Do you employ staff in the EU? EU Pay Transparency Directive

Stephanie Pote · Posted on: March 9th 2026 · read

Monitoring employees

The EU Pay Transparency Directive: What is it and who does it apply to?

The Directive mandates that all EU member states implement laws to promote pay transparency and close the gender pay gap. Each member state is responsible for enacting its own legislation to meet the directives goals by June 2026. The directive also applies to non-EU employers who have employers working in the EU. This means that if a company based outside the EU employs individuals within EU member states, it must comply with the directive’s requirements regarding pay transparency and reporting. 

Also, it’s important to note that employers with at least 100 employees in the EU will be required to comply with the gender pay gap reporting requirements.

The directive encompasses both public and private sector employers, ensuring that all organisations operating within the EU adhere to the same standards of pay transparency and equity. 
 

What employers should be doing now

The EU Pay Transparency Directive represents a significant shift in how employers approach pay, equality and disclosure. While implementation timelines vary across EU Member States, the direction of travel is clear: greater transparency, stronger employee rights, and increased scrutiny of pay practices.

For employers operating in, or connected to, the EU, preparation should already be underway.

What the Directive is designed to achieve

The Directive aims to address pay inequality by requiring employers to:

  1. Be more transparent about pay levels and structures
  2. Enable employees to understand how pay is determined
  3. Identify and address unjustified gender pay gaps
  4. Shift the burden of proof onto employers in pay discrimination cases

This is not simply a reporting exercise. It requires employers to demonstrate that pay decisions are objective, consistent and defensible.
 

Key areas employers should focus on

While specific obligations will depend on national implementation, common themes include:

Pay transparency in recruitment

Employers will need to think carefully about how pay ranges are set and communicated at recruitment stage, and whether current practices are consistent and justifiable.

Pay structures and job architecture

Clear role definitions, grading frameworks and objective pay criteria will be critical. Informal or manager-discretion-led approaches create significant risk.

Access to pay information

Employees will have enhanced rights to information about pay levels for comparable roles. Employers should assume that pay decisions will be scrutinised and challenged.

Gender pay gap analysis and remediation

Where unexplained pay gaps exist, employers may be required to take corrective action, including joint pay assessments.
 

What employers can be doing now

Early preparation will reduce both legal risk and disruption. Practical steps include:

  1. Auditing current pay data for inconsistencies and unexplained gaps.
  2. Reviewing job descriptions and role evaluation methods.
  3. Assessing how pay decisions are documented and approved.
  4. Training managers on objective, evidence-based pay decision-making.
  5. Identifying where discretion exists and whether it is defensible.

Importantly, employers should also review how pay is discussed internally. Transparency without explanation can damage trust just as much as secrecy.
 

This is a cultural shift, not just a legal one

The Directive reinforces a broader expectation that pay should be fair, explainable and consistently applied. Organisations that already take a structured, transparent approach to reward will find compliance easier than those relying on legacy practices or informal decision-making.

Preparing now allows employers to move from reactive compliance to confident, well-governed pay practices, supporting both equality and employee trust.

Our HR Solutions team can help you to prepare for the EU Pay Transparency Directive by assessing pay structures, calculating and addressing gender pay gaps, and implementing compliant policies and reporting processes that align with EU requirements.

This insight was previously published in our March edition of People Pulse

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