EU Pay Transparency Directive: Four Reasons to Act Now Despite Delayed Legislation

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Although the EU Pay Transparency Directive took effect on June 7th, 2026, local transposition varied massively between countries. While a handful of member states met the deadline effectively, others have issued delayed dates for expected implementation, or have not yet passed legislation.
We’ve spoken to business leaders and decision-makers who reason that they should pause or delay starting their EU Directive compliance activities until they see what the legislation will look like in their local markets.
But here’s our take: waiting for the Directive’s transposition at the local level is risky. Organizations should act now across all their EU markets, regardless of whether local governments have delayed transposing the Directive.
Below, we’ll discuss four reasons why waiting to act may do more harm than good.
1) The European Commission does not pause
The Pay Transparency Directive is not the only piece of legislation that EU member states are required to transpose. There are other directives that member states are behind on implementing—and this is not necessarily in their best interest. European Commission infringement procedures can and do take place against nations that put off implementing directives.
Nations with EU Directive transposition delays may ultimately end up facing these proceedings, too. In fact, the Commission responded to a question from the Netherlands in December 2025 by reaffirming that nations were expected to implement the EUPTD by the deadline, signaling that its transposition is a high priority.
This also has legal implications for employers, as it reinforces that compliance with the Directive is the expected norm across the EU. Consequently, organizations whose compliance lags in one or more markets may find themselves at a distinct disadvantage.
How prepared is your organization? Download our 6-point EUPTD readiness checklist to help guide your Directive planning.
2) Employee rights across the EU are different as of June 7th, even if local legislation did not change
Even where transposition is delayed at the local level, the Directive still granted EU employees certain rights on June 7th, 2026. These include the right to a pay comparison, compensation in cases of discrimination, information about how pay is determined, a pay secrecy ban, and a salary history ban for jobseekers.
In member states that missed the EUPTD transposition deadline, employees may not be able to claim damages directly from an employer just yet. However, they may be able to claim compensation from the local government or file formal complaints. These open cases and complaints could cause significant reputational damage—and reputational risk extends beyond formal complaints. Employees will ask questions about pay regardless of transposition status, and "we're not legally obliged yet" is not a satisfying answer.
Most organizations we speak to already have a plan to handle these requests: they may not be sharing everything the Directive will eventually require, but they are raising transparency anyway—typically starting with pay ranges—to protect employee trust and employer brand.
3) Local laws may differ—but not very much
We’ve kept a close eye on local legislation as it’s taken shape, and the local variations in the Directive’s transposition are marginal. Most differences involve definitions (like the exact definition of “benefits”) or deadlines (like employee request timeframes or snapshot dates). Only in rare cases does local law go beyond what the Directive requires.
Therefore, even in markets with delayed implementation, employers can be reasonably prepared by planning around the Directive’s core guidelines. They can also look to the legislation of nearby or similar markets to use as a planning framework.
4) Data reporting will be retrospective
Even when gender pay gap reporting is postponed until 2027, these reports will require 2025/26 data. What organizations operating in the EU do right now truly matters. This point was reinforced when Germany formally asked the European Commission to postpone the reference year for the first reporting cycle—and the Commission's response was unambiguous: the reporting must be based on data as of December 31, 2026, regardless of when national transposition occurs. Waiting for transposition, or hoping for a postponement of the reporting obligation, is a strategic mistake. The reference year will not change.
In addition, the Directive requires equitable job architectures, clearly defined criteria for pay, meaningful categories of workers, and the ability to run a pay equity assessment. These are all iterative processes, and few organizations get everything right on the first try.
We've found that it's best to spread this work out over time. This way, you can avoid the pain of a last-minute crunch when local implementation does take place, eliminating the risk of moving forward with a less-than-solid pay architecture. The same goes for closing gender pay gaps. If your organization identifies a pay gap now, and you have extra time before local laws take effect, you could spread the cost of remediation across two years to significantly reduce budget shock.
Best practices if transposition is delayed in your market(s)
Here is what we recommend for employers operating in markets where the EU Directive’s transposition is delayed:
- Use the EU Directive and similar markets as a baseline for your policies. The final local laws may be slightly different, but not by much.
- Document key assumptions (like dates and definitions). This will make your work more defensible and easier to pivot if local laws end up requiring something different.
- Use the extra time to iterate processes and close pay gaps.
These practices serve as vital EU pay transparency risk mitigation, helping you guarantee your employees the rights they are entitled to under EU law, protect your organization’s reputation, and ease the financial burden of compliance. Delaying is risky—start now.
How beqom can help
Our industry-leading software solution helps you create a job architecture for pay equity to deliver on the "equal pay for equal work" principle. The user-friendly interface provides deep insight into your organization’s pay structures and simplifies the process of pay equity analysis. When it’s time for retrospective data reporting, we provide compliance-ready reports that are both easy to generate and customize.
Book a free demo to see how we can help your organization get Directive-ready ahead of local deadlines.







