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Pay Transparency Germany 2026: Directive (EU) 2023/970, Employer Obligations & Reporting Deadlines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Pay transparency in Germany is about to undergo its most significant overhaul in nearly a decade. Directive (EU) 2023/970, the EU Pay Transparency Directive, must be transposed into German national law by 7 June 2026, replacing the limited framework of the existing Entgelttransparenzgesetz (EntgTranspG) with far broader obligations that touch every stage of the employment relationship. Employers will be required to disclose salary ranges in job advertisements, stop asking candidates about salary history, grant employees an expanded right to pay information, and, for the first time at scale, submit periodic gender pay gap reports and conduct joint pay assessments with works councils.

This compliance playbook sets out who is in scope, what must be reported, when deadlines fall, and how boards, general counsel and HR leaders can operationalise compliance before the transposition date arrives.

Executive Summary, Immediate Actions for Boards and HR

The transposition deadline of 7 June 2026 is not a future planning horizon, it is the date by which German employers must already be operating under new rules. Management boards that have not yet started auditing pay data, mapping job families and engaging their Betriebsrat on joint assessment processes face a compressed implementation window that carries real legal, financial and reputational risk. Employers with 250 or more employees should expect to deliver their first gender pay gap report within the initial reporting cycle following transposition, which industry observers expect to begin within 12 months of the law taking effect.

Three actions demand immediate attention: first, conduct a full audit of current compensation data across all employee categories, broken down by gender; second, define or refine job descriptions and corresponding pay bands using objective, gender-neutral evaluation criteria; and third, begin planning the organisational infrastructure, data systems, governance roles and works council engagement, needed to produce compliant reports on time. The timeline below translates these priorities into a phased action plan.

  • Next 30 days. Appoint a project lead (typically the head of compensation and benefits or a senior compliance officer). Conduct a gap analysis comparing current pay practices against the Directive’s requirements. Brief the management board.
  • Next 90 days. Complete the compensation data audit. Map all roles into job families using gender-neutral evaluation criteria. Initiate dialogue with the Betriebsrat about the joint pay assessment framework. Engage the Data Protection Officer (DPO) on GDPR implications.
  • Next 180 days. Run a pilot gender pay gap report using the Directive’s methodology. Identify and document any pay gaps exceeding the 5 % threshold. Draft corrective action plans where needed. Update recruitment processes to include salary-range disclosures and remove salary-history questions. Formalise internal governance and board reporting lines.

What Changed, Directive (EU) 2023/970 and How It Amends German Law

The EU Pay Transparency Directive was adopted on 10 May 2023 and entered into force on 6 June 2023, giving Member States a three-year transposition window ending on 7 June 2026. It represents the EU’s most ambitious legislative intervention on the gender pay gap to date, moving well beyond disclosure rights into mandatory reporting, enforcement mechanisms and a reversal of the burden of proof in pay-discrimination disputes.

Core Measures of Directive (EU) 2023/970

The Directive introduces five pillars of obligation for employers:

  • Pre-hire salary transparency. Employers must provide applicants with the initial pay range, or at least the entry-level pay, for advertised positions, either in the vacancy notice or before the interview stage.
  • Ban on salary-history enquiries. Employers may not ask candidates about their current or previous remuneration, directly or through intermediaries.
  • Right to information. Employees gain the right to request and receive information about 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.
  • Employer reporting obligations. Employers above defined headcount thresholds must periodically report gender pay gap data to a designated national monitoring body.
  • Joint pay assessments. Where reporting reveals a pay gap of 5 % or more in any category of workers that cannot be justified by objective, gender-neutral criteria, employers must carry out a joint pay assessment in cooperation with workers’ representatives.

Comparison with the Entgelttransparenzgesetz (2017)

Germany’s existing pay transparency regime, the EntgTranspG, in force since 2017, was widely regarded as limited in scope and enforcement. The table below highlights the key differences that the EU Directive’s transposition will introduce.

Feature EntgTranspG (2017) Directive (EU) 2023/970 (transposition by June 2026)
Scope, employer size Individual right to information applies only to employers with more than 200 employees; reporting obligations limited to employers with more than 500 employees Rights apply to all employers regardless of size; reporting obligations phased by headcount thresholds (100+ employees)
Pre-hire salary disclosure No requirement Mandatory salary range in job adverts or before interview
Salary-history ban No prohibition Employers may not ask about current or past remuneration
Reporting content Limited internal report on gender equality and equal pay Detailed gender pay gap metrics (mean, median, pay-band distribution, proportion by quartile) filed with national monitoring body
Joint pay assessment No mandatory assessment Required where unjustified pay gap ≥ 5 % is identified
Enforcement & burden of proof Weak enforcement; burden of proof on employee Shifted burden of proof to employer in pay-discrimination cases; Member States must establish effective penalties

Pay Transparency in Germany, Scope, Thresholds and Timelines

Understanding which employers are covered, and when, is critical for planning purposes. The Directive applies certain obligations universally while phasing reporting duties by employer size. National transposition may adjust thresholds within the parameters set by the Directive, but the following framework represents the baseline that German employers should plan against.

How to Count Employees

The Directive does not prescribe whether headcount or full-time equivalent (FTE) should be used for threshold calculations; this decision falls to the transposing Member State. Early indications suggest that Germany may adopt a headcount approach consistent with existing labour-law thresholds (for example, the Betriebsverfassungsgesetz uses headcount for works-council formation triggers). Employers operating through group structures should monitor whether the threshold is assessed at entity level or consolidated-group level, as this will determine which subsidiaries trigger reporting independently.

Special Cases, Temporary Agencies, Groups and the Public Sector

Temporary-agency workers present a particular challenge: the Directive requires that the user undertaking, not only the agency, applies equal-pay principles. Group undertakings may need to aggregate data at the parent-company level, depending on national transposition choices. Public-sector employers are subject to the same obligations and, in practice, may face stricter disclosure norms given existing civil-service transparency requirements.

Employer Category Employee Threshold Reporting Frequency Under the Directive
Large employers (250+) 250 or more employees Annually (from the first applicable reporting date following transposition)
Medium employers (150–249) 150–249 employees Every three years (first report due by 7 June 2027)
Smaller medium employers (100–149) 100–149 employees Every three years (first report due by 7 June 2031)
Small employers (<100) Fewer than 100 employees No mandatory reporting under the Directive (but right-to-information and pre-hire obligations apply)
Public-sector employers As per applicable threshold As required; may be subject to additional national transparency requirements

Employer Reporting Obligations, What to Report, Frequency and Deadlines

The reporting framework under the EU Pay Transparency Directive is substantially more demanding than anything German employers have faced under the EntgTranspG. Reports must be filed with a national monitoring body designated by Germany as part of its transposition, and they must also be made accessible to employees and their representatives.

Required Data Fields

The Directive specifies that employer reports must include, at a minimum:

  • Gender pay gap. The difference in average gross hourly pay between female and male workers, expressed as a percentage of male workers’ average gross hourly pay.
  • Gender pay gap in complementary or variable components. The gap in bonuses, allowances, overtime payments and other non-base-salary elements.
  • Median gender pay gap. The median gross hourly pay gap between female and male workers.
  • Median pay gap in variable components. The same metric applied to complementary and variable pay.
  • Proportion of male and female workers in each pay quartile. Workers must be ranked by pay and divided into four equal groups, with the gender split in each quartile reported.
  • Gender pay gap by category of workers. Broken down by ordinary basic salary and by complementary or variable components, for each category of workers performing equal work or work of equal value.

How to Calculate Pay Gaps, Methodology

Employers must base their calculations on gross hourly pay. The Directive defines this as the ordinary basic or minimum hourly wage plus any consideration, whether in cash or in kind, that the worker receives from the employer in connection with employment. Calculating accurate gaps requires a robust job-evaluation methodology that classifies roles into categories of “equal work” or “work of equal value.” Objective criteria for this classification include skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions. Industry observers expect that the German transposition will provide further guidance on accepted job-evaluation frameworks, but employers should not wait, adopting an analytical, factor-based evaluation system now will reduce rework later.

Filing and Publication Requirements

Reports must be submitted to the designated national monitoring body and made available to employees and their representatives. For employers with 250 or more employees, reporting is annual. Employers with 100 to 249 employees report every three years. The Directive further requires that the information submitted be accessible to a designated national equality body for monitoring and enforcement purposes. Industry observers expect the German transposition to require electronic filing, potentially through the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) or a purpose-built portal, though the exact filing mechanism will be confirmed by the implementing legislation.

Reporting Obligations by Employer Size, Comparison Table

Employer Size / Type Key Reporting Obligations First Report Deadline (Practical Guidance)
Large employers (250+) Full gender pay gap metrics (mean and median, base and variable), pay-quartile distribution, gap by worker category, corrective plan if gap > 5 % Within 12 months of transposition, start planning immediately
Medium employers (150–249) Same reporting content; three-year cycle; joint pay assessment triggers apply First report due by 7 June 2027; prepare data infrastructure now
Smaller medium employers (100–149) Same reporting content; three-year cycle First report due by 7 June 2031; begin baseline data collection
Small employers (<100) Right to information for employees; salary-range disclosure in adverts; recordkeeping Ongoing compliance from transposition date
Public-sector employers Full reporting; coordination with central authority; stricter public disclosure As required by national transposition measures

Operationalising Compliance, Joint Pay Assessments and the Works Council (Betriebsrat)

Where gender pay gap reporting reveals a difference of 5 % or more in any category of workers that the employer cannot justify on the basis of objective, gender-neutral criteria, the Directive mandates a joint pay assessment carried out in cooperation with workers’ representatives. In Germany, this means direct collaboration with the Betriebsrat, a requirement that adds both procedural complexity and an opportunity for constructive social dialogue.

Negotiating with the Betriebsrat, Legal Constraints and Best Practice

The Betriebsrat’s co-determination rights under the Betriebsverfassungsgesetz (Works Constitution Act) already cover many aspects of remuneration structures. The joint pay assessment process dovetails with these existing rights but introduces new obligations. Employers must provide the Betriebsrat with access to the data underlying the pay gap report, subject to GDPR-compliant anonymisation. Best practice suggests formalising the engagement through a works agreement (Betriebsvereinbarung) that sets out the scope, methodology, data-access protocols, timeline and dispute-resolution mechanism for the joint assessment.

The following six-step process represents a model framework for conducting the joint pay assessment:

  1. Initiation and mandate (Weeks 1–2). The employer formally notifies the Betriebsrat that a joint pay assessment is required, identifies the affected worker categories and proposes terms of reference.
  2. Data provision and validation (Weeks 3–4). HR compiles anonymised pay data for the affected categories. The Betriebsrat validates data completeness and raises any queries on job-classification methodology.
  3. Root-cause analysis (Weeks 5–7). Employer and Betriebsrat jointly examine the drivers of the identified gap, seniority distributions, part-time versus full-time ratios, bonus structures, overtime patterns, and market-benchmarking practices.
  4. Remedial measures and action plan (Weeks 8–10). The parties agree on corrective measures, which may include pay adjustments, revised bonus criteria, changes to promotion processes or updated job-evaluation frameworks, and set implementation timelines.
  5. Documentation and sign-off (Weeks 11–12). The completed joint pay assessment, including findings, root-cause analysis and action plan, is formally documented. Both parties sign off, and the employer files the assessment with the monitoring body.
  6. Monitoring and follow-up (ongoing). The action plan is reviewed at agreed intervals (typically quarterly) to track implementation progress and measure whether the gap is closing.

Internal Governance, HR, Legal and Data Team Responsibilities

Effective joint pay assessments require clear internal ownership. The recommended governance model assigns specific roles:

  • Project sponsor (CHRO or CFO). Owns the compliance mandate and reports to the management board on progress and risk.
  • Data owner (Head of Compensation & Benefits). Responsible for data extraction, quality assurance and delivery of anonymised datasets to the Betriebsrat.
  • Legal counsel (General Counsel or external adviser). Advises on Directive interpretation, works-council negotiation strategy and liability risk.
  • DPO / data protection team. Oversees GDPR compliance for all pay-data processing, including pseudonymisation, access controls and retention schedules.
  • External auditor (optional). Provides independent verification of the job-evaluation methodology and pay-gap calculations, adding credibility to the joint assessment outcome.

Data Protection, Recordkeeping and Anonymisation

Compiling and sharing granular pay data inevitably engages the GDPR. Employers must process compensation data lawfully, minimise the personal data they expose and maintain rigorous access controls, all while satisfying the Directive’s transparency objectives. The tension between disclosure and data protection is one of the most frequently cited implementation challenges.

DPIA Checklist for Pay Transparency Reporting

A Data Protection Impact Assessment is strongly recommended, and in many cases legally required, where the processing involves large-scale evaluation of employees’ pay data. The following checklist provides a practical starting point:

  • Lawful basis. Identify the appropriate legal basis, compliance with a legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c) GDPR) is the most likely basis for reporting mandated by the transposed Directive.
  • Purpose limitation. Pay data extracted for reporting should be used solely for that purpose and not repurposed for performance management or other HR analytics without a separate legal basis.
  • Data minimisation. Extract only the data fields required by the Directive. Avoid collecting sensitive personal data beyond what is strictly necessary.
  • Pseudonymisation and aggregation. Reports shared with the Betriebsrat or published externally must not allow the identification of individual employees. Where worker categories are small (typically fewer than five individuals), data must be aggregated to prevent re-identification.
  • Access controls. Define role-based access to raw pay data. Limit access to the data owner, the DPO and authorised members of the joint assessment team.
  • Retention schedule. Retain the underlying data for the duration required by the Directive and any national retention obligations. Industry observers expect a minimum retention period of three to five years from the date of each report.

Suggested Retention and Access Controls

Coordination between the DPO and the Betriebsrat is essential. Under German law, the Betriebsrat itself is not a separate data controller but operates under the employer’s data-protection framework. A data-access protocol, ideally embedded in the works agreement governing the joint pay assessment, should specify which data fields the Betriebsrat may access, in what form (anonymised or pseudonymised), and for how long. Employers should also log all access events to demonstrate accountability under Article 5(2) GDPR.

Board Duties, Liability and Enforcement Risk

The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non-compliance. While the exact penalty regime will be determined by the German transposition, management boards should prepare for a regulatory environment that imposes meaningful consequences for failure to report, inaccurate reporting or failure to conduct joint pay assessments where required.

Beyond direct penalties, the enforcement framework shifts the burden of proof in pay-discrimination disputes: where an employer fails to comply with its transparency obligations, it will be presumed to have discriminated, and the burden shifts to the employer to prove otherwise. This reversal significantly increases litigation risk and the potential for damages awards, including full back-pay and compensation for non-material harm.

Risk Matrix and Board Agenda Items

Boards should assess pay transparency compliance risk across two dimensions, probability of occurrence and severity of impact:

  • High probability, high impact. Failure to file reports on time; discovery of unjustified pay gaps exceeding 5 % without a remedial action plan. The likely practical effect will be regulatory penalties, reversed burden of proof in litigation, and significant reputational damage.
  • Medium probability, high impact. Inadequate job-evaluation methodology that fails to withstand judicial scrutiny. Class-action-style claims by employee groups citing systemic pay discrimination.
  • Medium probability, medium impact. GDPR breaches arising from improper handling of pay data during reporting or joint assessments.
  • Low probability, high impact. Personal liability of board members under general corporate-governance duties (§ 93 AktG for AGs; § 43 GmbHG for GmbHs) if non-compliance results from a failure to implement adequate internal controls.

Recommended quarterly board agenda items include: status of pay-data audit completion; progress of works-council engagement; summary of pay gaps identified by category; remedial actions in progress; and upcoming filing deadlines.

Practical Pay Transparency Germany Compliance Checklist

The following phased checklist translates the Directive’s requirements into concrete, assignable tasks for HR and legal teams.

Within 30 days:

  • Appoint a cross-functional project lead and establish a steering committee (HR, legal, finance, DPO).
  • Brief the management board on obligations, deadlines and risk exposure.
  • Conduct a gap analysis: compare current pay practices, job descriptions and recruitment processes against Directive requirements.

Within 90 days:

  • Complete a full compensation data audit across all employee categories, segmented by gender.
  • Map all roles into job families using objective, gender-neutral evaluation criteria.
  • Open formal dialogue with the Betriebsrat on the joint pay assessment framework.
  • Commission a DPIA for pay-data processing; engage the DPO on anonymisation protocols.
  • Update recruitment policies: embed salary-range disclosure in all job advertisements; remove salary-history questions from application forms and interview scripts.

Within 180 days:

  • Run a pilot gender pay gap report using the Directive’s required metrics (mean, median, quartiles, variable components).
  • Identify and document all pay gaps exceeding 5 % by worker category; prepare justification dossiers or corrective action plans.
  • Finalise a works agreement with the Betriebsrat governing joint pay assessment procedures, data-access protocols and dispute-resolution mechanisms.
  • Establish board reporting lines: quarterly compliance status reports to the management board and, where applicable, the supervisory board.
  • Prepare filing infrastructure for the first mandatory report and test data submission processes.

Conclusion, Preparing for Pay Transparency in Germany

The transposition of Directive (EU) 2023/970 marks a turning point for pay transparency in Germany. Employers that act now, auditing their data, building robust job-evaluation frameworks, engaging their Betriebsrat and establishing board-level governance, will be best positioned to meet the 7 June 2026 deadline and manage the ongoing reporting, disclosure and joint-assessment obligations that follow. Those that delay face not only regulatory penalties but a reversed burden of proof in litigation and lasting reputational consequences. The compliance checklist above provides a concrete starting point; for tailored guidance on structuring your organisation’s response, specialist legal advice is recommended.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Markus Bauer at RITTERSHAUS Rechtsanwalte PartmbB, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Directive (EU) 2023/970 (official text), EUR‑Lex
  2. Entgelttransparenzgesetz (English translation), Gesetze im Internet
  3. KPMG Law, Implementation of the Pay Transparency Directive
  4. Ogletree, Pay Transparency Update for Employers in Germany
  5. Taylor Wessing, 10 Pitfalls in Pay Transparency
  6. Ebner Stolz / RSM Ebner Stolz, Pay Transparency Directive Brochure
  7. Littler, Pay Transparency Topic Hub
  8. Scheja & Partners, EU Pay Transparency Directive: Data Protection
  9. activeMind.legal, Practical Employer Guide to the Pay Transparency Directive

FAQs

What does the EU Pay Transparency Directive require of German employers in 2026?
Employers must publish salary ranges in job adverts, stop asking candidates about salary history, grant employees the right to comparative pay information, and, above defined headcount thresholds, file periodic gender pay gap reports and conduct joint pay assessments where unjustified gaps exceed 5 %. The transposition deadline is 7 June 2026.
Pre-hire transparency and right-to-information obligations apply to all employers regardless of size. Mandatory reporting applies to employers with 100 or more employees, phased by headcount: employers with 250+ report annually, those with 150–249 report every three years from 7 June 2027, and those with 100–149 report every three years from 7 June 2031.
Reports must include the mean and median gender pay gaps in base and variable pay, pay-quartile distributions, and gaps by worker category. Employers with 250+ employees should expect their first report within 12 months of transposition. Smaller in-scope employers follow the phased deadlines set out in the Directive.
Where a pay gap of 5 % or more in any worker category cannot be justified by objective criteria, the employer must conduct a joint assessment with the Betriebsrat. This involves sharing anonymised data, performing a root-cause analysis, agreeing on corrective measures and documenting the outcome, typically over a 12-week process.
No. The Directive prohibits employers from requesting information about a candidate’s current or prior remuneration, whether directly or through intermediaries. Hiring decisions must be based on the salary range for the role and objective, gender-neutral criteria.
A gap of 5 % or more in any category of workers performing equal work or work of equal value is the threshold that triggers further action. If the gap cannot be justified by objective, gender-neutral factors, the employer must carry out a joint pay assessment and implement corrective measures.
Yes. Employers must identify a lawful basis for processing (typically legal obligation under Article 6(1)(c) GDPR), conduct a DPIA, apply pseudonymisation and aggregation to prevent individual identification, and coordinate data-access protocols with the DPO and Betriebsrat.

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Pay Transparency Germany 2026: Directive (EU) 2023/970, Employer Obligations & Reporting Deadlines

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