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What the EU Pay Transparency Directive Really Demands of Employers

2 Jun, 2026
5 Mins Read
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EU Pay Transparency
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Neeyamo
By Editorial team
From the desk of Neeyamo's editorial team.
Last Modified Tue, 09 Jun 26 15:44:53 +0530

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Any organization employing workers within EU member states, regardless of where its headquarters are located, must comply with the applicable requirements for its European workforce. Whether a company is based in New York, London, Singapore, or Tokyo, employees working in EU jurisdictions may fall under the scope of the directive.

It goes well beyond identical job titles. The concept extends beyond employees performing identical jobs. Employers must also assess whether different roles deliver comparable value based on objective criteria such as skills, responsibilities, effort, and working conditions. A warehouse operations manager and a customer service supervisor may hold very different positions, yet the organization may need to demonstrate whether compensation differences are objectively justified.

Employees will have the right to request information regarding their individual pay level and average pay levels, broken down by gender, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Employers must respond within specified timeframes and provide the information in a clear and accessible format.

If reporting identifies a gender pay gap of at least 5% within a category of workers and the employer cannot justify the difference through objective, gender-neutral criteria, corrective action becomes necessary. Organizations must be able to investigate compensation decisions, analyze historical pay practices, review allowances and variable pay components, assess promotion patterns, and identify the root causes of disparities.

It fundamentally shifts responsibility onto the employer. In pay discrimination claims, employers may be required to demonstrate that compensation differences are based on objective and gender-neutral criteria. Historically, organizations could often focus on responding to issues after they emerged. Under the new framework, employers must be prepared to substantiate compensation decisions with evidence. Payroll records become evidence. Compensation histories become evidence. Pay policies become evidence. Data quality becomes evidence.