Our Expert in Austria
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Last reviewed: 13 May 2026
Pay transparency in Austria is entering a new era. With the transposition deadline for Directive (EU) 2023/970, the EU Pay Transparency Directive, set for 7 June 2026, Austrian employers face a compressed timeline to overhaul how they advertise salaries, respond to employee pay-information requests, conduct equal pay audits and document remuneration decisions. Austria already operates one of Europe’s more established gender pay gap reporting regimes, introduced through amendments to the Equal Treatment Act (Gleichbehandlungsgesetz) from 2011 onward, but the Directive significantly expands employer obligations in scope, granularity and enforcement.
This guide provides a step-by-step compliance framework, covering every obligation from recruitment advertising through to remediation, designed for general counsel, HR directors, payroll leads and in-house teams preparing for the 2026 changes.
If you have time for nothing else, prioritise these six actions before the transposition deadline:
Directive (EU) 2023/970, adopted by the European Parliament and Council on 10 May 2023 and published in the Official Journal of the EU, establishes binding rules to strengthen the application of the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value between men and women. It applies across all EU Member States and must be transposed into national law by 7 June 2026.
The Directive builds on Article 157 TFEU (equal pay) and earlier equal-treatment directives but introduces several mechanisms that go well beyond existing Austrian law. The core pillars include: mandatory salary-range disclosure in job advertisements; a prohibition on asking applicants about their pay history; the right of employees to request and receive information on pay levels for categories of workers performing equal work or work of equal value; mandatory pay-gap reporting for organisations above defined thresholds; joint pay assessments (audits) where unjustified gaps exceed certain levels; and a shift of the burden of proof to the employer in pay-discrimination claims.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 10 May 2023 | Directive (EU) 2023/970 adopted by the European Parliament and Council |
| 17 May 2023 | Directive published in the Official Journal of the EU |
| 7 June 2026 | Transposition deadline, all Member States, including Austria, must have national implementing legislation in force |
| 7 June 2027 | First reporting cycle begins for employers with 150+ employees (under the Directive’s phased schedule) |
| 7 June 2031 | Reporting obligations extend to employers with 100–149 employees |
Austria’s existing pay-reporting obligations under the Equal Treatment Act already require companies with more than 150 employees to produce biennial income reports (Einkommensbericht). The 2026 reporting cycle, widely described as the last cycle under the current national regime, is expected to be the transitional bridge before the Directive’s broader framework takes effect. Industry observers expect the Austrian transposition law to align closely with the Directive’s phased thresholds, though the precise text of the national implementing legislation should be monitored as the deadline approaches.
The EU Pay Transparency Directive imposes a layered set of employer obligations that touch recruitment, ongoing employment and organisational reporting. Austrian employers should prepare for each obligation category in parallel, because compliance requires coordinated changes across HR, legal, finance and IT functions.
Under the Directive, employers must provide job applicants with information on the initial pay level or salary range for the advertised position. This information must be included in the job vacancy notice or otherwise communicated to the candidate before the job interview, it cannot be deferred to the offer stage.
Austria already requires collective-agreement (Kollektivvertrag) minimum salaries to be stated in job advertisements under Section 9 of the Equal Treatment Act. The Directive goes further: employers must state the actual salary range or starting pay, not merely the collective-agreement floor. For many Austrian employers, this means updating thousands of active job postings.
Sample job-ad salary-range wording:
“For this position, the gross annual salary ranges from EUR [X] to EUR [Y], based on qualifications, experience and the applicable collective agreement. Willingness to overpay is given depending on the candidate’s profile.”
Additionally, the Directive explicitly prohibits employers from asking applicants, directly or through third parties, about their current or historical remuneration. Recruitment agencies, internal hiring managers and HR business partners must all be trained on this prohibition. Existing intake forms and interview guides should be reviewed and revised to remove salary-history fields.
One of the most operationally significant provisions of the Directive is the right of individual employees to request and receive written information on their individual pay level and the average pay levels, broken down by sex, for categories of workers performing equal work or work of equal value. This right applies regardless of employer size.
The Directive requires employers to respond to such requests within two months. Employers must also inform all employees annually of their right to make such a request. The information must be accurate and sufficiently detailed to enable a meaningful comparison.
In practice, this means Austrian employers need to:
Sample acknowledgement wording:
“We acknowledge receipt of your pay-information request dated [date]. Under applicable law, we will provide a written response within two months. If you have any questions in the meantime, please contact [designated contact].”
The Directive requires employers to make easily accessible the criteria used to determine pay levels, pay progression and pay increases. These criteria must be objective, gender-neutral and linked to the value of the work performed. Austrian employers operating under collective agreements will find partial alignment here, as collective-agreement pay scales already provide structured grading. However, the Directive also captures non-collective-agreement pay components, discretionary bonuses, variable pay, benefits-in-kind and ad hoc pay adjustments, which must now be documented against objective criteria.
Practically, every Austrian employer should maintain a written remuneration policy (or update an existing one) that sets out how base pay, bonuses, allowances and other pay components are determined. This document will serve both as evidence of remuneration scheme compliance and as the basis for any future equal-pay audit.
The scope of pay transparency obligations in Austria depends on employer size, sector and the specific obligation in question. The table below summarises the expected framework based on the Directive’s provisions and Austria’s existing reporting thresholds.
| Entity Type | Reporting Frequency / Threshold | Key Obligations (Summary) |
|---|---|---|
| Large private employers (250+ employees) | Annual pay-gap reporting (from 7 June 2027 under the Directive’s phased schedule); existing Austrian biennial income reports continue during transition | Full pay audit, publish summary gender pay gap statistics, respond to individual pay-information requests, document pay structures and criteria |
| Mid-size private employers (100–249 employees) | Reporting every three years (from 7 June 2027 for 150–249; from 7 June 2031 for 100–149) | Pay-gap reporting on phased schedule, respond to pay-information requests, salary-range disclosure in job ads, document pay criteria |
| Small employers (below 100 employees) | No mandatory pay-gap reporting under the Directive (Member States may extend coverage) | Salary-range disclosure in job ads, respond to individual pay-information requests, prohibition on salary-history questions |
| Public sector | Typically full coverage regardless of size (subject to Austrian transposition) | Publish pay scales and salary ranges, respond to employee requests, ensure full remuneration scheme compliance, conduct equal pay audits |
Regardless of size, all employers operating in Austria must comply with the recruitment-stage obligations (salary ranges in job ads, prohibition on salary-history requests) and the individual pay-information request rights. The reporting and audit obligations scale with headcount.
Job-family mapping: To comply with the audit and reporting obligations, employers must define categories of workers performing “equal work or work of equal value.” This requires a structured job-evaluation exercise. Industry observers expect Austrian employers to rely on a combination of collective-agreement job classifications (Verwendungsgruppen) and internal grading systems. The key is that evaluation criteria are objective, gender-neutral and consistently applied.
A pay audit, also referred to as an equal pay audit or joint pay assessment under the Directive, is the central compliance mechanism. Where an employer’s pay-gap reporting reveals a gender pay gap of 5% or more in any category of workers, and the employer cannot justify the gap by objective, gender-neutral factors, a joint pay assessment must be conducted in cooperation with worker representatives.
Even where a joint pay assessment is not yet legally triggered, conducting a voluntary pay audit now is the single most effective step Austrian employers can take to prepare for the 2026 changes. The following methodology provides a practical framework.
The first task is assembling a clean, comprehensive dataset. The table below lists the recommended data fields for a pay audit in Austria.
| Data Field | Description | Privacy Note |
|---|---|---|
| Employee ID (anonymised) | Unique identifier, not the employee’s name or social-insurance number | Use pseudonymised keys; restrict access to audit team |
| Gender | As recorded in HR system (male / female / diverse / not disclosed) | Special-category data under GDPR, document legal basis for processing |
| Job title | Current contractual job title | , |
| Job family / job grade | Internal grading or collective-agreement classification (Verwendungsgruppe) | , |
| Base annual gross salary | Full-time equivalent (FTE) base pay | , |
| Variable pay / bonuses | Target and actual variable compensation (annual) | , |
| Allowances & supplements | Overtime supplements, shift allowances, travel allowances, housing benefits | , |
| Benefits-in-kind | Company car, meal vouchers, pension contributions, stock options (monetary value) | , |
| Working hours | Contractual weekly hours; full-time / part-time indicator | , |
| Seniority / tenure | Years of service with current employer | , |
| Relevant experience | Total years of professional experience (where recorded) | , |
| Location / site | Work location (relevant for regional pay differentials) | , |
| Performance rating | Most recent annual appraisal score (if applicable) | Handle with care, may introduce bias if rating criteria are not gender-neutral |
Data should be extracted from the HRIS, payroll system and benefits administration platform. Ensure that working-time data is normalised to FTE equivalents before any gap calculation, as Austria has a high proportion of part-time female workers and unadjusted figures will distort the analysis.
The Directive references a 5% threshold: where the average pay gap between male and female workers in any category exceeds 5% and cannot be justified by objective, gender-neutral factors, the employer must take action. In practice, the audit should proceed in two stages:
Where the residual gap in any category exceeds 5%, the employer should flag the category for remediation and prepare a justification file documenting the analysis, the factors considered and the remediation plan.
The audit should produce three deliverables:
Pay reporting in Austria currently operates through the biennial income report (Einkommensbericht) regime. Under the Directive, reporting obligations will become more detailed and, for larger employers, more frequent. But the most immediate operational challenge is handling individual pay-information requests from employees.
The Directive grants every employee the right to receive written information on their individual pay and on average pay levels by sex for their category of work. Employers must respond within two months of receiving the request. The following SLA framework is recommended:
Retain a copy of every request and response for at least three years. Where a request raises a potential equal-pay concern, escalate to the remediation workflow immediately, do not wait for the next reporting cycle.
Where a pay audit reveals unjustified gaps, Austrian employers have several remediation options. The most common approach is direct pay adjustment, increasing the pay of underpaid employees to close the gap. However, remediation can also include non-monetary measures: reclassification of roles, revision of bonus criteria, changes to promotion pathways or adjustments to benefits structures.
Every remediation decision must be documented. Record the gap identified, the justification analysis, the remediation option chosen and the timeline for implementation. This documentation serves as evidence of good faith and proactive compliance in the event of a discrimination claim.
Communications plan: Industry observers expect that transparent internal communications will be essential to managing employee expectations. A recommended approach includes:
The Directive requires Member States to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non-compliance. While Austria’s transposition legislation will define the precise sanction regime, the Directive itself mandates several enforcement-enhancing features that employers should anticipate:
Early indications suggest that Austria’s enforcement framework will draw on the existing institutional infrastructure, the Equal Treatment Commission (Gleichbehandlungskommission) and the Ombudsman for Equal Treatment (Gleichbehandlungsanwaltschaft), but with enhanced investigative and remedial powers. Employers who have not conducted audits or who fail to respond to pay-information requests within the two-month deadline face the greatest exposure.
Use this 30/60/90/180-day action plan to structure your compliance programme for pay transparency in Austria:
Days 1–30:
Days 31–60:
Days 61–90:
Days 91–180:
Recommended templates (available for download from Global Law Experts):
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ingrid Korenjak at Kinner Korenjak LAW Rechtsanwälte, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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