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New EU Law Requires Salary Information in Job Posts: What Job Seekers and Employers Need to Know

Salary & Pay 12 December 2025 6 min read min read

Starting in 2026, employers across the EU—including Cyprus and Greece—must include salary information in job advertisements. Here's what's changing and why it matters.

If you've noticed more job posts including salary ranges lately, it's not a coincidence. The European Union's new Pay Transparency Directive, adopted in April 2023, is reshaping how companies hire and how workers understand their worth. While the law doesn't take full effect until 2026-2027, smart employers are already adapting, and job seekers should understand the new rights coming their way.

What's Actually Changing?

The core change is simple: transparency becomes mandatory. Every job posting must include information about the starting salary or at minimum the pay basis for the position. During interviews, employers must provide this information if it wasn't already in the job ad. This applies to companies of all sizes across Cyprus, Greece, and all EU member states.

But salary transparency is just the beginning. The directive includes several requirements designed to close the gender pay gap, which currently sits at around 15-16% across Europe:

For job seekers:

  • Employers cannot ask about your previous salary during the hiring process

  • You have the right to know the pay range before accepting any offer

  • Once employed, you can request information about average pay levels for workers in comparable roles

  • You're protected from retaliation if you discuss your salary with colleagues

For employers:

  • Companies with 100+ employees must report their gender pay gap regularly

  • If an unexplained pay gap of 5% or more exists, companies must conduct pay assessments and create action plans to fix it

  • The burden of proof shifts: if a worker claims pay discrimination, the employer must prove their decisions were based on objective, gender-neutral criteria

Why This Law Exists

The EU passed this directive because decades of equal pay laws haven't closed the gender pay gap. The problem wasn't that discrimination was legal—it was that it was invisible. When you don't know what your colleague earns, you can't identify unfair treatment. When employers control all the salary information during negotiations, they hold all the power.

The directive's strategy is straightforward: make pay practices visible, and the pressure to justify those practices pushes companies toward fairer outcomes. Think of it as regulatory sunlight.

What This Means for Job Seekers in Cyprus and Greece

Better negotiating position: No more guessing what a job pays or anchoring your expectations to your last salary. When you see a range of €35,000-€45,000 in a job post, you can evaluate whether it meets your needs before investing time in applications.

Protection from salary history discrimination: If you were underpaid in your last job—perhaps because you accepted a lower offer fresh out of university or during an economic downturn—that underpayment won't follow you. Employers must base their offers on the role's value, not your salary history.

Visibility into your worth: Once hired, you'll be able to request data showing whether you're paid fairly compared to colleagues doing similar work. This isn't about creating jealousy—it's about identifying genuine inequities.

Freedom to discuss pay: Many employment contracts include clauses prohibiting salary discussions. The directive makes these unenforceable. You can talk about your compensation with colleagues without fear of disciplinary action.

What This Means for Employers in Cyprus and Greece

Update your job postings now: Even though full enforcement begins in 2027, many job seekers already expect salary information. Companies providing it gain a competitive advantage in attracting candidates. Those hiding it look like they have something to hide.

Audit your pay practices: Before reporting becomes mandatory, conduct internal audits to identify any gender pay gaps. Finding problems privately gives you time to address them before they appear in public reports or trigger regulatory scrutiny.

Document your compensation decisions: Can you explain why you pay one employee more than another in a comparable role? The directive doesn't require identical pay regardless of circumstances—it requires that differences be based on objective factors like documented performance, additional qualifications, or legitimate market conditions. Start documenting these justifications now.

Prepare for transparency conversations: Managers will need training on how to discuss compensation openly and fairly. When an employee asks why they earn less than a colleague, "that's confidential" is no longer an acceptable answer.

Review your hiring process: Make sure your interview scripts don't include questions about salary history. Train recruiters on the new requirements.

Timeline: When Does This Take Effect?

  • June 2026: EU member states must have implementing legislation in place (Cyprus and Greece will transpose the directive into national law)

  • June 2027: First reporting obligations begin for companies with 150+ employees

  • Ongoing: Companies with 100-149 employees report every three years

Some employers are already implementing these practices voluntarily. Others are waiting for final national legislation. Smart companies are using the transition period to get ahead rather than scrambling at the deadline.

The Bigger Picture

This directive is part of a global movement toward pay transparency. Several US states already require salary ranges in job postings. The momentum reflects growing recognition that compensation opacity enables discrimination to persist.

For Cyprus and Greece specifically, this levels the playing field with countries that have already moved toward transparency. It also helps both countries address their specific gender pay gap challenges while aligning with broader EU labor standards.

Research shows that pay transparency, when implemented well, improves employee trust and reduces turnover. Workers who believe they're paid fairly are more engaged and satisfied. Companies willing to disclose salary information signal confidence in their compensation practices—which differentiates them in competitive talent markets.

What You Should Do Now

If you're job seeking:

  • Start expecting salary information in job posts—and favor employers who provide it

  • Use the new transparency to benchmark your worth and negotiate confidently

  • Remember that discussing compensation with colleagues is a protected right

If you're an employer:

  • Add salary ranges to your job postings today, even before it's legally required

  • Conduct a pay equity audit to identify and address any gaps

  • Train your hiring managers on the new rules

  • Document the objective criteria behind your compensation decisions

The era of treating salary as a closely guarded secret is ending. For job seekers, that means more power in negotiations and better visibility into fair pay. For employers, it means demonstrating that your compensation practices can withstand scrutiny. Either way, transparency is the future—and it's arriving faster than you might think.