPR-compliant pay-equity audit, engage the CSE constructively, build salary-band structures that withstand scrutiny, and train recruiters on the salary-history ban. Those who wait risk compressed timelines, adversarial CSE relations and regulatory exposure.

The immediate to-do list is clear: map your pay data and job families within 30 days; schedule the first CSE meeting and launch the DPIA within 90 days; and publish your first set of Directive-aligned indicators within 180 days. Early, structured action is the most effective way to turn a compliance obligation into a competitive advantage in talent attraction and retention.

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. EUR‑Lex, Directive (EU) 2023/970 (Pay Transparency)
  2. Entreprendre / Service‑public.fr, French Government Notice on Transposition
  3. CNIL, French Data Protection Authority (HR Data and DPIA Guidance)
  4. CMS, Beyond Disclosure: How the EU Pay Transparency Directive Will Reshape Employer Obligations
  5. Lewis Silkin, France Pay Transparency Draft Law: Key Differences from the EU Directive
  6. French Ministry of Labour (Ministère du Travail)

FAQs

What is the EU Pay Transparency Directive and when must France transpose it?
Directive (EU) 2023/970 establishes binding minimum standards to strengthen equal pay between men and women across the EU. France, like all Member States, must transpose the Directive into national law by 7 June 2026. The Directive was adopted on 10 May 2023 and published in the Official Journal of the European Union.
Employers must provide the initial pay level or a pay range, based on objective, gender-neutral criteria, for every advertised position. This information must appear in the vacancy notice or be communicated to the candidate before the interview. Draft French rules indicate that mandatory salary-range disclosure will apply to all published job advertisements.
Employers should calculate both the mean and median gender pay gap across the organisation and within categories of workers performing equal work or work of equal value. Adjustments for objective factors (seniority, qualifications, scope of responsibility) must be documented. Where the gap exceeds 5% and cannot be justified, a joint pay assessment with employee representatives is required under the Directive.
The CSE must be informed and consulted on the employer’s pay-transparency measures, including the methodology and findings of the pay-equity audit. For employers with 250 or more employees where unjustified pay gaps exceed 5%, the CSE participates in a joint pay assessment. Establishing a dedicated working group and providing written briefing materials at least 15 days before the first meeting is recommended.
Yes. Employers should identify a lawful basis (typically compliance with a legal obligation under Article 6(1)(c) GDPR), conduct a Data Protection Impact Assessment, pseudonymise individual records, limit access to the audit team, and delete the pseudonymous key upon audit completion. The employer remains the data controller throughout the process. CNIL guidance on HR data processing should be followed closely.
Article 5(2) of Directive 2023/970 prohibits employers from asking applicants about their pay history. Early indications suggest French transposition will embed this prohibition directly in national law. Employers should implement a salary-history ban policy in all recruitment processes immediately, including in contracts with external recruiters.
The Directive requires effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties. Analysis of French draft proposals suggests administrative fines and potential percentage-of-payroll sanctions for serious breaches. Additionally, the Directive shifts the burden of proof in equal-pay claims, meaning employers who cannot demonstrate compliance face increased litigation risk. Documenting audit methodology, CSE consultation and corrective actions is the most effective mitigation strategy.
Immediately. Employers should map job families and pay data within 30 days, schedule CSE engagement and launch the DPIA within 90 days, and aim to publish Directive-aligned pay indicators within 180 days. Waiting for the final French transposition text to be published before beginning operational preparation is a high-risk strategy given the 7 June 2026 deadline.

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.

Newsletter Sign Up
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

Join Mailing List

GLE

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

Implementing Pay Transparency in France: Practical Steps for Employers, the CSE and Trade Unions

Send welcome message

Custom Message