Purposes of the Pay Transparency Directive
The Directive is designed to make unequal pay harder to hide. It does this before as well as during employment, through company reporting, and stronger penalization when pay discrimination is not remediated.
Historically, pay equity between women and men is legally implemented however not in practice as employees often had to challenge unequal pay without access to the information needed to prove it.
The Directive changes the starting point: companies must make pay systems more transparent, more explainable, and easier to test against the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value.
What changes in practice?
The Directive is easiest to understand as three connected transparency requirements.
Individualized disclosure during employment
Employees get more visibility over pay criteria, progression, and average pay levels of men and women doing the same work or work of equal value.
Reporting to governmental agency
Companies are required to report gender pay gap metrics to a governmental agency. Metrics may also be publicaly reported upon.
Disclosure before hiring
Applicants shall receive pay-related information (e.g. pay ranges) for the role prior to their interview. Companies may not ask applicants about current or previous pay history.
Who is covered, and when?
The Directive covers companies and employees in different ways. Reporting requirements for companies are phased in by the company size. Some rights apply broadly to employees and applicants.
companies
The Directive applies to public-sector and private-sector companies. Applicant transparency, pay-setting transparency, and employee information rights can be relevant even where the company is not yet required to report on pay-gap metrics.
Employees and applicants
The Directive applies to employees with an employment contract or employment relationship as defined by national law, collective agreements, practice, and Court of Justice case law. It also gives job applicants pre-employment pay transparency rights.
The reporting deadlines for companies phase in from 2027 onwards, with later reporting for companies in the 100 to 149 employee band.
| Company size | First Article 9 report | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| More than 250 employees | First report by June 2027, covering the previous calendar year | Every year |
| 150 to 249 employees | First report by June 2027, covering the previous calendar year | Every three years |
| 100 to 149 employees | First report by June 2031, covering the previous calendar year | Every three years |
| Fewer than 100 employees | Voluntary unless national law stipulates otherwise | Dependant on national law |
Key definitions
| Term | Common definition |
|---|---|
| Pay | Basic salary or wage plus other direct or indirect cash or in-kind remuneration, including complementary or variable components. |
| Pay level | Gross annual pay and the corresponding gross hourly pay. |
| Gender pay gap | The difference between average pay levels of women and men, expressed as a percentage of average male pay. |
| Median gender pay gap | The difference between median female and male pay, expressed against median male pay. |
| Pay quartile | One of four equal-sized employee groups after employees are ordered by pay level. |
| Same or equal-value work | Work assessed as equal using objective, gender-neutral criteria such as skills, effort, responsibility, and working conditions. |
| Group of employees | Employees doing the same or equal-value work, grouped using non-arbitrary, objective, gender-neutral criteria. |
Equal work and work of equal value
Equal-value work is the structural core of the Directive. Companies need pay structures that allow employees to be compared where they perform the same work or work of equal value. The Directive points to objective, gender-neutral criteria such as skills, effort, responsibility, working conditions, and other relevant factors for the job or position.
Reporting requirements
The reporting obligation defined in Article 9 has three moving parts: calculate the gender pay gaps, route the right information to the right audience, and govern the methodology so the figures can be explained.
- Gender pay gap;
- Gender pay gap in complementary or variable components;
- Median gender pay gap;
- Median gender pay gap in complementary or variable components;
- Proportion of female and male employees receiving complementary or variable components;
- Proportion of female and male employees in each quartile pay band;
- Gender pay gap between employees by categories of employees, broken down by ordinary basic wage or salary and complementary or variable components.
Communicated to the authorities
Article 9.1(a)-(f)
The reporting dataset is communicated to the authority responsible for compiling and publishing the gender pay gap data.
Information provided to employees and employee representatives
Article 9.1(g)
Employee-group gaps are provided to employees on an individualized basis and employee representatives.
Headline company-level metrics may be published or made publicly available
Article 9.1(a)-(f)
What happens if a gap is found?
A reported gap does not automatically mean unlawful discrimination. But an unadjusted pay gap that exceeds the Directive's 5% trigger and cannot be objectively explained needs to be remediated within 6 months or moves company into a deeper joint pay assessment and remediation process with employee representatives.
Access and confirmation of data
Employees must be informed about their individual right to information annually.
The accuracy of the reported information is confirmed by management.
Methodology access
Employee representatives have access to the methodology applied by the company, so reporting should be documented and repeatable.
Data protection, confidentiality, and enforcement
The Directive is pro-transparency, not anti-privacy. Personal data processed under the employee information, reporting, and joint pay assessment provisions must comply with GDPR and should not be used for purposes other than applying the principle of equal pay.
Where disclosure would clearly reveal the pay of an identifiable employee, Member States may route access through e.g. employee representatives.
What still depends on national law?
The Directive sets EU-level minimum requirements. Member States may add further reporting formats, filing portals, publication rules, enforcement routes, employee-representative processes, sanctions, and lower company thresholds when they transpose or implement it nationally.
Implementation remains a country-by-country issue. For more country-specific information, please refer to Syndio's EU Pay Transparency Directive Transposition Tracker.