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pay transparency france

How Employers Must Comply with France's 2026 Pay‑transparency Rules, Practical Legal Checklist for HR

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 18 May 2026

Pay transparency France obligations are about to change fundamentally. By 7 June 2026 France must transpose EU Directive 2023/970, the Pay Transparency Directive, into national law, replacing the familiar Professional Equality Index (Index de l’égalité professionnelle) with a broader set of pay indicators, mandating salary‑range disclosures in job adverts and strengthening every employee’s right to request pay information. For HR directors, in‑house counsel, payroll managers and business owners operating in France, the compliance window is now measured in weeks. This guide provides a lawyer‑vetted, step‑by‑step checklist covering scope, obligations, templates, justification protocols and sanctions so that employers can act before the deadline rather than react after it.

Pay Transparency France, What Changes at a Glance

As of 18 May 2026 the following key facts frame every employer’s compliance programme:

  • Transposition deadline. France must implement Directive (EU) 2023/970 by 7 June 2026. The French government confirmed this timeline through Service‑Public.
  • New pay indicators. A set of indicators will replace the current Professional Equality Index, covering gender pay gaps, bonus gaps and pay‑level distribution breakdowns.
  • Salary ranges in job adverts. Employers will be required to include a salary range or minimum pay level in every job posting, internal and external.
  • Employee information rights. Workers gain the right to request and receive data on average pay levels for colleagues performing equal work or work of equal value, broken down by sex.
  • Reporting and remediation. Employers above certain headcount thresholds must publish reports, and where unexplained pay gaps exceed defined levels a joint pay assessment and corrective action plan become mandatory.
  • Strengthened enforcement. Sanctions for non‑compliance may include administrative fines, orders to correct disparities and exposure to civil claims with a shifted burden of proof.

Use the checklist sections below to map each obligation to your organisation’s size, data readiness and HR workflows.

Background, From EU Directive to French Transposition

Directive (EU) 2023/970, adopted on 10 May 2023, establishes minimum rules to strengthen the application of the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value between men and women through pay transparency and enforcement mechanisms. It applies to all EU Member States, which are required to bring their national laws into conformity by 7 June 2026.

France already had one of Europe’s more developed pay‑equity frameworks through the Professional Equality Index, introduced in 2019. That index used five indicators (four for companies with fewer than 250 employees) and required annual publication of a composite score out of 100. The Directive goes further: it broadens the data that must be reported, extends individual information rights, introduces pre‑employment transparency and imposes remediation duties that did not previously exist under French law.

France’s draft transposition bill (projet de loi) was presented in early 2026. While the final text on Legifrance should be confirmed before implementation, the Directive’s obligations are directly applicable where national measures fall short. Industry observers expect the final French law to closely mirror the Directive’s structure while adjusting certain thresholds to align with existing French headcount categories.

Key Terms Employers Must Understand

  • Salary range (fourchette salariale). The initial pay level or range, based on objective and gender‑neutral criteria, that the employer sets for a given position.
  • Pay indicators. Quantitative metrics, including the gender pay gap in mean and median terms, bonus gaps and pay‑quartile distributions, that employers must calculate and report.
  • Equal work / work of equal value (travail de même valeur). Work assessed as equivalent using objective, gender‑neutral criteria including skills, effort, responsibility and working conditions, as defined in Article 4 of the Directive.
  • Joint pay assessment. A mandatory employer–worker representative review triggered when reporting reveals a gender pay gap of 5 % or more that the employer cannot justify with objective factors.

Who Is in Scope, Employer Thresholds and Timing

The Directive applies to all employers, public and private, but reporting obligations are phased by headcount. The table below summarises the framework as set by the EU Directive’s transposition schedule. Employers should verify the final French implementing text for any national adjustments to thresholds or timing.

Employer Size Obligations from 7 June 2026 Expected First Reporting / Notes
Micro & small (< 50 employees) Salary ranges in job adverts; employee individual information rights; equal‑pay provisions apply. Periodic reporting not mandated by the Directive but may be required under French law, check final text. Reporting cadence likely delayed or simplified under draft French provisions; verify final law on Legifrance.
Medium (50–149 employees) All of the above plus periodic reporting on pay indicators (frequency set by national law, at least every three years under the Directive). Reporting timing varies, prepare data audits in 2026 to be ready for whichever cadence the final law imposes.
Large (≥ 150 employees) Full annual reporting on all pay indicators; public disclosure; joint pay assessment and remediation duties where gender pay gap ≥ 5 % is unjustified; stronger enforcement exposure. Employers with ≥ 250 employees: first report due 7 June 2027 covering 2026 pay data. Employers 150–249: first report due 7 June 2031 (Directive default, France may accelerate this).

Practical note: even employers below 50 employees face immediate obligations on job‑advert salary ranges and individual information requests. No employer is entirely exempt from the pay transparency France framework.

Core Employer Obligations, Salary Ranges, Employee Rights and Reporting

Salary Ranges in Job Adverts

Under Article 5 of the Directive, employers must provide job applicants with information on the initial pay level or its range before the employment interview, or at the latest in the job posting itself. The likely practical effect in France will be that every job advert (whether published on job boards, the company website, or communicated through recruitment agencies) must include a salary range.

What to include:

  • A clear salary range (e.g., “€42,000 – €48,000 gross annual”) or the minimum entry‑level pay for the position.
  • The relevant provisions of any applicable collective bargaining agreement (convention collective) that determine pay.
  • Confirmation that the range is based on objective, gender‑neutral criteria.

What not to do:

  • Do not ask candidates about their current or previous salary (Article 5(2) of the Directive explicitly prohibits this).
  • Do not publish unreasonably wide ranges designed to circumvent the obligation (e.g., “€30,000 – €80,000”), enforcement bodies and courts are expected to challenge ranges that are not genuinely informative.

Employee Information Rights

Any employee may request, and must receive within two months, information on their individual pay level and the average pay levels, broken down by sex, for categories of workers performing equal work or work of equal value (Article 7). Employers must also proactively inform all workers, at least annually, of this right and of the steps required to exercise it.

Key implementation points for HR teams:

  • Create a standardised request form and response template (see Section 9 below).
  • Train line managers and HR business partners on how to handle requests without delay.
  • Ensure payroll and HRIS systems can extract the required averages by sex and job category within the two‑month response window.

New Annual Reporting Indicators, Replacing the Professional Equality Index

The Directive mandates reporting on a defined set of indicators that are broader than the current French Professional Equality Index. Based on Article 9 of the Directive, the required indicators cover:

Indicator Description
Gender pay gap (mean) Difference in mean gross hourly pay between female and male workers.
Gender pay gap (median) Difference in median gross hourly pay between female and male workers.
Gender bonus gap (mean) Difference in mean complementary or variable pay between female and male workers.
Gender bonus gap (median) Difference in median complementary or variable pay between female and male workers.
Proportion receiving bonuses Proportion of female vs. male workers receiving complementary or variable components.
Pay‑quartile distribution Proportion of female and male workers in each pay quartile (lower, lower‑middle, upper‑middle, upper).
Gender pay gap by category Gender pay gap in ordinary basic and complementary pay by category of workers, broken down by ordinary basic gross hourly pay and complementary or variable pay.

The French draft bill may introduce additional national indicators or adjust the methodology to align with existing INSEE or DARES data categories. Employers should monitor Legifrance for the final list and calculation rules.

New Pay Indicators, How They Differ from the Professional Equality Index

The Professional Equality Index replacement represents a significant shift. Where the old index produced a single composite score out of 100, allowing employers to offset weak performance on one indicator with strong results on another, the new framework requires disclosure of each indicator individually, preventing such offsetting.

Key Differences at a Glance

  • No composite score. Each indicator is reported separately; there is no single headline number.
  • Median and mean required. The old index used only certain averaging methods; the Directive requires both mean and median calculations for pay and bonus gaps.
  • Quartile distribution. A new requirement with no equivalent in the existing index, showing the concentration of women and men across pay bands.
  • Variable pay included. Bonuses, commissions, stock options and other variable components must be separately reported, a broader scope than the current French methodology.
  • Remediation trigger. A 5 % gender pay gap in any category that cannot be objectively justified triggers a mandatory joint pay assessment within six months.

Worked Example, 200‑Employee Company

Consider a company with 200 employees (110 female, 90 male). To calculate the mean gender pay gap indicator:

  1. Sum gross hourly pay for all female workers and divide by 110 to obtain the female mean (e.g., €22.50/hr).
  2. Sum gross hourly pay for all male workers and divide by 90 to obtain the male mean (e.g., €25.00/hr).
  3. Calculate the gap: (€25.00 − €22.50) ÷ €25.00 = 10 %.
  4. Report this figure as the mean gender pay gap. Repeat the exercise for median values, bonus components and each job category.

For pay‑quartile distribution, rank all 200 employees by gross hourly pay and divide into four equal groups of 50. Report the proportion of women and men in each quartile (e.g., lower quartile: 70 % female / 30 % male).

Detailed step‑by‑step calculation guidance for each indicator, including data sources, rounding conventions and reporting formats, will be covered in a forthcoming companion article on pay indicator calculations for French employers.

Pay Transparency Compliance Checklist, Action Steps by Employer Size

The following numbered checklist converts the legal obligations into project deliverables with suggested ownership and a timeline anchored to the 7 June 2026 transposition date.

  1. Conduct a pay‑equity audit (all employers, start immediately). Map current base pay, bonuses and variable compensation by sex and job category. Identify gaps exceeding 5 %. Owner: HR analytics / payroll. Deadline: complete before 7 June 2026.
  2. Update all job advert templates (all employers). Add salary range fields to internal and external advert templates. Remove any salary‑history questions from application forms and interview scripts. Owner: talent acquisition / recruitment. Deadline: 7 June 2026.
  3. Build an employee information‑request workflow (all employers). Create a standardised request form, a response template and a two‑month response tracker within your HRIS. Owner: HR operations. Deadline: 7 June 2026.
  4. Configure HRIS and payroll for new indicator calculations (employers ≥ 50). Ensure systems can extract gross hourly pay (base and variable separately), calculate mean and median by sex and job category, and produce quartile distributions. Owner: HRIS / payroll / IT. Deadline: Q3 2026 (before first data collection period).
  5. Review and update collective bargaining provisions (employers ≥ 50). Check whether the applicable convention collective or company‑level agreement contains pay‑scale structures that can support objective justification. Negotiate amendments if necessary. Owner: legal / employee relations. Deadline: ongoing, priority Q2–Q3 2026.
  6. Prepare justification documentation for known pay gaps (employers ≥ 50). For every gap exceeding 5 % that your audit identifies, document the objective, non‑discriminatory reasons (seniority, qualifications, market premiums, performance ratings). Owner: compensation / legal. Deadline: before first reporting cycle.
  7. Draft a remediation action plan (employers ≥ 150 with unjustified gaps). Where gaps cannot be justified, prepare a corrective plan with timelines, budget allocation and monitoring milestones. This becomes mandatory if a joint pay assessment is triggered. Owner: CHRO / legal / finance. Deadline: within six months of reporting.
  8. Communicate to employees (all employers). Issue an internal notice informing all workers of their new information rights, how to exercise them and where to direct questions. Owner: internal communications / HR. Deadline: 7 June 2026.
  9. Train managers and HR teams (all employers). Deliver briefing sessions on the new obligations, the ban on salary‑history questions and how to handle employee pay‑data requests. Owner: L&D / HR business partners. Deadline: Q2 2026.
  10. Monitor Legifrance for the final French text (all employers). The draft bill may undergo amendments. Assign a legal or compliance lead to monitor the Journal Officiel and update the compliance programme accordingly. Owner: legal. Deadline: ongoing.

How to Legally Justify Pay Differences and the Remediation Protocol

The Directive does not require that all employees in a category receive identical pay. It requires that any differences be explainable by objective, gender‑neutral criteria. This distinction is critical: employers who can document their reasons will satisfy regulators; those who cannot will face remediation orders and potential sanctions.

The Legal Test

To withstand scrutiny, a pay difference must satisfy three conditions:

  • Objectivity. The factor explaining the gap (e.g., seniority, qualifications, geographic location, market scarcity premium) must be measurable and verifiable.
  • Gender neutrality. The factor must not directly or indirectly discriminate on the basis of sex. For example, relying on prior salary (which itself may reflect historical discrimination) is unlikely to qualify.
  • Proportionality. The magnitude of the pay difference must be proportionate to the weight of the justifying factor.

Documentation Checklist

For each role category where a gender pay gap ≥ 5 % exists, the employer should compile:

  • A written justification memo identifying the specific objective factors.
  • Supporting data (e.g., seniority tables, qualification records, performance evaluation scores, market benchmark reports).
  • Evidence that the factors were applied consistently across genders.
  • A record of any remedial steps already taken (e.g., salary adjustments, promotion fast‑tracking).
  • Minutes of any joint pay assessment conducted with employee representatives.

Remediation Steps When Gaps Are Unjustified

Where the audit or reporting reveals an unjustified gap of 5 % or more, the employer must:

  1. Initiate a joint pay assessment with worker representatives within six months of the reporting date.
  2. Identify root causes (e.g., biased starting salaries, uneven bonus allocation, promotion bottlenecks).
  3. Develop a corrective action plan with specific measures, a budget and deadlines.
  4. Communicate the plan, and progress, to the comité social et économique (CSE) and to the competent monitoring body.
  5. Re‑assess and report in the next cycle to demonstrate improvement.

Enforcement, Sanctions and Litigation Risk for Non‑Compliance in France

The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties. While the exact French sanction regime depends on the final transposition text, the Directive’s framework, combined with existing French employment law enforcement mechanisms, points to the following risk matrix.

Sanction Type Description Likely Enforcement Body
Administrative fines Financial penalties for failure to report, failure to include salary ranges in adverts, or obstruction of employee information requests. Amounts to be set by French law. Labour inspectorate (inspection du travail); possibly DREETS.
Orders to correct Mandatory corrective orders requiring employers to conduct a joint pay assessment, produce a remediation plan or adjust pay within a set timeframe. Labour inspectorate; employment tribunal (conseil de prud’hommes).
Civil claims / compensation Employees who suffer pay discrimination may claim full compensation, including back pay, lost benefits and moral damages, with no pre‑set cap. The Directive shifts the burden of proof to the employer once the employee establishes facts suggesting discrimination. Employment tribunal (conseil de prud’hommes); civil courts.
Reputational exposure Public disclosure of pay indicators means poor results are visible to employees, candidates, investors and media. Non‑publication or poor scores carry significant employer‑brand risk. Market and public opinion; ESG rating agencies.
Collective action / representative claims The Directive explicitly empowers equality bodies and worker representatives to bring claims on behalf of affected employees, lowering the barrier to group litigation. Equality bodies (Défenseur des droits); trade unions.

How to Respond to an Inspection or Employee Request

  • Inspections. Cooperate promptly; provide requested documentation within the statutory timeframe. Ensure the justification memos and audit trail described above are readily accessible. Appoint a single point of contact (typically legal or HR compliance lead).
  • Employee requests. Acknowledge within one week; respond with the required data within two months. If the data reveals a gap, proactively explain the objective justification rather than waiting for a formal complaint.

Interaction with Data Protection and Collective Bargaining

Disclosing pay data raises data protection considerations under the GDPR and French CNIL guidance. At the same time, collective bargaining agreements interact with pay transparency obligations in practical ways employers must manage.

Data protection, key principles:

  • Pay data constitutes personal data. Processing must be grounded in a lawful basis, compliance with a legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c) GDPR) is the primary basis for mandatory reporting.
  • Aggregated and anonymised data should be used wherever possible. The Directive specifies that individual pay data should not be identifiable in reports involving categories with fewer than a defined number of workers.
  • Conduct a data protection impact assessment (DPIA) if the new reporting involves large‑scale processing of sensitive compensation data.
  • Limit access to individual‑level pay data to those with a legitimate operational need (HR, payroll, legal counsel).

Collective bargaining, practical interaction:

  • Sectoral and company‑level collective agreements (conventions collectives and accords d’entreprise) that establish transparent pay grids can serve as strong evidence of objective, gender‑neutral pay‑setting criteria.
  • Employers should verify that existing collective agreement pay classifications do not inadvertently embed gender bias (e.g., undervaluing roles predominantly held by women).
  • The CSE must be consulted on the joint pay assessment and remediation plan, reinforcing the role of social dialogue in the new framework.

Practical Templates and Sample Wording

The following templates offer starting points. Each should be adapted to the employer’s specific circumstances, applicable collective agreement and final French law wording.

Template 1, Salary‑Range Job Advert Wording

“Remuneration: The gross annual salary for this position is between €[X] and €[Y], depending on experience and qualifications. This range is determined on the basis of objective, gender‑neutral criteria in accordance with [applicable collective agreement] and the company’s pay policy. Additional benefits include [list variable components, e.g., annual bonus of up to Z % of base salary, meal vouchers, transport allowance].”

Template 2, Employee Information Request Response

“Dear [Employee Name], Further to your request dated [date] under your right to pay transparency information, please find below the data for your job category [category name]: Average gross annual pay, female workers: €[X]; male workers: €[Y]. These figures cover [number] employees performing work of equal value as assessed under criteria [specify]. Should you wish to discuss this data or require further clarification, please contact [HR contact].”

Template 3, Justification Memo Outline

  • Job category: [Category name and headcount (F/M)].
  • Identified gap: [X %] (mean) / [Y %] (median).
  • Objective factors: [List each factor, seniority, qualifications, performance, geographic premium, market benchmark, with supporting data reference].
  • Residual unexplained gap: [Z %] after adjusting for objective factors.
  • Corrective action (if residual gap > 0): [Describe planned adjustments, timeline and budget].

Template 4, Remediation Action Plan Summary

  • Scope: [Job categories covered].
  • Root cause analysis: [Summary findings from joint pay assessment].
  • Corrective measures: [e.g., salary adjustments for [N] employees, revised bonus criteria, promotion pathway review].
  • Budget: €[total] allocated over [timeframe].
  • Monitoring: [Quarterly review with CSE; next full report on [date]].
  • Responsible parties: [CHRO, compensation manager, legal counsel].

Conclusion

The pay transparency France reforms taking effect from 7 June 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of French equal‑pay reporting in years. Every employer, from startups with fewer than 50 employees to multinational groups, faces immediate obligations on salary‑range disclosure and employee information rights, with larger organisations subject to comprehensive indicator reporting, public disclosure and mandatory remediation duties. The compliance checklist above provides the framework; the templates provide the starting drafts. Employers who act now, auditing pay data, updating job adverts, configuring HRIS systems and documenting justifications, will be positioned to meet the deadline with confidence rather than scrambling under regulatory pressure.

For organisations requiring tailored compliance programmes or legal review of their pay‑equity documentation, consulting a qualified French employment law specialist is strongly recommended.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Margaux Goetz-Nectoux at MAGE AVOCATS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. EUR‑Lex, Directive (EU) 2023/970 (EU Pay Transparency Directive)
  2. Service‑Public / Entreprendre, French Government Notice on Transposition
  3. Legifrance, French Official Journal (Draft and Final Laws)
  4. CNIL, French Data Protection Authority Guidance
  5. Trusaic, Global Pay Transparency Centre: France
  6. Littler, Analysis of French Draft Transposition Bill

FAQs

What will change with pay transparency in France in 2026?
France will transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive by 7 June 2026, introducing new pay indicators replacing the Professional Equality Index, mandatory salary ranges in job adverts, stronger employee information rights and reporting and remediation duties.
All employers, regardless of size, must include salary ranges in job adverts and respond to employee information requests from the transposition date. Periodic reporting obligations are phased by headcount.
A clear salary range or minimum pay level, any relevant collective agreement provisions and confirmation that the range is based on objective, gender‑neutral criteria. Asking candidates about salary history is prohibited.
Employers must document objective, non‑discriminatory reasons, such as seniority, qualifications, performance and market factors, and maintain auditable records. Where gaps of 5 % or more remain unjustified, a joint pay assessment is mandatory.
Sanctions may include administrative fines, orders to correct disparities, civil compensation claims (with shifted burden of proof) and reputational damage through public indicator disclosure. Specific amounts depend on the final French implementing law.
No inherent conflict exists; employers must anonymise aggregated reports, rely on the legal obligation basis under GDPR Article 6(1)(c) and limit access to individual pay data to authorised personnel. A DPIA may be advisable.
Collective agreements setting transparent pay grids can support objective justification for pay structures. However, employers must verify that existing classifications do not embed indirect gender bias. The CSE must be consulted on remediation plans.

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How Employers Must Comply with France's 2026 Pay‑transparency Rules, Practical Legal Checklist for HR

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