Austria is under pressure to implement the EU’s Pay Transparency Directive, but political disagreement has raised questions over how quickly the new rules will arrive and how strong they will be.
For foreign workers and jobseekers in Austria, the issue is more than an abstract equal-pay debate. Salary ranges, collective agreements, job advert wording and pay negotiations can already be difficult to understand, especially for people who didn’t grow up with Austria’s employment system.
The EU rules are aimed mainly at closing the gender pay gap. But if implemented clearly, they could also make the Austrian labour market easier to read for anyone trying to work out whether an offer is fair.
READ ALSO: What you should know about collective agreements if you work in Austria
What is happening in Austria?
EU member states must transpose the Pay Transparency Directive into national law by June 7th, 2026.
Austria hasn’t yet finalised that implementation. According to ORF, Labour Minister Korinna Schumann, from the centre-left SPÖ, has given the social partners a deadline to reach an agreement. If they don’t, she said she would send a draft into the government’s political coordination process herself.
The social partners are the major employer and employee organisations involved in Austria’s policy negotiations, including the Chamber of Labour, trade unions and the Chamber of Commerce.
The debate has become politically tense. ORF also reported that NEOS, the smallest coalition partner, has called for a delay and a revision of the EU directive, warning of an excessive “reporting avalanche”. Similar criticism came from parts of the conservative ÖVP, while the Industriellenvereinigung, the Federation of Austrian Industries, supported the call for a practical and business-friendly implementation.
The Labour Ministry, unions and the Chamber of Labour have pushed back, arguing that pay transparency is needed to tackle wage differences between men and women.
READ ALSO: Six things you need to know about salaries in Austria
What would the EU rules do?
The European Commission says the directive is meant to strengthen the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value.
It includes several measures relevant to workers and applicants.
Job applicants should have a right to information about pay before employment. Employers shouldn’t be allowed to ask applicants about their salary history. Workers should be able to request information about average pay levels for comparable work, so they can compare their pay with colleagues of the other sex doing equal work or work of equal value.
The directive also includes reporting duties for employers with at least 100 employees. If a gender pay gap of more than five percent is found and cannot be justified by objective criteria, companies must take action.
The Commission also says the rules include stronger enforcement measures, including penalties, compensation and a shift in the burden of proof in certain cases of non-compliance.
Why could this matter for foreign workers?
Foreign workers in Austria often face a steep learning curve when it comes to pay.
Many jobs are covered by collective agreements, known as Kollektivverträge, but jobseekers still need to understand the relevant classification, minimum salary, experience level and possible overpayment. Most job adverts list only the legal or collectively agreed minimum, even when the actual salary may be higher.
That can leave applicants unsure how much to ask for, especially if they are new to Austria or coming from a labour market where salary negotiations work differently.
A right to pay information before employment could make it harder for employers to rely on vague salary expectations. A ban on asking salary history could also help applicants who were underpaid in a previous job, including those coming from lower-paid labour markets or from sectors where they had less bargaining power.
The right to request average pay information may also help workers who suspect they are being paid less than colleagues doing comparable work.
READ ALSO: Why Austria continues to have one of the widest gender pay gaps in the EU
Why do employers object?
Business representatives are mainly concerned about bureaucracy, costs and reporting obligations.
The Austrian Economic Chamber said the directive would bring far-reaching changes for employers, including salary information during recruitment, information rights for employees, regular gender pay-gap reporting and possible joint pay assessments.
The Chamber said companies should prepare by analysing pay structures, defining equal or equivalent work, identifying pay gaps and preparing for information and reporting duties.
NEOS and ÖVP critics argue that a rushed implementation could create unnecessary bureaucracy that would later need to be corrected.
What do worker representatives say?
The Chamber of Labour highlights that Austria has a serious pay transparency problem.
According to AK Wien, Austria’s gender pay gap is 17.6 percent, above the EU average of 11.1 percent. It says only around one third of the gap can be explained by structural factors, leaving more than two thirds unexplained.
The AK also says pay often remains a taboo subject in Austria, with many workers unsure how their income is calculated – and how it compares to their colleagues. It argues that variable pay elements such as allowances, bonuses and premiums can be particularly confusing.
It has called for strong employee participation, clear information for workers and unambiguous legal rules for employers.
READ ALSO: What you need to know about the ‘minimum wage’ in Austria
Key vocabulary
die Lohntransparenz – pay transparency
die Entgelttransparenzrichtlinie – Pay Transparency Directive
der Kollektivvertrag – collective agreement setting minimum pay and conditions for a sector
das Einstiegsgehalt – starting salary
das Entgeltgefälle – pay gap
die Sozialpartner – Austria’s main employer and employee organisations involved in policy negotiations
