In the latest webinar in our our EU Pay Transparency Masterclass series, speakers shared how to approach worker categories, the 5% gender pay gap and joint assessments per the directive and provided an update on country implementation.
Panelists included:
What’s happening: Most countries missed the June 7, 2026, deadline to implement the EU Pay Transparency Directive, but the compliance clock is still ticking. Enforcement will begin in 2027 and with most companies relying on 2026 data, the next six months are critical.
-
Only 4 countries Slovakia, Lithuania, Malta and Italy have formally “transposed” the law.
-
Denmark, France, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland and Greece are expected to transpose by the end of 2026.
-
Sweden and Estonia are resisting the directive altogether, while Spain has made limited progress.
What CHROs need to do now:
-
Define worker categories before regulators do. Worker categories are the toughest part of the directive, and if you get this step wrong, your data will be inaccurate. Determine how pay gaps are measured, how employee requests are answered and whether employers trigger remediation obligations.
-
Audit compensation data now and model potential pay outcomes. Reporting may be delayed but 2025-2026 data will likely inform future disclosures. Early analysis can help identify gaps that may exceed the directive’s 5% threshold.
-
Pressure-test existing job architecture. Employers should determine whether current job grades, leveling structures and evaluation systems can support worker-categories.
-
Document your decision-making. Employers should be prepared to defend how worker categories were built, why certain jobs were grouped together, and how pay decisions were made.
-
Prepare for employee information requests. Some organizations are already receiving requests from employees seeking pay information. Companies should establish a consistent process and governance structure before requests increase.
-
Engage works councils and employee representatives early. Educate representatives on compensation frameworks before disputes arise.
Bottom line: The biggest risk isn’t missing the deadline—it’s not preparing at all. Companies that validate worker categories and model pay data between now and end of 2026 will be in the strongest position once transparency requirements take effect.