In the weeks since the EU Pay Transparency rules came into full effect, how have organisations responded to the change?
In early June, changes were made to how companies in EU member states are required to disseminate employee-relevant information. The EU Pay Transparency Directive is a policy that aims to reduce the gender pay gap, ensure fairer pay structures and create an atmosphere in which professionals and jobseekers can have open conversations about pay and other topics.
Having first been passed in 2023, countries were given three years to align themselves with the new rules and make any necessary changes. A month has gone by now since that final deadline, but what has changed?
Job search platform Mokaru analysed 1,776,876 global job listings posted between April and June, on the career sites of 48,758 employers, across more than 46 applicant tracking systems. What was discovered is that one month after the EU Pay Transparency Directive deadline, only 6.6pc of EU job ads are disclosing salary information. This is compared to nearly 40pc in the US.
Mokaru’s experts said, “If you are job hunting in Europe, you already know the ritual, read the listing, scan for the salary, find nothing, apply anyway and hope the number at the end of four interview rounds does not waste everyone’s time. Our data shows exactly how bad it is and how different it could be.”
With US figures notably higher than the available European data, Mokaru said, “Here is the uncomfortable timing, the EU Pay Transparency Directive, the law that, among other things, gives applicants the right to salary information before the interview, had its implementation deadline on 7 June, 2026. One month later, European employers’ job ads are still overwhelmingly silent.”
Evolving landscapes
Canada and the US are setting the pace as research found that salaries are disclosed in more than one-third of listings. For comparison, the UK trailed behind at 21pc, the Netherlands at 12pc, Ireland at 10pc, France at 9pc and Austria also at 9pc.
Mokaru also found that numbers varied dramatically, even in cases where employers from different regions were utilising the same job promotion platforms. Germany is one such example as on Workday only 2.8pc of employers chose to disclose salary information, compared to more than 40pc of US-based employers.
Sweden lies at the bottom of the list, having the least transparent jobs market, at just 0.4pc, or fewer than one in 200 job listings. Despite the law coming into effect and the European Commission sticking to the timeline, many countries have elected to ‘postpone’ implementation, with Sweden pausing it completely for the time being.
Mokaru said, “To be fair to the directive, it is early days. Four weeks is not enough time to rewrite hiring workflows and in most member states the national law that actually binds employers is not yet in force, the bulk of implementations will land between now and January 2027, with enforcement and sanctions following later.
“The honest conclusion from this data is not that the directive has failed, it is that, one month in, employer behaviour has not yet started to move.”
Rising trends
The research highlighted other patterns and trends that stand out, such as the impact the policy has had so far on remote job listings. What the data uncovered is that remote job listings in the EU are almost twice as likely to disclose salary as on-site listings, at 11.5pc and 6.2pc respectively.
The report said, “Employers hiring remotely compete in an international talent pool, one where US-style transparency is increasingly the norm. Competition is currently doing more for European pay transparency than regulation. In the US, the remote/on-site gap barely exists (39.5pc versus 37.4pc), transparency laws there apply regardless of where the work happens.”
Looking at the data that is specific to Ireland, Mokaru also found that as seniority rises, transparency has a tendency to fall, as junior roles disclose at around 32pc, compared to 11pc of senior roles and 9pc of lead roles.
The report said, “more than four in five Irish job ads keep candidates guessing and the higher the role, the quieter the ad, junior positions disclose pay three times more often than senior ones.”
Ultimately, Mokaru’s experts are of the opinion that the burden of the European information gap falls largely on those who have the least negotiating power, mainly invested candidates who cannot afford to walk away from multiple rounds of interviews when the offer finally lands below their floor.
And “until the directive has teeth”, European candidates should be aware of the factors that best indicate whether the role they are applying for is at a company likely to embrace the change in policy.
So, until then be aware of your rights, look into remote friendly opportunities and research market rates because even if your employer plans to keep you in the dark, the information is likely available elsewhere.
Don’t miss out on the knowledge you need to succeed. Sign up for the Daily Brief, Silicon Republic’s digest of need-to-know sci-tech news.







You must be logged in to post a comment Login