
Poland’s Draft Equal Pay Act
What employers need to know before June 2026
The draft Act on strengthening the right to equal pay introduces clear and enforceable obligations for employers. While equal pay is already a legal principle, this proposal focuses on how employers must prove compliance in practice through job evaluation, pay transparency, reporting, and corrective action.
Below is an easy overview of the most important points for employers.
Lithuania implements the directive
What employers need to know before June 2026
Lithuania has published draft legislation to transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive, primarily through amendments to the Labour Code and related enforcement rules (including the Administrative Offences framework). The draft builds on existing Lithuanian transparency requirements and adds clearer, enforceable obligations around recruitment transparency, pay-setting rules, employee information rights, and (for larger employers) pay gap reporting and follow-up action.
Below is an easy overview of the most important points for employers.


Germany’s “Pay Transparency Act 2.0” (expected)
What employers need to know before June 2026
Germany is preparing to transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive by 7 June 2026, primarily by amending the existing Pay Transparency Act (Entgelttransparenzgesetz, EntgTranspG). As of January 2026, implementation work has been driven by an expert commission (final proposals delivered 7 November 2025) and a federal legislative process planned to start in early 2026.
Sweden’s Draft Pay Transparency Implementation
Sweden was among the first EU Member States to publish a formal proposal on how it plans to transpose the EU pay transparency directive into national law. The government’s Inquiry Report (SOU 2024:40) sets out amendments to the Discrimination Act (Diskrimineringslagen) to meet the Directive’s requirements, building on Sweden’s existing pay equity framework and annual pay surveys.


Belgium’s Pay Transparency Implementation
Belgium does not yet have national legislation fully transposing the EU pay transparency directive (Directive (EU) 2023/970) for all employers, but there has been notable early implementation at the regional level and active preparatory work involving social partners and legislators.
Ireland’s Draft Pay Transparency Implementation
Ireland is actively preparing to transpose the EU pay transparency directive into national law ahead of the 7 June 2026 deadline. On 15 January 2025, the Government published the General Scheme of the Equality (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2024, which includes draft provisions to implement key transparency measures — making Ireland one of the earlier Member States to publish formal draft legislation in respect of the Directive.
Below is an easy overview of the most important points for employers.


The Netherlands’ Draft Pay Transparency Act
What employers need to know before June 2026
The Netherlands has published a draft bill to implement the EU Pay Transparency Directive (Directive (EU) 2023/970) by amending key national employment laws, including the Equal Treatment of Men and Women Act and related statutes. The draft aims to transpose the Directive’s requirements into Dutch law through a “pure implementation”—largely mirroring the Directive’s text and minimum obligations.
Below is an easy overview of the most important points for employers.
Finland’s Draft Pay Transparency Reform
What employers need to know before June 2026
Finland is preparing amendments to the Act on Equality between Women and Men and related legislation to implement the EU Pay Transparency Directive by the 7 June 2026 deadline. Finland already has comparatively advanced gender pay and equality obligations, but the reform significantly strengthens transparency, documentation, and employee rights, and introduces new employer duties in recruitment and pay reporting.
Below is an easy overview of the most important points for employers.


Malta’s Draft Pay Transparency Implementation
What employers need to know before June 2026
Malta has begun transposing the EU Pay Transparency Directive (Directive (EU) 2023/970) into national law with the publication of Legal Notice 112 of 2025 (amending the Transparent and Predictable Working Conditions Regulations under the Employment and Industrial Relations Act). This represents Malta’s first formal step toward full implementation by the 7 June 2026 deadline.
Below is an easy overview of the most important points for employers.
Slovakia’s Draft Pay Transparency Act
Slovakia has published draft legislation to transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive into national law. The draft “Law on Equal Pay for Men and Women for Equal Work or Work of Equal Value” and related amendments are intended to fully implement the Directive in Slovak labour law, replacing partial transparency measures with a comprehensive statutory framework. The draft was published on 19 September 2025 and is currently progressing through public consultation and the legislative process. If adopted, the law is expected to take effect on 1 June 2026 ahead of the EU deadline.


