EU Pay Transparency Deadline Slipped: Germany Faces Legal Risks Amid Wide HR Salary Spreads
08.06.2026 - 01:43:46 | boerse-global.de
Germany has missed the June 7 deadline to implement the EU Pay Transparency Directive, leaving employers exposed to potential lawsuits and penalties. The ruling coalition remains divided on how to translate the rules into national law, and a formal infringement procedure from Brussels could follow.
The directive grants employees a right to request average pay data for comparable roles broken down by gender. Companies must also disclose salary ranges in job postings, ban questions about previous pay during interviews, and — starting from 100 employees — regularly report on their gender pay gap. Germany's unadjusted gender pay gap stood at 15.6 percent in 2024; the adjusted figure is roughly 6 percent.
Legal experts warn of increased litigation risk. A 2024 ruling from the Federal Labour Court combined with the new directive could open the door to compensation claims.
Recruiter and HR Operations Salaries Show Stubborn Divergence
New salary data from Kununu, also published on June 7, paints a mixed picture for HR professionals. Recruiters earn a national average of 47,600 euros gross per year, with a range between 32,900 euros and 70,900 euros. Experience drives the spread: entrants with fewer than three years take home about 43,600 euros, while ten-year veterans average 62,000 euros. Regionally, Munich leads at 52,000 euros.
HR operations staff earn significantly more. According to Gehalt.de data from June 6, the average annual salary in that field is 58,948 euros. Employer branding and personnel marketing specialists reach 51,348 euros. The highest regional pay for this group is in Baden-Württemberg at 53,767 euros. Consulting firm Kienbaum projects a 3.1 percent sector-wide increase by 2026.
AI Adoption Accelerates but Compliance Looms
Digitalisation is reshaping HR budgets. A survey by IT-Daily shows 48 percent of German HR decision-makers now invest in artificial intelligence — up from 38 percent the previous year. About 40 percent of companies already pair AI with human oversight for payroll processing.
But the EU AI Act adds pressure. From August 2026, strict transparency and risk management rules will apply to AI used in personnel decisions. Yet only 47 percent of employers have binding guidelines for technology use, leaving many unprepared.
Utility Workers See Modest Tariff Boost
In the collective-bargaining sphere, a 1.25 percent wage increase took effect June 1 under the utilities sector agreement (TV-V). It covers roughly 135,000 employees at municipal companies. The new pay scale runs from about 2,605 euros at the lowest grade to nearly 9,922 euros at the top. The contract remains in force through March 2027, reflecting a pattern of moderate but steady wage adjustments.
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