The Ministry of Labor has shared draft legislation to transpose the EU Pay Transparency Directive (2023/970) with the social partners, with further consultations scheduled for March 19. The draft generally follows the text of the directive but, in doing so, would significantly add to existing protections in some areas, such as mandatory gender pay gap reporting under the existing Gender Equality Index. It is also highly unlikely that France will meet the June 2026 deadline for transposition, which could affect gender pay gap reporting one year after the law is published. France had an unadjusted gender pay gap of 11.8% as of 2024 compared with the EU average of 11.1% (Eurostat data).
The directive would also reverse the existing burden of proof on pay. Rather than the employee having to prove that the employer violated the rules on pay transparency, the employer would have to prove that it has not violated the rules.
Employers should monitor the legislative process closely. As noted above, the bill is a working draft to be discussed with social partners. Further changes and refinements are to be expected but are unlikely to be hugely different. The government is still in the process of developing provisions in the bill for the public sector. While the deadline for transposing the directive will probably be missed, it is expected to be signed into law by the end of 2026.