Cookie Settings

We use cookies to improve your experience and for marketing. Visit our Cookies Policy to learn more.

Prepare for the EU Pay Transparency Directive before it becomes a legal risk

The EU Pay Transparency Directive (EU 2023/970) will soon require companies across Europe to disclose salary ranges, report gender pay gaps, and justify pay differences. With TalentUp, you can upload your workforce data and instantly benchmark salaries, detect pay gaps, and prepare compliance-ready insights.

Companies that prepare early reduce compliance risk by up to 80% while building a more competitive and transparent compensation strategy.

00
days
:
00
hours
:
00
minutes
:
00
seconds

Turn pay transparency into a competitive advantage

TalentUp transforms complex regulatory requirements into clear, actionable compensation insights. Upload your workforce data and instantly analyze salaries across your entire organization.

100%

Benchmark 100% of your workforce against the market

80%

Preparing early for Pay Transparency helps companies reduce compliance risk up to 80%.

35%

Companies using modern salary benchmarking platforms improve compensation decisions by up to 35%.

June/2023

Directive adopted

June/2026

Member States must implement in national law

June/2027

Reporting starts for companies with 150 employees or more.

June/2031

Reporting starts for companies with 100-149 employees (every 3 years)

Prepare your company for pay transparency before reporting begins

Thousands of European companies will soon need to analyze salary structures, justify pay differences, and report gender pay gaps.

TalentUp makes it simple. Upload your workforce data and receive clear insights into pay equity, market competitiveness, and compliance readiness.

Person smiling siting on a couch with a laptop on their lap

Non-compliance can be extremely expensive

Unlimited employee compensation claims

Employees can claim full back pay for discrimination, including bonuses and benefits.

Regulatory Fines

National authorities can impose financial penalties, potentially reaching thousands of euros depending on national legislation.

Exclusion from public contracts

Companies that fail to comply may be excluded from public procurement processes.

Reputational damages

Pay transparency violations can significantly damage employer brand, employee trust, and investor confidence.

TalentUp is a member of the Pay Transparency Alliance

The Pay Transparency Alliance is a collective of organizations and individuals united by a shared commitment to advancing pay transparency across industries.

Discover more
Logo Pay Transparency Alliance

Equip your organization to navigate the EU Pay Transparency Directive with confidence using our end-to-end guide, covering everything from pre-hiring transparency and information rights to the critical reporting timelines approaching in 2026.

European Pay Transparency Directive Guide

Know more about each country's progress

Country Situation Notes
austria Deadline missed – no draft law published, no implementation timeline announced. Austria is among the most delayed member states. Infringement proceedings risk. No official announcement or draft published as of June 2026. Austria missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline with no concrete legislative activity reported. ETUC and multiple legal sources confirm Austria among the countries with 'no draft published and no timeline' for transposition. Austria is among the least advanced EU member states. Euronews listed Austria as one of the countries with 'no draft published' as of June 2026.
View draft
belgium Partial transposition – EUR-Lex records 4 measures; job-ad salary ranges implemented. Remaining obligations pending. ETUC and Baker McKenzie classify as 'delayed partial'. Belgium has partially transposed the Directive and EUR-Lex records 4 national measures formally communicated. Key measures enacted include salary range transparency obligations for job advertisements. Belgium asked the EU Commission for additional time. ETUC classifies Belgium as 'delayed partial transposition'. According to Baker McKenzie, Belgium has implemented the Directive only in respect of certain provisions. The remaining obligations (pay reporting, right to information, enforcement framework) are still pending full legislative adoption.
View draft
bulgaria Partial/formal notification – EUR-Lex records 12 measures; draft law published May 2026. Classification disputed: likely partial transposition at the June 2026 deadline. EUR-Lex records 12 national measures formally communicated by Bulgaria. A draft transposition law was published in late May 2026. Bulgaria is classified by Deloitte as having 'published draft legislation at end of May implementing the EU Pay Transparency Directive'. Despite EUR-Lex showing 12 measures, ETUC classified Bulgaria alongside countries in the 'no draft published, no timeline' category, suggesting the 12 measures may reflect existing equality legislation rather than new Directive-specific legislation.
View draft
croatia Deadline missed – no draft law, no timeline. Croatia is among the least advanced member states. Infringement proceedings risk. No formal draft published and no implementation timeline announced as of June 2026. Croatia missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. ETUC confirmed Croatia among the countries with 'no draft published and no timeline'. Euronews listed Croatia alongside countries with no draft. Croatia is among the least advanced EU member states on this Directive. Some early-stage awareness activities have been noted by the Ministry of Labour.
View draft
cyprus Deadline missed – draft bill published November 2025, still in legislative process. Cyprus did not enact the law by 7 June 2026. Cyprus published a draft bill in November 2025 for public consultation that closely tracks the Directive's requirements. However, the bill had not been enacted into law by the 7 June 2026 deadline. Cyprus is classified as 'in progress' but having missed the deadline. The draft was published via the official government e-consultation portal and covers the main Directive requirements including pay range disclosure, reporting, and enforcement.
View draft
czech republic Partial-to-full transposition – EUR-Lex records 31 measures; pay-secrecy ban in force since June 2025. Labour Code amendment of March 2026 implements remaining requirements. Classification varies: ETUC says 'partial', EUR-Lex shows substantial notification. EUR-Lex records 31 national measures formally communicated by the Czech Republic, suggesting significant legislative activity. An amendment to the Labour Code (effective 1 June 2025) banned pay secrecy clauses. A further amendment to the Labour Code was proposed on 26 March 2026 to implement the remaining Directive requirements. Czech Republic is classified by some sources (ETUC, Littler) as having 'partially transposed' the Directive as of the June 2026 deadline. The ban on pay-secrecy clauses is already in force.
View draft
denmark Deadline missed – officially delayed to 1 January 2027. Draft bill for amending Equal Pay Act released 26 February 2026 for consultation. Denmark formally confirmed it will miss the 7 June 2026 deadline and plans to implement by 1 January 2027. A consultation draft bill was released on 26 February 2026, amending Denmark's existing Equal Pay Act (Ligelønsloven). Denmark builds on a strong tradition of social dialogue and an existing equal pay framework. The draft bill is expected to be submitted to Parliament in Q3 2026 for entry into force on 1 January 2027.
View draft
estonia Deadline missed – no draft law, no timeline. Estonia announced a delay. Infringement proceedings risk. No draft law published and no implementation timeline announced as of June 2026. Estonia missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. ETUC and multiple sources confirm Estonia among the countries with 'no draft published and no timeline'. Estonia was listed among the group of 10 countries that officially announced delays (per beqom LinkedIn analysis). Existing gender pay gap reporting requirements exist under Estonian employment law but do not fulfil Directive requirements.
View draft
finland Deadline missed – draft progressing through Parliament, targeting late 2026 entry into force. Finland officially announced a delay. Finland had an updated draft transposition law in public consultation in late 2025. Despite this progress, Finland missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. Finland was among the 10 countries that officially announced delays (per beqom analysis). The draft was progressing through the Finnish legislative process but had not been adopted by Parliament by the deadline. Finland has existing gender pay gap reporting obligations under the Act on Equality between Women and Men (Tasa-arvolaki), but these do not fully satisfy the Directive requirements. Finland is targeting late 2026 for entry into force.
View draft
france Deadline missed – draft law published post-deadline (8 June 2026). Formal transposition requires Parliamentary approval, expected later in 2026. European Commission has urged full implementation. A pre-draft bill (avant-projet de loi) was circulated to social partners on 6 March 2026. After consultations, the government transmitted a revised draft (projet de loi) to social partners on 5 June 2026 and published it on 8 June 2026 — one day after the transposition deadline. The bill has not yet been voted on by Parliament. The existing Index d'égalité professionnelle (mandatory since 2019 for companies with 50+ employees) remains the only operational framework.
View draft
germany Deadline missed – no draft law submitted. Commission report published Nov 2025 targets 2027 implementation. European Commission has urged full implementation. Direct effect of the Directive in German law is being debated by legal scholars. An 11-person expert commission published its final report in November 2025, recommending a bureaucracy-reduced implementation model and suggesting the individual right to information apply from 2027. No formal draft bill has been submitted to Parliament. Germany missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. A Deloitte analysis notes that the EU Pay Transparency Directive may now need to be assessed for potential direct application in domestic law given the missed deadline.
View draft
greece Deadline missed – no draft law published. Draft expected to Parliament Q3/Q4 2026. Labour Code reform consultations underway. No draft law published as of 7 June 2026. Greece missed the transposition deadline. Squire Patton Boggs notes that 'significant progress is being made' despite no published draft, and that the draft law is expected to be submitted to Parliament in Q3 or Q4 of 2026. The Greek Ministry of Labour (Ypourgeio Ergasias) has engaged in preparatory work including Labour Code reform consultations. Greece is among the countries facing infringement proceedings risk.
View draft
hungary Deadline missed – no draft law published, no implementation timeline announced. Hungary is among the most delayed member states. Infringement proceedings risk. No official announcement or draft published as of June 2026. Hungary missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline with no concrete legislative activity reported. ETUC confirmed Hungary among the countries with 'no draft published and no timeline'. Hungary is among the least advanced EU member states on this Directive. Multiple trackers (ETUC, beqom) list Hungary in the 'no draft published, no timeline' category.
View draft
ireland Deadline missed – partial legislative scheme published Jan 2025 but no full transposition enacted. Ireland missed the June 2026 deadline. Infringement proceedings risk. Ireland published a General Scheme of the Equality (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2024 in January 2025 as a partial framework. However, no complete transposition law was enacted by the 7 June 2026 deadline. ETUC confirmed Ireland among the countries with 'no draft published and no timeline' for full transposition. The January 2025 scheme covers some aspects but is not a full transposition. Ireland missed the deadline and is subject to potential infringement proceedings.
View draft
italy Fully transposed – Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 in force as of 7 June 2026. Italy met the transposition deadline. Legislative Decree No. 96 of 7 May 2026 was approved by the Council of Ministers on 30 April 2026 in final examination and published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale. It entered into force on 7 June 2026, making Italy one of the first EU member states to fully transpose the Directive. The decree introduces pay transparency obligations, job-ad salary disclosure, reporting requirements for companies with 50+ employees (first report due June 2027), and strengthened enforcement mechanisms.
View draft
latvia Deadline missed – no draft law, no timeline. Latvia is among the delayed member states. Infringement proceedings risk. No draft law published and no implementation timeline announced as of June 2026. Latvia missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. ETUC confirmed Latvia among the countries with 'no draft published and no timeline'. Latvia was listed among the group of countries that announced delays. The Ministry of Welfare (Labklājības ministrija) had conducted some preliminary consultations, but no formal draft was submitted.
View draft
lithuania Fully transposed (phased) – Law No. XV-969 in force 7 June 2026; right to information delayed to 1 January 2027. Lithuania met the transposition deadline. On 21 May 2026, Lithuania adopted Law No. XV-969, amending the Labour Code to formally transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive. Most requirements entered into force on 7 June 2026. However, the individual right to pay information requirement has been phased – it will apply from 1 January 2027. Lithuania is among the small group of member states that met the June 2026 deadline.
View draft
luxembourg Deadline missed – no draft law published, no timeline announced. Luxembourg is among the most delayed member states. Infringement proceedings risk. No official announcement or draft published as of June 2026. Luxembourg missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. Multiple sources confirm Luxembourg among the countries with no draft and no timeline. Euronews listed Luxembourg alongside Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary and Portugal as countries with 'no draft published'. Luxembourg had consulted with social partners but no formal bill emerged before the deadline.
View draft
malta Fully transposed – LN 112/2025 (partial, in force Aug 2025) + LN 173/2026 (full completion, June 2026). Malta met the transposition deadline. Malta has transposed the Directive in two stages. Legal Notice 112 of 2025 (published June 27, 2025, in force August 27, 2025) introduced early partial transposition including pay range disclosure in job advertisements. Legal Notice 173 of 2026 completed the full transposition with the remaining obligations (pay reporting, right to information, enforcement). Both instruments together constitute full transposition as of 7 June 2026.
View draft
netherlands Deadline missed – officially delayed to 1 January 2027. Draft law expected to Parliament Q3/Q4 2026. Infringement proceedings risk. The Netherlands formally confirmed it will miss the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline and has announced a delayed implementation target of 1 January 2027. A draft law is expected to be submitted to Parliament in Q3 or Q4 of 2026. The Dutch government had previously indicated the law would enter into force in January 2027. The Netherlands is subject to potential European Commission infringement proceedings for missing the deadline.
View draft
poland Partial transposition – EUR-Lex records 10 measures; existing pay scale and recruitment rules in force. Full transposition bill pending Parliamentary adoption. ETUC classifies as 'delayed partial'. Poland has partially transposed the Directive. An Act on pay scale disclosure and gender-neutral job titles entered into force in 2025. An updated full transposition draft was published on 4 May 2026. EUR-Lex records 10 national measures formally communicated by Poland. However, ETUC classifies Poland as 'delayed partial transposition' as the complete framework was not enacted by 7 June 2026. The full transposition bill is still making its way through Parliament.
View draft
portugal Deadline missed – no draft law published, no timeline. Portugal is among the most delayed member states. Infringement proceedings risk. No draft law published and no implementation timeline announced as of June 2026. Portugal missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. Euronews and ETUC listed Portugal among the countries with no draft published. Portugal is among the group of least advanced EU member states. Multiple trackers confirm Portugal in the 'no draft, no timeline' category. Existing gender pay gap legislation (Law 60/2018 on equal pay) provides a partial existing framework.
View draft
romania Advanced transposition – EUR-Lex records 27 formally notified measures; draft law published May 2026. Romania is among the more advanced member states in formal notification. EUR-Lex records 27 national measures formally communicated by Romania, indicating substantial transposition activity. A draft transposition law (Proiect de lege) was published on 27 May 2026, with a public consultation period running to 8 April 2026. Romania appears to have formally notified a significant number of measures to the Commission, making it one of the more advanced countries despite initial delays. The full law was expected to amend the Labour Code and Law 202/2002 on equal opportunities.
View draft
slovakia Fully transposed – Equal Pay Act in force as of 7 June 2026. Slovakia was the first EU member state to complete transposition. Slovakia was the first EU member state to adopt a complete transposition law. The Equal Pay Act (Zákon o rovnakom odmeňovaní) entered into force on 7 June 2026. It introduces obligations including pay range disclosure in job advertisements, individual right to pay information, annual pay reporting for employers with 100+ employees (first report due June 2027), and strengthened enforcement via the Labour Inspectorate.
View draft
slovenia Deadline missed – working group established but no draft law published. Slovenia missed the June 2026 deadline. Infringement proceedings risk. No draft law published as of June 2026. Slovenia missed the 7 June 2026 transposition deadline. A working group was established at the Ministry of Labour to study transposition, but no formal draft emerged before the deadline. Slovenia is classified by ETUC among the countries with no completed transposition. Existing equal treatment legislation provides a partial existing framework but is insufficient for full Directive compliance.
View draft
spain Deadline missed – no draft law, no formal transposition process initiated. Spain is among the most delayed member states despite existing partial pay transparency legislation (RD 902/2020). Infringement proceedings risk. Spain did not initiate any formal transposition process before the 7 June 2026 deadline. Spain missed the deadline and multiple sources confirm no formal draft was submitted to Parliament. The existing Real Decreto 902/2020 on equal pay provides some partial obligations, but Spain has not drafted a comprehensive transposition law. Sources including ETUC, Squire Patton Boggs, and STTK list Spain among the countries with 'no progress to report' or 'no draft, no timeline'.
View draft
sweden Deadline missed – transposition formally halted March 2026; draft suspended. Targeting entry into force late 2026 / early 2027. EUR-Lex shows 32 existing measures notified. Sweden formally halted its transposition process on 26 March 2026. The government's draft law, which was initially expected to enter into force on 1 July 2026, was subsequently delayed to 1 January 2027, and then suspended entirely. Some sources indicate Sweden is targeting a 2 December 2026 entry into force. Despite this, EUR-Lex records 32 national measures communicated by Sweden, suggesting some existing legislation (Discrimination Act, Diskrimineringslagen) was notified. Full comprehensive transposition remains pending.
View draft

Last updated on 11/06/2026

Frequently
asked questions

The EU Pay Transparency Directive is a legal framework introduced by the European Union to reduce gender pay gaps and ensure fair, transparent, and non-discriminatory pay practices across all member states. It introduces mandatory salary transparency in job postings, prohibits employers from asking candidates about their pay history, and requires companies to explain how they determine salaries and career progression. The directive also reinforces the principle that work of equal value must be paid equally. Employers must evaluate roles using objective and gender-neutral criteria such as skills required, responsibility levels, effort, and working conditions. If employees performing work of equal value show a pay difference of more than 5% without a justified reason, the employer must take corrective action. This threshold is meant to stop hidden or systemic pay discrimination and to ensure that all similar roles are treated fairly.

Read more in our blog

The Organizational Impacts of Pay Transparency

The Organizational Impacts of Pay Transparency

Navigating Pay Transparency Laws

Navigating Pay Transparency Laws with Real-Time Salary Data

EU Pay Transparency Directive Guide

How HR Teams Can Prepare for the EU Pay Transparency Directive