Countries around the globe are implementing pay transparency reporting laws. These laws are complex and varied, depending on the organization size, sector, and location.
Pay equity is the impetus behind these laws, many of which require enhanced pay transparency measures for employers. Pay transparency reporting requirements are expanding around the world with 50-plus global jurisdictions already having adopted or in the process of implementing some form of pay data reporting requirement.
Some have laws requiring equal pay that are only minimally enforced, while others have robust enforcement and reporting requirements. The European Union’s Pay Transparency Directive is set to shape the future of global pay data reporting and is the most comprehensive legislation aimed at closing the gender pay gap.
The EU Directive will add reporting obligations to an additional 14 member states and will amend the reporting requirements in the 13 member states with existing pay reporting requirements. This will mean mandatory pay equity analyses and remediation as well as public reporting on mean and median pay gaps.
Regulatory pay transparency reporting is a daunting task for organizations with a large global workforce. Employers must navigate complexities like the various approaches to pay equity, data privacy, a web of different reporting requirements, and differences in employee thresholds and deadlines.
To assist your organization in its compliance journey, our team of experts created a pay transparency reporting laws calendar. The calendar highlights monthly pay transparency reporting deadlines for jurisdictions across the world.
Additionally, we have provided guidance for how to prepare for compliance and a strategy for adopting a global approach to regulatory pay transparency compliance and workplace equity.
2025 global pay transparency reporting deadlines
Jan
Feb
U.S. – Massachusetts
Mar
France
Belgium*
Austria*
U.S. – New Jersey
Brazil
Apr
United Kingdom
Portugal
Italy*
May
U.S. – California
Australia
Jun
Israel
U.S. – Federal (EEO-1)
Switzerland*
Canada – Federal*
Begins 2025
Jul
U.S. – Federal (OFCCP) (deadlines to be released)
Aug
Sep
Canada – Federal*
Brazil
Oct
South Africa
Nov
Canada – British Colombia*
Dec
Denmark
Iceland
Ireland
Employer specific deadlines
Australia – Victorian Government, Canada – Newfoundland, Canada – Ontario, Canada – Quebec, Chile, Colombia, Finland*, Germany*, India, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg*, Norway, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, U.S. – Illinois*, U.S. – Minnesota*
*Reporting is not annual. This reporting could be more frequent or less frequent. Access guides in our global pay transparency center for more details.
Stay ahead of evolving global pay transparency reporting landscape
There’s more to adopting a culture of pay equity than ensuring compliance with pay transparency reporting and pay transparency legislation.
It provides a springboard for best-in-class, forward-thinking organizations to create a more open, inclusive, and positive workplace culture, attract more talent, enhance your brand reputation and in doing so, rebuild connections and employee trust.
Partnering with a pay equity analysis software provider enables you to stay ahead of the evolving global pay data reporting landscape.
Here are some of the benefits of partnering with Trusaic:
- Allows your company to continuously evaluate your progress on pay transparency, whether that is on a monthly or quarterly basis, after making a series of new hires or layoffs, and when you are asked a question about pay transparency by an employee.
- Delivers up-to-date information on your pay equity status. Employers can also be confident that analytics reflect your current situation by offering real-time results.
- Offers more accurate and rapid results than manual analyses, which are often out of date before they are complete.
- Offers multidimensional analysis, rather than binary, and accounts for intersectionality, i.e., an ability to analyze factors such as race/ethnicity, gender, age, and disability, simultaneously.
- Ensures compliance with EEOC Title VII guidance . The EEOC made it clear that employers cannot delegate responsibility for discrimination to a third party software provider, nor rely on their vendor’s assurance that its software complies with EEOC Title VII. If your pay equity software violates workplace laws you, as an employer, may be held liable.