For many years, compensation policies have been one of the least transparent areas within organizations. That is now starting to change. The EU Pay Transparency Directive, which will come into effect in June 2026, is being seen as the beginning of a major mindset shift in the business world.

With the final compliance deadline set for June 7, 2026, companies across EU member states will be expected to make compensation processes more transparent, measurable, and auditable. This transformation goes far beyond just sharing salary ranges. As highlighted in Deloitte’s analysis on the topic, organizations will also need to base hiring, performance evaluation, and promotion decisions on objective and data driven criteria.

There is a very concrete reason behind this regulation. According to Eurostat data, the gender pay gap across the EU stood at 11.1% in 2024 and has shown only limited improvement over the last decade. At the current pace, achieving pay equality could still take decades. This is why the directive goes beyond transparency and introduces a stronger accountability framework that requires companies to measure, report, and address pay gaps.

After June 2026, companies will be required to clearly define role based salary bands, regularly measure and report pay gaps, take action when differences exceed 5%, and document salary increase and promotion processes in a transparent way. Compensation policies no longer remain within internal discussions. They are becoming a management area that can be measured, questioned, and when necessary, challenged.

How Will the Directive Affect Türkiye?

For Türkiye, the directive does not create a direct legal obligation. However, for companies doing business with Europe, operating within global organizations, or working with international investors, it is likely to become a standard.

According to the Economic Development Foundation’s report on the EU Gender Equality Strategy, multinational companies are expected to align their Türkiye operations with these transparency standards as well. This will likely create two major effects for companies in Türkiye. First, compensation policies will become more systematic and data driven. Second, employee expectations will continue to change rapidly. Because transparency does not spread only through regulation, it also spreads through culture.

In this new era, companies will no longer be expected to explain only how much they pay, but also why they pay it. This shifts compensation from being purely a financial topic into a matter of trust, fairness, and company culture. Rather than seeing transparency as a corporate choice or a special offering, we are moving towards a time where it will be recognized as a fundamental standard that shapes an organization’s ability to build trust.

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