Key facts
- The EU's Pay Transparency Directive, aimed at closing the gender pay gap, missed its June deadline for full implementation in most member states.
- Only Italy, Slovakia, Malta, and Lithuania fully transposed the directive into national law on time.
- Starting in June 2026, employers must publish salary ranges in job ads and cease asking about candidates' pay history.
- The directive aims to address the 11.1% hourly pay gap between men and women in the EU.
- Some countries, like Estonia, indicated they might opt to pay EU fines rather than implement the directive.
The European Union's Pay Transparency Directive, designed to enforce equal pay and close the gender pay gap, has faced significant delays in implementation across member states. While the directive mandates that employers publish salary ranges in job advertisements, cease inquiring about candidates' pay history, and allow employees to request pay data on colleagues performing equivalent work, most countries failed to meet the June deadline for transposing these rules into national law.
Only four EU nations – Italy, Slovakia, Malta, and Lithuania – fully adopted the directive on time. Belgium, Malta, and Poland managed partial transposition. Several others, including the Netherlands and Ireland, have confirmed they will miss the deadline, with the Netherlands pushing its implementation to January 2027. Estonia has indicated a potential willingness to pay EU fines rather than comply with the directive's requirements, while Austria, Hungary, and Luxembourg have reportedly taken no action at all.
This uneven enforcement poses a challenge to the directive's goal of closing the persistent 11.1% hourly pay gap between men and women in the EU, a disparity that has remained largely unchanged over the past decade. The directive aims to shift the burden of proof onto employers in cases of suspected pay discrimination by making pay more visible. MEP Gabriele Bischoff noted that the previous lack of transparency "didn't just hide gaps, it reproduced them," highlighting the importance of the new rules for achieving genuine pay equity.
