With less than two weeks to go before the 7 June 2026 EU Pay Transparency Directive transposition deadline, employers are finalising their readiness measures.
In this snapshot briefing, we provide a practical overview of implementation progress across EU, highlighting key areas of divergence and emerging “gold‑plating” trends. We also explore the strategic question of whether to adopt a EU-wide framework or a locally tailored approach, and set out focused, actionable steps employers should prioritise in the final phase of readiness and how we can help.
Key implementation dates
Member States are required to transpose the Directive by 7 June 2026. This date remains the formal legal deadline, but in practice, jurisdictions are progressing at different speeds, with a few expected to fully meet the deadline, while others are likely to delay or implement in phases. Several jurisdictions have signalled implementation dates in 2027, reflecting legislative backlog and complexity.
Many of the Directive’s requirements will apply to all employers employing workers in the EU from the date local transposing laws come into force. Reporting obligations are phased in from 2027.
Some Members States have chosen to commence new laws, or adjust existing ones, before the 7 June 2026 deadline, including Belgium (where parts of the Directive have already been brought into force for the French Community of the public sector since 1 January 2025), the Czech Republic (where a ban on pay secrecy clauses took effect on 1 June 2025), Poland (where some pay transparency obligations at the recruitment stage took effect from 24 December 2025) and Malta (where pay transparency at the recruitment stage and worker right to request individual pay level information came into force on 27 August 2025).
Others will meet (or closely meet) the 7 June 2026 deadline, but will use transitional provisions to delay specific rights. For example, Slovakia’s implementing law will come into effect on 7 June 2026, but the obligation to provide average pay information will be required for the first time in 2028 based on information for the year 2027.
See our at-a-glance-table at the end of this briefing for further details.
Areas of variation by jurisdiction
While the Directive sets minimum harmonised standards, Member State approaches are already diverging in several key respects. Most notably, scope thresholds vary (e.g. employee numbers triggering gender pay gap reporting obligations), with some jurisdictions lowering thresholds below the Directive baseline. Similarly, content and methodology of reporting differ (e.g. definition of “pay”, treatment of variable elements, comparator groups, and job evaluation methodologies) depending on existing national frameworks and workforce engagement structures.
Variation is also emerging in rights-based elements, including the response timing for employee information requests and the extent of employer disclosure obligations. Where jurisdictions already have pay transparency regimes, the Directive is being layered onto existing obligations, often resulting in incremental but complex amendments.
Divergence is also being seen in financial penalties for breach and remedies. The Directive requires sanctions and compensation frameworks, but Member States retain discretion as to their design. This is producing differences in evidential burdens, comparator rules and practical exposure, meaning that “equivalent compliance” across jurisdictions will not result in equivalent legal risk.
See our at-a-glance-table at the end of this briefing for further details.
A local or EU-wide approach?
The fragmented implementation landscape gives rise to the question whether companies should adopt a local approach, implementing measures only once laws in the country of operation are effective, or an EU-wide approach regardless of transposition delay.
An EU-wide approach offers clear operational benefits: scalable compliance, a consistent and coherent narrative and the increased possibility of surfacing and addressing systemic issues earlier. It also mitigates the potential direct or indirect effects of the Directive whilst local laws are implemented (see our briefing, The impact of delayed transposition). However, such an approach requires a sufficiently consistent and objectively justified pay and grading framework across jurisdictions, the availability of reliable data across all operating locations and the ability to flex to take account of variations in local laws.
On the other hand, a local approach allows employers to respond to jurisdiction-specific timing, any “gold-plating” of the Directive’s requirements, enforcement cultures, disclosure norms and industrial relations contexts. It also enables alignment with existing national frameworks (for example, gender pay gap regimes or collective bargaining), which may dictate how the Directive obligations are applied in practice. However, a purely local approach risks fragmentation, duplication of effort and inconsistencies in messaging and employee experience, as well as reduced visibility of cross-border pay disparities.
A hybrid model of global principles with local tailoring will often be a more realistic approach. In practice, this typically involves establishing centralised minimum standards based on the Directive’s requirements (e.g. job architecture, pay principles, governance and documentation), while allowing local implementation to reflect national legal requirements and labour market practice. Such an approach can balance legal compliance and risk management with operational efficiency, and is generally more appropriate where there are material differences in data quality, regulatory expectations or workforce structures across jurisdictions.
Practical steps
As employers finalise their readiness measures, key practical steps to take now include:
- Finalise compliant pay structures: Ensure pay frameworks are fully aligned with Directive and local requirements (if known), with clearly defined, documented and objectively justifiable criteria for both pay and progression, demonstrably gender‑neutral in design and application.
- Operationalise employee information rights: Put in place robust processes to receive, assess and respond to employee pay information requests within the applicable deadlines, including clear internal ownership, guidance and escalation routes.
- Complete a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction gap analysis: Conduct a detailed gap analysis against Directive requirements and any draft laws, across all relevant countries.
- Align end-to-end people processes: Update recruitment practices (including job adverts and salary setting), internal communications and policies, and ensure alignment with works council / union / employee representative engagement strategies.
- Pilot reporting and stress-test data capability: Test the organisation’s ability to generate compliant pay gap reports under different national scenarios. “Dry runs” using 2025 data is a key step to identify data, methodology or systems gaps ahead of the first mandatory reporting cycle.
How we can help
You can track the latest developments on our Navigating Global Pay interactive site, as well as access to essential FAQs, timelines, a summary of the Directive, a glossary and briefings. Request access to our site here.
With our established equal pay practice, we are ideally placed to support employers with their pay transparency readiness, with some of our recent work in this respect including:
- advising on how to structure the project to maximise privilege and the confidentiality of sensitive pay data and potential gaps
- reviewing pay architecture through the lens of work of equal value to ensure compliance with the Directive
- conducting pay gap analyses against current practices
- advising on local legal developments
- developing action plans
- drafting EU consistent templates and processes
- delivering training
Local transposition progress – a snapshot
To request access to our Navigating Global Pay interactive site please contact: bhupinderdhilon@eversheds-sutherland.com
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Member State
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Status of implementation
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Expected timings
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Example differences from the Directive’s requirements
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Austria
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Belgium
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Partial transposition at regional level has taken place (1 January 2025). Federal draft awaited.
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Full transposition date currently unknown
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Current analysis of remuneration structure requirement for companies that usually employ at least 50 employees.
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Bulgaria
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Draft legislation published.
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Expected to be effective on 7 June 2026. Reporting expected to apply from 7 June 2027 for employers with 150 or more employees
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- Annual reminder of right to request information by 31 January
- Where a gender pay gap of at least 5% is identified, employers must provide a formal justification to the Commission for Protection Against Discrimination.
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Croatia
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Cyprus
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Draft legislation published.
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Transposition date currently unknown
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Pay information at the recruitment stage in writing before the interview.
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Czech Republic
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Partial transposition (1 June 2025). Draft legislation published for the remaining elements.
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Full transposition expected by 1 January 2027. The first report for companies with 150 or more employees will be 2028.
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Classification of the work graded according to the value of the work, based on its complexity, responsibility, and physical exertion.
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Denmark
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Draft legislation published.
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Transposition expected 1 January 2027. The first report for companies with 150 or more employees will be 1 September 2028.
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Reports are generated by Statistics Denmark using the existing classification of employees according to a 6-digit DISCO code
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Estonia
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Draft legislation published (partial transposition).
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Full transposition date currently unknown
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The more burdensome elements of the Directive are currently being left aside while Estonia seeks to discuss with the European Commission how these requirements could be implemented with minimal administrative burden.
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Finland
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Draft legislation published
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Transposition date currently unknown
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Statistical Office compiles the pay information on the basis of the data reported to the Incomes Register
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France
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Draft legislation published
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Transposition date currently unknown
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- Replacement of the current Gender Equality Index with a seven indicator model aligned with the Directive
- A three-level process for determining categories of workers
- Pay information at the recruitment stage in the job advertisement or in writing before or during the job interview
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Germany
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Greece
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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The process of setting up a working group for the transposition of the Directive has been initiated.
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Hungary
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Ireland
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Draft legislation published (partial transposition). Heads are in preparation for a separate Bill to transpose the remaining aspects
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As of 1 June 2025, the threshold for reporting was lowered to employers with 50+ employees.
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- Salary / ranges must be in job advertisements
- Low threshold for reporting
- Website publication obligation
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Italy
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Draft legislation published
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Final adoption anticipated by 7 June 2026
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- National collective bargaining agreements will be the primary reference point for worker categories and assessing equal value
- “Pay level” excludes non-structural individual pay components
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Latvia
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Draft legislation published
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Transposition date currently unknown
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Slightly different definition of pay
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Lithuania
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Draft legislation published
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Some provisions expected to be effective on 7 June 2026, others by 1 January 2027
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Salary / ranges must be in job advertisements
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Luxembourg
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Malta
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Partial transposition has taken place (7 August January 2025). Draft legislation published for the remaining elements.
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Full transposition date currently unknown
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Worker right to pay information is for their individual pay level and the pay level for categories of workers performing the same work.
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Netherlands
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Draft law published.
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Expected to enter into force by 1 January 2027. The first report for companies with 150 or more employees will be 7 June 2028.
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- Agency workers covered
- Works Council right to consent when introducing, changing of withdrawing “pay or job-grading systems” (includes joint pay assessment).
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Poland
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Partial transposition has taken place (24 December 2025). Draft legislation published for the remaining elements.
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Remaining elements expected to enter into force by 1 January 2027. The first report for companies with 150 or more employees will be 7 June 2027.
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- Prescriptive timing/ format of providing pay information at the recruitment stage
- “Supplementary or variable components” exclude remuneration based on the employee’s personal grade
- Responses to worker requests for pay information within 30 days
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Portugal
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Romania
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Draft law published.
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The first report for companies with 150 or more employees will be 7 June 2027.
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- The criteria used to determine work of equal value are similar to those set out in the Directive, with the added criterion of “knowledge”
- Responses to worker requests for pay information within 30 days
- Timescale for remediation is 90 working days
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Slovakia
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Draft law approved.
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New law will enter into force on 7 June 2026. Compliant remuneration structures by 31 July 2026. The first report for companies with 150 or more employees will be 7 June 2027. Right to information on average pay levels from 2018.
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- Phased roll-out
- After first reports, reporting by 15 April of the following calendar year
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Slovenia
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Spain
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Draft legislation awaited
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Transposition date currently unknown
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N/A
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Sweden
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Draft law published
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Expected to enter into force by 1 January 2027. Implementation measures currently paused.
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The referral to the Council on Legislation proposes a deadline of 20 May in the year in which the reporting obligation applies for the submission of the gender pay gap report to the Equality Ombudsman.
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