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What Japan Directors and Board Members Must Know About the 2026 Employment Law Reforms: Duties, Liability and a Board‑level Compliance Checklist

By Global Law Experts
– posted 50 minutes ago

Japan’s 2026 employment law package, anchoring reforms to the Labour Standards Act, expanded gender pay gap reporting obligations, and reinforced freelancer protections, has materially changed the landscape of directors liability employment Japan boards must navigate. For the first time, employers with 101 or more regular employees face mandatory gender pay gap and female manager ratio disclosure, while strengthened enforcement powers give the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW) and the Japan Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) broader inspection and sanctioning authority. These workplace law reforms Japan companies are now subject to create explicit new duties for directors, audit and supervisory board members, and corporate officers, duties that carry personal civil, administrative and, in serious cases, criminal liability.

This article provides board‑level analysis of what has changed, where the liability exposure sits, and a practical 12‑point board compliance checklist that directors can operationalise within the next 90 to 180 days.

What Changed in 2026, The Japan Labour Reforms 2026 Legislative Snapshot

The 2026 reform package is not a single statute but a coordinated set of amendments and new enforcement measures that, taken together, reshape employer compliance 2026 Japan obligations across four pillars. Boards must understand each pillar because the duty of oversight under the Companies Act extends to all areas of regulatory compliance, including employment law.

  • Labour Standards Act amendments. Revised provisions tighten working‑condition notification requirements, expand protections for fixed‑term and part‑time workers, and introduce enhanced penalties for employer violations. The amendments reinforce MHLW’s authority to conduct on‑site inspections and issue corrective orders.
  • Expanded gender pay gap reporting. The Act on Promotion of Women’s Participation and Advancement in the Workplace has been amended to lower the reporting threshold. Employers with 101 or more regular employees must now calculate and publicly disclose their gender pay gap and female manager ratio, effective for fiscal years ending on or after April 1, 2026.
  • Freelance Act and Subcontract Act enforcement. The Freelance Act (formally, the Act on Improvement of Transactions between Specified Entrusted Business Operators and Freelancers), which came into force in November 2024, now intersects with the Subcontract Act’s strengthened enforcement regime. Boards engaging freelancers or subcontractors must ensure written transaction terms, prompt payment and prohibition of unjust price reductions are complied with, or face JFTC enforcement action.
  • Harassment prevention and reporting obligations. Updated MHLW guidelines require employers to maintain effective internal complaint channels and response systems, with board‑level accountability for investigation protocols and remedial actions.

Timeline of Key Dates and Who Is Affected

Date Reform Board Action Required
November 1, 2024 Freelance Act enters into force Audit all freelancer/subcontractor contracts for written terms, payment conditions and prohibited practices
April 1, 2026 Expanded gender pay gap and female manager ratio disclosure, threshold lowered to 101+ employees Approve disclosure policy; instruct CHRO/CFO to prepare payroll methodology; set first reporting timeline
April 1, 2026 Labour Standards Act amendments (working conditions, part‑time protections, penalty revisions) Update employment contracts and rules of employment; verify internal controls for working‑condition notifications
Ongoing (strengthened from 2026) MHLW inspection powers and JFTC/Subcontract Act enforcement intensification Establish board reporting line for inspection responses; assign responsible officer for regulatory liaison

Director Duties Under the 2026 Reforms, Statutory and Governance Obligations

Understanding board duties Japan employment law creates is essential because the personal exposure of individual directors flows directly from these obligations. The duties fall into two intersecting categories: general Companies Act duties and sector‑specific statutory duties imposed by employment legislation.

Under the Companies Act, every director owes the company a duty of care of a prudent manager (Article 330, incorporating Civil Code Article 644) and a duty of loyalty (Article 355). Courts have consistently interpreted the duty of care as including a duty of oversight, the obligation to establish, maintain and monitor adequate internal control systems (Article 362(4)(vi) for companies with boards of directors). Where employment law non‑compliance causes damage to the company, through fines, corrective orders, litigation costs or reputational harm, directors who failed to exercise adequate oversight may face personal liability under Article 423 (liability to the company) or Article 429 (liability to third parties for gross negligence or bad faith).

The 2026 employment reforms intensify this oversight duty in practical terms. Directors must now ensure that:

  • Internal controls cover new reporting obligations. The board must verify that payroll data systems, HR policies and disclosure procedures are adequate to meet gender pay gap reporting and other mandated disclosures.
  • Whistleblower and harassment response systems are operational. Under strengthened MHLW guidance, boards bear responsibility for ensuring that internal complaint channels function effectively and that investigation protocols meet statutory standards.
  • Freelancer and subcontractor contracting practices comply with the Freelance Act. Procurement departments must use written transaction terms that specify scope, compensation and payment timing, and boards must verify compliance through internal audit.
  • Regulatory changes are proactively monitored. Directors cannot rely on management to flag compliance gaps. The duty of oversight requires boards to commission periodic compliance audits and to receive reports on regulatory developments affecting corporate governance employment law obligations.

Duties of Audit and Supervisory Board Members

Audit and supervisory board members (kansayaku) and members of audit committees under the three‑committee structure carry a distinct, independent duty to monitor the execution of duties by directors. In the employment law context, this means kansayaku must independently verify that employment‑related internal controls are functioning, that disclosed information is accurate and that management is responding appropriately to regulatory inquiries or inspection findings. Where kansayaku identify deficiencies and fail to act, for example, by not raising the matter at a board meeting or by not exercising their right to request reports from directors, they may incur personal liability under the Companies Act.

Board Minutes, Delegation and Documentation

Robust documentation is both a governance best practice and a liability shield. Boards should record in their minutes that they have received a compliance briefing on the 2026 reforms, approved specific compliance measures, delegated implementation to identified officers, and set deadlines for verification. Sample resolution language might include: “The board resolves to approve the 2026 Employment Compliance Implementation Plan as presented, delegates day‑to‑day execution to the General Counsel and Chief Human Resources Officer, and directs the Audit Committee to report on implementation progress at the next quarterly board meeting.” Proper documentation creates contemporaneous evidence that the board discharged its oversight duty.

Director Liability Japan: Civil, Administrative and Criminal Exposure

The question of director liability Japan boards face is not theoretical. Enforcement has intensified across all three exposure pathways, and the 2026 reforms widen the circumstances in which personal liability can crystallise.

Civil liability. Under Companies Act Article 423, a director who breaches their duty of care or loyalty and causes damage to the company is liable for that damage. Where employment law violations lead to fines, back‑pay orders, litigation settlements or reputational losses, the company may pursue the responsible director for the resulting financial harm. Under Article 429, third parties, including employees and freelancers, may pursue directors directly where the director acted with gross negligence or bad faith. Industry observers expect that the expanded reporting obligations and strengthened enforcement will increase the frequency of derivative actions (kabunushi daihyō soshō) where shareholders allege oversight failures.

Administrative liability. MHLW labour standards inspectors have authority to issue corrective orders (zesei kankoku) and, for persistent non‑compliance, to publicly disclose the names of violating employers. While administrative orders typically bind the company rather than individual directors, the reputational consequences, and the downstream civil liability risk, are significant. For freelancer and subcontracting violations, the JFTC and the Small and Medium Enterprise Agency (SMEA) can issue recommendations and orders under the Subcontract Act, with potential publication of the violating company’s identity.

Criminal liability. Certain Labour Standards Act violations carry criminal penalties, including imprisonment and fines, that can be imposed on the individual responsible for the violation. Under the dual‑liability (ryōbatsu) provisions, both the company and the responsible officer, which can include directors, may be prosecuted. While criminal prosecution of directors for employment law breaches remains relatively uncommon, the 2026 amendments expand the range of offences and increase applicable penalties, making this a risk that boards must take seriously.

Enforcement: MHLW Inspections, JFTC and Criminal Referrals

MHLW conducts scheduled and complaint‑triggered inspections of employer premises. Where inspections reveal violations, inspectors typically issue a corrective guidance notice (shidō) followed, if necessary, by a formal corrective order. Failure to comply with corrective orders may result in criminal referral to the public prosecutor. For Subcontract Act violations, the JFTC has independent investigative authority and can issue binding recommendations that require corrective action and reporting. Boards should designate a senior officer to serve as the company’s regulatory liaison and ensure that inspection responses are escalated to the board promptly.

Illustrative Case Scenarios

  • Scenario 1, Nominal director oversight failure. A company’s board includes several outside directors who attend meetings but do not review compliance reports. Following an MHLW inspection that reveals systematic overtime violations, the company is fined and ordered to pay back‑wages. Shareholders bring a derivative action alleging that the outside directors breached their duty of oversight. The likely practical effect is that directors who received no compliance briefings and requested no reports will struggle to demonstrate they fulfilled their duty of care.
  • Scenario 2, Failure to implement freelancer protections. A company routinely engages freelancers without written transaction terms and delays payments beyond the statutory period. The JFTC issues a public recommendation under the Subcontract Act. The reputational damage leads to lost contracts with a major client. The board faces questions about whether it established adequate internal controls over procurement contracting.
  • Scenario 3, Incomplete gender pay disclosure. A company with 150 employees fails to publish its gender pay gap data for the fiscal year ending March 2027 (the first reporting cycle under the expanded threshold). MHLW issues guidance requesting correction. Early indications suggest that the administrative response in such cases will begin with corrective guidance, but repeated failure to disclose could escalate to formal orders and publication of the company name.

Board‑Level Compliance Checklist: Immediate, Medium‑Term and Ongoing Actions

This board compliance checklist is the central practical deliverable for directors, audit and supervisory board members and general counsel. It covers 12 action items grouped by urgency. Each item identifies the responsible owner, the evidence of completion and the recommended timeline.

Immediate Actions (0–90 Days)

  1. Commission a compliance gap audit. Responsible: General Counsel (GC). Evidence: Written gap analysis report presented to the board. Timeline: Complete within 60 days. The audit should map all 2026 employment reform requirements against current company policies, contracts and reporting systems.
  2. Approve a gender pay gap disclosure policy. Responsible: Board (resolution). Evidence: Board minutes recording approval of methodology, timeline and designated officer. Timeline: Board resolution within 45 days. For companies with 101 or more employees, this must be in place before the end of the first applicable fiscal year.
  3. Instruct payroll methodology verification. Responsible: CFO and CHRO jointly. Evidence: Written payroll methodology document reviewed by external advisors. Timeline: 60 days. Ensure the calculation methodology aligns with MHLW guidance on gender pay gap computation.
  4. Audit all freelancer and subcontractor contracts. Responsible: Head of Procurement/Legal. Evidence: Contract audit log confirming written terms, payment schedules and prohibited‑practice compliance. Timeline: 90 days.
  5. Update rules of employment and employment contracts. Responsible: CHRO and Legal. Evidence: Revised standard contracts filed with the applicable Labour Standards Inspection Office. Timeline: 90 days.
  6. Verify harassment complaint channels. Responsible: CHRO. Evidence: Documented test of internal reporting channels; training records for HR investigators. Timeline: 60 days.
  7. Designate a regulatory liaison officer. Responsible: Board (delegation). Evidence: Board minutes. Timeline: Immediate. This officer will coordinate responses to MHLW inspections and JFTC enquiries.

Near‑Term Actions (90–180 Days)

  1. Conduct director and officer training on employment compliance. Responsible: GC. Evidence: Training attendance records and materials. Timeline: Within 120 days. Training should cover the 2026 reforms, personal liability exposure and the board’s oversight obligations under the Companies Act.
  2. Establish board reporting protocols for compliance KPIs. Responsible: Audit Committee/Kansayaku. Evidence: Written reporting framework specifying frequency, content and escalation triggers. Timeline: 120 days.
  3. Review D&O insurance coverage. Responsible: CFO and Legal. Evidence: Insurance broker’s written confirmation of coverage scope and exclusions for employment‑related regulatory sanctions. Timeline: 150 days.
  4. Integrate employer compliance 2026 Japan requirements into internal audit plan. Responsible: Head of Internal Audit. Evidence: Revised annual audit plan approved by the Audit Committee. Timeline: 180 days.
  5. Prepare first gender pay gap disclosure draft. Responsible: CHRO and CFO. Evidence: Draft disclosure reviewed by Legal and ready for board sign‑off before the filing deadline. Timeline: Aligned with fiscal year‑end.

Template: Board Resolution, Recommended Wording

Boards should adopt a formal resolution at the earliest opportunity. A model resolution might read:

“RESOLVED that the Board of Directors approves the 2026 Employment Law Compliance Implementation Plan dated [date], including (i) the gender pay gap disclosure policy and methodology, (ii) the freelancer and subcontractor contract audit programme, (iii) the updated rules of employment, and (iv) the appointment of [Officer Name] as Regulatory Liaison Officer. The Board delegates day‑to‑day implementation to the General Counsel and Chief Human Resources Officer and directs the Audit Committee to report on implementation progress at each quarterly board meeting until further resolution.”

Compliance Governance KPIs to Monitor

  • Gender pay gap calculation accuracy rate, percentage of payroll categories verified against MHLW methodology.
  • Freelancer contract compliance rate, percentage of active freelancer engagements with written terms meeting Freelance Act requirements.
  • Harassment complaint response time, average days from complaint receipt to preliminary investigation finding.
  • Regulatory inspection closure rate, percentage of inspection findings resolved within MHLW‑mandated corrective periods.
  • Director training completion, percentage of directors who have completed the 2026 employment compliance briefing.

Practical Compliance Maps: Reporting Obligations and Entity Comparison

Not all employers face identical obligations. The following comparison table summarises how gender pay gap reporting employers of different sizes are affected by the 2026 reforms, along with harassment and freelancer compliance duties.

Entity Type Reporting Obligations (Gender Pay / Managerial Ratio / Harassment) First Required Reporting / Note
Large employers (300+ employees) Existing gender pay and managerial disclosure obligations continue with expanded metrics and refined methodology requirements Already required, boards must refine calculation methodology and verify ongoing accuracy
Medium employers (101–299 employees) New expanded disclosure: gender pay gap, female manager ratio, and related workforce metrics First fiscal year ending on or after April 1, 2026, prepare methodology and disclosure channels now
Small employers (≤100 employees) Limited or phased disclosure obligations; harassment prevention and workplace protection duties apply regardless of size Monitor future threshold changes; ensure harassment response systems are in place

For multinational companies with Japan subsidiaries, the critical action is to establish a data collection workflow that captures Japan‑specific payroll information in a format compatible with MHLW methodology. This may require coordination between global payroll systems and local HR teams, and should be reviewed by the company’s data protection officer to ensure compliance with Japan’s Act on the Protection of Personal Information. Companies already navigating pay transparency obligations in other jurisdictions will find structural parallels that can accelerate implementation, though Japan’s calculation methodology has its own distinct requirements.

Case Studies and Risk Scenarios

Scenario A, Missed gender pay disclosure. A Japanese subsidiary of a multinational group has 180 employees. The global HR team, unfamiliar with Japan’s expanded reporting threshold, fails to prepare a gender pay gap disclosure for the fiscal year ending March 2027. MHLW issues corrective guidance. The board must convene an extraordinary meeting, instruct the CHRO to prepare the disclosure within the corrective period, document the remediation in board minutes, and conduct a root‑cause analysis to prevent recurrence. Early indications suggest that first‑time failures addressed promptly through corrective guidance are unlikely to escalate to formal orders, but the company’s name may be included in MHLW advisory notices.

Scenario B, Freelancer dispute and JFTC enforcement. A technology company engages 40 freelance engineers without written transaction terms and routinely pays invoices 90 days after completion of work. A freelancer files a complaint with the JFTC. Investigators issue a recommendation under the Subcontract Act, requiring immediate correction and a written compliance plan. The board must ensure procurement contracts are re‑drafted, appoint an officer to liaise with the JFTC, and report the matter through the audit committee. Companies managing similar regulatory changes in areas such as the Japan Payment Services Act will recognise the enforcement pattern: corrective guidance followed by escalation for persistent non‑compliance.

Implementation Playbook, Who Does What Inside the Company

Effective implementation of the 2026 reforms requires clear accountability across functions. The following high‑level RACI matrix assigns responsibilities for the core compliance workstreams.

Task Responsible Accountable Consulted Informed
Gender pay gap calculation and disclosure CHRO, CFO Board / Audit Committee External advisors, DPO All directors
Freelancer / subcontractor contract audit Head of Legal, Procurement GC Finance, Business units Board, Kansayaku
Harassment response system review CHRO GC External investigators Audit Committee
Regulatory inspection response Regulatory Liaison Officer GC Relevant department heads Board Chair, Kansayaku
Internal audit integration Head of Internal Audit Audit Committee GC, CHRO Board

The general counsel should serve as the central coordination point, maintaining a single compliance tracker that is reviewed at each Audit Committee meeting and reported to the full board quarterly. Companies operating across multiple jurisdictions with concurrent employment reform programmes should consider harmonising their board reporting frameworks to reduce duplication while maintaining jurisdiction‑specific accuracy.

Conclusion

The 2026 employment reforms have converted what were once primarily HR operational matters into explicit board‑level governance responsibilities, directly affecting directors liability employment Japan companies must manage. The three actions every board should take immediately are: commission a compliance gap audit, approve a disclosure and reporting policy through formal board resolution, and verify that internal controls, from payroll methodology to freelancer contracts, meet the new statutory standards. Directors who act now, document their decisions and establish ongoing monitoring through the audit committee will materially reduce their personal liability exposure and position their companies for the strengthened enforcement environment ahead.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Hiroyuki Kamano at KAMANO SOGO LAW OFFICES, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW), Gender Pay / Women’s Empowerment
  2. MHLW, Employment and Labour Standards Overview
  3. Japanese Law Translation, Labour Standards Act (English Translation)
  4. Japanese Law Translation, Companies Act (English Translation)
  5. MHLW, Freelance Act Official Explanatory Pamphlet
  6. OECD, Pay Transparency in Progress (2026 Report)

FAQs

What duties do directors have under Japan's 2026 labour reforms?
Directors must establish and monitor internal controls that ensure compliance with expanded reporting obligations, harassment prevention requirements and freelancer protections. This includes approving disclosure policies, commissioning compliance audits and receiving periodic progress reports, all grounded in the duty of care under the Companies Act.
Yes. Civil liability may arise under Companies Act Articles 423 and 429 where oversight failures cause damage to the company or third parties. Administrative sanctions target the company but carry reputational and downstream liability consequences for directors. Criminal prosecution under dual‑liability provisions is possible for serious Labour Standards Act violations.
Employers with 101 or more regular employees must calculate and publicly disclose their gender pay gap and female manager ratio. The obligation applies to fiscal years ending on or after April 1, 2026. Employers with 300 or more employees were already subject to disclosure and must now refine their methodology to meet expanded metric requirements.
Yes. Boards must ensure that all freelancer engagements comply with the Freelance Act’s requirements for written transaction terms, prompt payment within statutory timeframes and the prohibition of unjust price reductions. Oversight of procurement and contracting practices is now a core compliance duty for directors.
The three highest‑priority actions are: (1) commission a compliance gap audit covering all 2026 reform requirements; (2) approve a gender pay gap disclosure policy with a designated responsible officer and timeline; and (3) instruct internal audit to verify payroll methodology and freelancer contract compliance.
Multinationals should map Japan payroll data against MHLW calculation methodology, establish a local data collection workflow coordinated with global systems, and consult the data protection officer to ensure processing complies with the Act on the Protection of Personal Information. Engaging local advisors is strongly recommended to validate methodology.
Most D&O policies exclude regulatory fines and penalties from coverage. Boards should instruct the CFO and legal team to review current policy terms, confirm exclusion scope in writing with the insurer, and treat uninsured regulatory exposure as a contingent risk item requiring board‑level monitoring. Companies facing evolving regulatory environments, such as those affected by Japan’s ESR solvency regime changes, should conduct a comprehensive insurance review across all regulatory exposure areas.

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What Japan Directors and Board Members Must Know About the 2026 Employment Law Reforms: Duties, Liability and a Board‑level Compliance Checklist

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