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Last updated: May 16, 2026
Pay transparency Italy rules have entered a new era. On April 30, 2026, the Italian Council of Ministers adopted Decree‑Law No.62, the country’s primary vehicle for transposing EU Directive 2023/970 on pay transparency into national law. The Decree introduces mandatory salary‑range disclosure in job adverts, bans employers from requesting salary history, and creates enforceable employee rights to detailed pay information. Combined with gender pay gap reporting thresholds, corrective‑plan obligations for employers above certain workforce sizes, and supplementary measures in the 2026 Budget Law, Italy’s 2026 employment law landscape now demands immediate action from every HR director, general counsel and compliance officer with operations on Italian soil.
The central question for employers is no longer whether pay transparency obligations will arrive in Italy, but how quickly internal processes can be brought into compliance. Decree‑Law No.62 took effect upon publication in the Gazzetta Ufficiale, meaning core obligations, including the salary‑history ban and the requirement to disclose pay ranges in job advertisements, are already operative. The broader reporting and audit obligations stemming from the EU Pay Transparency Directive must be fully implemented by June 7, 2026, the transposition deadline set by Directive 2023/970.
Industry observers expect the practical effect to be felt most sharply in recruitment teams, compensation and benefits departments, and legal functions tasked with updating employment contracts and internal policies. Employers who have not yet begun a structured pay audit face a compressed timeline. The five immediate actions below should be treated as urgent priorities.
For a comprehensive overview of Italy’s pay transparency employer compliance obligations, the sections below break down every requirement, reporting threshold, and practical step.
The obligations introduced by Decree‑Law No.62 and EU Directive 2023/970 apply broadly. Every employer operating in Italy, whether a domestic company, an Italian subsidiary of a multinational, or a public‑sector entity, is subject to the core transparency rules on recruitment, salary‑history prohibition, and employee information rights regardless of workforce size. The more onerous reporting and corrective‑plan obligations are tiered by headcount, as outlined in the Directive:
Both private‑ and public‑sector employers are covered. There is no sector exemption. Employers already subject to Italy’s existing biennial gender pay reporting requirements under Law No.162/2021 (which applies to companies with more than 50 employees) should expect the Decree‑Law No.62 framework to supplement, and in some areas replace, those existing obligations.
| Date | Event | Employer action required |
|---|---|---|
| May 10, 2023 | EU Directive 2023/970 adopted and published in the Official Journal | Begin planning and gap analysis |
| June 7, 2026 | Transposition deadline, Member States must have national implementing measures in force | All obligations must be operationally embedded |
| April 30, 2026 | Decree‑Law No.62 adopted by the Italian Council of Ministers | Core rules (salary‑history ban, advert disclosure, employee information rights) take effect immediately |
| June 7, 2027 | First reporting deadline for employers with 250+ employees | Prepare and submit first gender pay gap report |
| June 7, 2031 | First reporting deadline for employers with 100–249 employees | Prepare first triennial gender pay gap report |
Decree‑Law No.62 is the centrepiece of Italy’s implementation of pay transparency rules. The obligations it creates can be grouped into three categories: recruitment and advertising, employee information rights, and gender pay gap triggers. Each imposes concrete tasks on decree law 62 employers.
Under the Decree, all job advertisements must disclose the initial pay level or pay range for the position, based either on the applicable CCNL pay band or the employer’s internal compensation framework. The disclosure must be provided before the employment relationship is discussed with a candidate, in practice, this means the information must appear in the job posting itself, not merely at the offer stage.
Equally significant is the prohibition on salary‑history enquiries. Employers, and any agents acting on their behalf, may not ask applicants about their current or previous remuneration. The prohibition covers direct questions in interviews, fields on application forms, and requests routed through recruitment agencies. The policy rationale, drawn directly from Article 5 of Directive 2023/970, is to break the cycle whereby historical pay gaps follow workers from one employer to the next.
Employers should also ensure that recruitment agencies under contract are formally notified of these prohibitions. Updating agency agreements with a pay transparency compliance clause is a prudent early step.
Workers have the right to request, and receive in writing, information about their individual pay level and the average pay levels, broken down by gender, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Employers must respond within a reasonable period, and the Directive specifies a maximum of two months. Decree‑Law No.62 adopts this standard.
The information provided must include not only base salary but all variable components: bonuses, overtime rates, benefits in kind, and supplementary allowances. Employers should anticipate that these requests will become routine, particularly from employee representatives and trade unions. A standardised response template, discussed in the HR processes section below, is essential.
Where gender pay gap reporting reveals a difference of 5 per cent or more in any category of workers, and the employer cannot justify the gap by objective, gender‑neutral factors, the employer must undertake a joint pay assessment with worker representatives. This assessment must identify root causes, develop corrective measures, and set a timeline for remediation. The 5 per cent threshold is drawn directly from Article 10 of Directive 2023/970.
| Obligation | Who must comply | Practical next step |
|---|---|---|
| Salary range in job adverts | All employers | Update every live vacancy; amend advert templates and agency briefs |
| Salary‑history ban | All employers | Remove salary‑history fields from applications; retrain interviewers |
| Employee pay‑information right | All employers | Create standard response template; train HR to respond within two months |
| Gender pay gap reporting | Employers with 100+ employees | Begin data collection; assign reporting owner; prepare first report |
| Joint pay assessment & corrective plan | Employers where gap ≥ 5% | Engage worker representatives; conduct root‑cause analysis; draft remediation plan |
While Decree‑Law No.62 provides the national legal framework, the underlying EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970 sets the minimum floor for all Member States. Employers operating across multiple EU jurisdictions should note that Italy’s implementing measures may exceed the Directive’s minimum requirements in certain respects. Understanding the interaction between the two instruments is essential for compliance.
The Directive requires employers to report on a defined set of pay metrics, segmented by gender and by category of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. The minimum dataset includes:
Employers should begin assembling this data now, even before the formal reporting window opens. Early indications suggest that the Italian implementing regulations will require reports to be submitted to the national equality body, with public disclosure for employers above the applicable threshold.
Decree‑Law No.62 implements the Directive but also builds on Italy’s pre‑existing reporting framework under Law No.162/2021. The likely practical effect will be a consolidated reporting obligation: employers already filing biennial reports will transition to the new format and thresholds, while employers newly brought into scope (100–249 employees) will have until 2031 for their first triennial report. Employers with 250 or more employees face the tightest timeline, with the first annual report due by June 7, 2027.
| Employer size | Required reporting & frequency | Practical implications (documents to prepare) |
|---|---|---|
| Fewer than 100 employees | No mandatory periodic reporting, but must comply with all individual transparency rights (advert disclosure, employee information requests, salary‑history ban) | Pay‑range templates for adverts; employee information response protocol; internal pay policy documentation |
| 100–249 employees | Gender pay gap report every three years (first report due June 7, 2031) | All of the above, plus: pay‑data collection framework; job‑evaluation methodology; draft reporting template; designated reporting owner |
| 250+ employees | Gender pay gap report annually (first report due June 7, 2027) | All of the above, plus: annual audit cycle; joint pay assessment process if gap ≥ 5%; corrective‑plan template; consultation mechanism with worker representatives |
Companies already familiar with Italy’s evolving smart working rules will recognise the pattern: EU‑level frameworks are being layered onto Italy’s existing labour law infrastructure, creating a hybrid compliance environment that requires careful mapping of both sources.
For employers approaching a pay audit for the first time, or upgrading an existing exercise to meet the new standards, the following eight‑step method provides a structured framework aligned with both Decree‑Law No.62 and the Directive’s requirements.
Step 1, Data collection. Compile a complete pay dataset from payroll and HR systems. At a minimum, capture: employee ID, gender, job title, job grade or level, department, contract type (full‑time, part‑time, fixed‑term), base annual salary, variable pay (bonuses, commissions), overtime, benefits in kind, supplementary allowances, and total hours worked. Use a standardised spreadsheet with consistent column headers.
Step 2, Job matching and evaluation. Group employees into categories of “same work” or “work of equal value.” This requires a job‑evaluation methodology, whether point‑factor, whole‑job ranking, or an existing CCNL classification. Document the criteria used and ensure they are objective and gender‑neutral.
Step 3, Statistical analysis. For each job category, calculate the mean and median gender pay gap in base salary and in total remuneration. Where resources permit, run a regression analysis to isolate the explained portion of any gap (tenure, qualifications, performance ratings) from the unexplained portion. A gap exceeding 5 per cent that cannot be justified by objective factors triggers the corrective‑plan obligation.
Step 4, Adjustments and corrective plan design. Where an unjustified gap is identified, design specific corrective measures: targeted salary adjustments, revised pay‑band structures, promotion pathway reforms, or benefits recalibration. Assign each measure an owner, a budget and a deadline.
Step 5, Consultation with worker representatives. The Directive requires that the joint pay assessment be conducted in cooperation with worker representatives. In Italy, this typically means engaging the RSU (rappresentanza sindacale unitaria) or, where applicable, the relevant trade union. Document all consultation steps.
Step 6, Documentation and record retention. Retain all underlying data, methodology documents, statistical outputs, corrective plans, and consultation records. The Directive does not prescribe a specific retention period, but industry observers expect Italian implementing guidance to require retention for at least five years, consistent with general employment‑record retention practice.
Step 7, Public disclosure. Employers above the reporting threshold must publish their gender pay gap data. The format and publication channel will be specified in Italian implementing regulations; early indications suggest submission to the national equality body and publication on the employer’s website.
Step 8, Audit governance and update cycle. Establish a recurring audit cycle, annual for employers with 250+ employees, triennial for 100–249, with clear ownership (typically a joint HR‑Legal‑Finance committee). Schedule the next audit before the reporting deadline to allow time for remediation.
Sample pay audit data columns:
| Employee ID | Gender | Job title | Job grade | Contract type | Base salary (annual) | Variable pay | Benefits in kind | Total remuneration | Hours/week |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Populate with payroll data for every employee in scope | |||||||||
Every job advertisement must now include pay‑range information. Below is a model wording that can be adapted:
“This position offers a gross annual salary range of €[X] – €[Y], in line with [CCNL / company pay band level]. The final offer will reflect the candidate’s experience, qualifications and the specific responsibilities of the role.”
Review all template employment contracts and remove any clause that requires the employee to disclose prior salary or that conditions the offer on salary‑history verification. Consider adding a transparency clause, such as:
“The Company determines compensation on the basis of objective, gender‑neutral criteria including role scope, required qualifications, experience, and the applicable CCNL classification. Employees may request information about their pay level and average pay levels by gender for comparable roles at any time.”
Employers should formalise and document the criteria used for pay decisions, pay progression and promotions. These criteria must be objective and gender‑neutral, and they must be accessible to employees upon request. A short internal policy excerpt might read:
“Pay and promotion decisions at [Company] are based on [listed criteria: job grade, performance assessment score, tenure, market benchmarking data]. These criteria are reviewed annually and are available to all employees via [HR portal / intranet]. Employees may direct questions about pay criteria to [HR contact].”
For in‑house counsel navigating these updates, the employment law practice area on Global Law Experts provides direct access to specialist advisors in Italy and across Europe.
Non‑compliance with pay transparency Italy rules carries multiple enforcement risks. The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties. In Italy, enforcement is expected to operate through several channels:
Mitigation steps include: maintaining a complete audit trail for all pay decisions; conducting proactive pay audits before any complaint arises; training managers on the new rules; and retaining documented evidence of objective, gender‑neutral criteria used in pay and promotion decisions.
Alongside Decree‑Law No.62, Italy’s 2026 Budget Law introduces supplementary employer obligations that interact with the broader pay transparency framework. Notably, the Budget Law expands the right of employees to request conversion to part‑time work in certain circumstances, including for caregiving responsibilities.
Employers must now respond to such requests within a defined procedural timeframe, provide written reasons for any refusal, and document the decision. The connection to pay transparency is direct: part‑time conversion decisions can create or widen gender pay gaps if they are not managed consistently and documented objectively. Employers should integrate part‑time request handling into their broader pay‑equity monitoring framework to ensure that part‑time conversion patterns are captured in gender pay gap analyses.
The Budget Law also reinforces parental leave protections and non‑discrimination provisions that complement the transparency framework. HR teams should review these measures alongside the Decree‑Law obligations to ensure a coherent internal compliance structure. Italy’s 2026 Budget Law, employee rights to part‑time work is a topic that warrants dedicated analysis for employers managing workforce‑flexibility programmes.
The following roadmap provides a structured implementation plan. Assign each item to a responsible owner and track completion against the deadlines indicated.
Employers seeking specialist guidance on implementation can find an employment lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory, or browse the Italy lawyer directory for jurisdiction‑specific expertise.
Pay transparency Italy obligations are no longer prospective, they are operative. Decree‑Law No.62 and the EU Pay Transparency Directive together create a binding framework that touches every stage of the employment relationship, from the job advert to the annual pay report. Employers who act now to audit pay data, update recruitment processes, and build internal transparency infrastructure will be best positioned to manage compliance risk and avoid enforcement action. Those who delay face compressed timelines, heightened litigation exposure, and reputational consequences. The time to begin is today.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stefanie Lebek at DM&P Legal&Tax, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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