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The collective redundancy procedure in Bulgaria is a tightly regulated sequence of notifications, consultations and administrative filings that every employer must complete before it can lawfully dismiss a significant number of employees within a defined period. The rules apply to private-sector and public-sector employers alike and are rooted in the Bulgarian Labour Code (articles 130a–130d), which transposes EU Council Directive 98/59/EC on collective redundancies. Getting any step wrong, filing a notification late, skipping a consultation round, or miscounting the threshold, can result in administrative fines, reinstatement orders and prolonged litigation.
This guide sets out, in sequential order, every step an employer must take, the documents it must produce, the deadlines it must meet, and the costs it should budget for, with references current to June 2026.
A collective redundancy arises when an employer plans to dismiss a specified minimum number of employees for reasons unrelated to the individual workers concerned, typically restructuring, closure of an undertaking or part of it, or a reduction in business activity. The concept is distinct from individual dismissal and from dismissals based on employee conduct or capacity. It captures any termination driven by the employer’s operational needs, including redundancy on economic, technological or organisational grounds.
Bulgarian law requires any employer that reaches or exceeds the statutory thresholds (see the eligibility section below) to follow a mandatory procedure before any dismissal letters are issued. The procedure has three core purposes: to give employee representatives a genuine opportunity to negotiate alternatives to dismissal; to give the Employment Agency (Agentsiya po zaetostta) advance warning so it can prepare labour-market support; and to ensure affected workers receive adequate notice and compensation.
The obligations apply regardless of the employer’s legal form, limited liability company, joint-stock company, branch of a foreign entity, or state-owned enterprise. They also apply regardless of the employees’ nationality; foreign nationals employed under Bulgarian employment contracts are counted and protected in the same way as Bulgarian nationals. An employer that fails to follow the procedure risks having the dismissals declared unlawful, with affected employees entitled to reinstatement and compensation for lost earnings. Industry observers expect enforcement scrutiny to intensify through 2026, as Bulgaria’s labour inspectorate continues to prioritise procedural compliance in restructurings.
Not every multi-person dismissal triggers the collective redundancy rules. The obligation arises only when an employer proposes to dismiss, within any 30-day period, at least the number of employees set out in the collective dismissal threshold Bulgaria framework under Labour Code article 130a. The thresholds track the scales set by EU Directive 98/59/EC, adapted into Bulgarian law as follows:
| Employer’s usual workforce size | Minimum dismissals within 30 days to trigger the rules |
|---|---|
| 20–99 employees | At least 10 employees |
| 100–299 employees | At least 10 % of the total number of employees |
| 300 or more employees | At least 30 employees |
When counting, the employer must include every proposed termination that is not based on the individual worker’s conduct or capacity. Voluntary departures prompted by the employer (such as mutual-termination offers made in the context of a restructuring) are generally counted if the initiative comes from the employer. Fixed-term contracts expiring at their natural end date are not counted, nor are dismissals during a probationary period initiated by the employee.
Before launching the procedure, the employer should audit several prerequisite factors: whether any applicable collective bargaining agreement imposes additional consultation or severance obligations; whether the planned dismissals overlap with a transfer of an undertaking (in which case the Labour Code transfer-of-enterprise protections in articles 123–123a also apply); and whether any of the employees earmarked for dismissal enjoy enhanced protection.
These protections do not exempt the employer from the collective redundancy procedure; they impose additional individual-level safeguards that must be satisfied alongside it.
The core of the collective redundancy procedure in Bulgaria follows a structured sequence of internal preparation, notification, consultation and execution. Each step below identifies the responsible actor, the required output and the applicable timeline.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Prepare internal decision and selection criteria | Employer (Board / Management / HR / Legal) | 1–2 weeks |
| 2. Notify employee representatives and open consultation | Employer (HR + Legal) | Consultation begins immediately upon notification |
| 3. File written notification to Employment Agency | Employer (HR / Legal) | At least 30 days before the first planned dismissal |
| 4. Conduct consultation meetings and explore alternatives | Employer and employee representatives | Not less than 45 days from the date of notification to representatives |
| 5. Finalise decision and issue individual termination notices | Employer (HR / Legal) | Individual notices served after the 30-day Employment Agency waiting period expires |
| 6. Administrative closure and final payments | Employer (Payroll / HR) | Immediate to 30 days after each termination effective date |
Employer (Board or authorised management body) documents the economic, technological or organisational reasons for the proposed redundancy. The internal decision should record the total number of positions to be eliminated, the departments or functions affected, the proposed timeline, and the objective criteria for selecting employees. This document is not filed externally, but it forms the evidentiary foundation if a dismissed employee later challenges the lawfulness of the dismissal in court. Best practice is to have the decision signed, dated and archived before any external notifications are sent.
HR and legal counsel translate the board decision into a role-by-role selection matrix. Under Bulgarian case law, selection criteria must be objective and non-discriminatory, typical permissible criteria include the employee’s qualifications, length of service, performance appraisals, and the operational necessity of the role. Before finalising the list, the employer must consider alternatives to dismissal: redeployment to a vacant position within the enterprise, reduction of working hours, or retraining. Failure to demonstrate that alternatives were genuinely explored is a frequent ground for successful employee challenges. Employers should also check, at this stage, which employees fall within protected categories and whether the prior-approval requirements set out above have been initiated.
The employer must provide written notification to the employee representatives, the works council, trade-union representatives, or, where neither exists, directly to the affected employees, at least 45 days before the intended date of the first dismissal (Labour Code, art. 130a(1)). The notification must contain the following information:
Consultation must begin as soon as the notification is delivered. The employer is obliged to consult “in good time” and with a view to reaching an agreement on how to avoid or reduce the number of dismissals and to mitigate their consequences, for example, through retraining, redeployment or social-plan measures (Labour Code, art. 130a(3)). There is no statutory minimum number of meetings, but good practice, and the standard applied by Bulgarian courts, requires at least two substantive sessions, with a genuine exchange of proposals and counter-proposals.
Simultaneously with or immediately after notifying the employee representatives, the employer must send a written notification to the territorial division of the Employment Agency at least 30 days before the first planned dismissal (Labour Code, art. 130b(1)). The employer notification to the Employment Agency in Bulgaria must include the same core information provided to representatives (reasons, numbers, categories, timeline, criteria) plus the following:
A copy of the Employment Agency notification must also be sent to the employee representatives, who have the right to submit their own observations to the Agency. No dismissal may take effect before the 30-day waiting period following the Employment Agency’s receipt of the notification has elapsed. The Employment Agency uses this period to plan re-employment and retraining measures. Industry observers note that in practice, inspectors may contact the employer during this window to request supplementary information, particularly where the notification is incomplete.
Consultations with employee representatives must continue throughout the 45-day period and should address concrete alternatives to dismissal, reduced working time, secondment to group entities, voluntary redundancy packages, retraining programmes, or staggered dismissals. The employer must provide any additional information the representatives reasonably request. Minutes should be taken at every consultation meeting, signed by both sides, and archived. Failure to produce adequate consultation records is one of the most common grounds on which Bulgarian courts invalidate collective dismissals. Where the consultation results in an agreement (a “social plan”), its terms become binding on both parties and must be reflected in the individual termination documents.
Once the 30-day Employment Agency waiting period has expired and consultations have been completed (or at least 45 days have elapsed since notification to representatives), the employer may proceed to issue individual termination notices. Each notice must comply with the general dismissal requirements under the Labour Code: it must be in writing, cite the specific legal ground for dismissal (typically Labour Code, art. 328(1)(1)–(3)), and state the notice period. The statutory minimum notice period for collective dismissal in Bulgaria is 30 days for open-ended contracts, unless the employment contract or a collective agreement specifies a longer period (up to a maximum of three months).
During the notice period, each affected employee is entitled to paid time off of one hour per day (or two hours for a seven-hour working day) to seek new employment, unless otherwise agreed.
After each employee’s termination takes effect, the employer must finalise all outstanding payments, including accrued but untaken annual leave, pro-rated salary, and any applicable severance, within the period specified by the Labour Code or the employment contract. The employer must also de-register the employee with the National Revenue Agency for social-security purposes, update labour books, issue the required employment certificate, and archive all redundancy-related documents for the statutory retention period.
Proper documentation is essential both for regulatory compliance and for defending the employer’s position in any subsequent litigation. The table below consolidates every core document the employer should prepare or obtain during the collective redundancy procedure.
| Document | Notes (issuer / format / purpose) |
|---|---|
| Internal business rationale and redundancy plan | Employer, signed board or management decision setting out reasons, scope, affected roles, selection criteria and proposed timeline. Not filed externally but critical evidence in any court challenge. |
| Notification to employee representatives | Employer, written notice delivered at least 45 days before the first intended dismissal; must list reasons, numbers, categories, period, selection criteria and proposed severance. |
| Consultation minutes and records | Employer + representatives, signed minutes of each consultation meeting, including proposals, counter-proposals and alternatives discussed. Archive indefinitely. |
| Notification to Employment Agency | Employer, written notification filed at least 30 days before the first intended dismissal; includes all information given to representatives plus employer details and consultation status. Sent to the territorial Employment Agency office. |
| Copy of Employment Agency notification to representatives | Employer, a copy of the Agency notification must be forwarded to employee representatives, who may submit their own observations. |
| Individual termination letter / notice | Employer, written dismissal notice to each affected employee, citing the legal ground, notice period, effective date, severance entitlements and the employee’s right to challenge the dismissal. |
| Severance and final-pay calculation worksheets | Employer / Payroll, itemised gross-to-net calculations covering notice pay, statutory severance, accrued leave, pro-rated salary and social-security contributions. |
| Settlement or mutual-termination agreements (if applicable) | Employer + employee, signed agreements where a negotiated package is offered; document that the employee’s consent is voluntary and informed. |
| Proof of delivery and communication records | Employer, receipts, tracked-delivery confirmations, email read-receipts or intranet-posting logs proving when and how employees and representatives were notified. |
Maintaining a complete file of these documents is the single most effective risk-mitigation measure an employer can take. Courts reviewing collective-dismissal disputes routinely request the full file; gaps in documentation create an adverse inference against the employer.
The timeline for a collective redundancy in Bulgaria is determined by two overlapping statutory clocks: the 45-day consultation period and the 30-day Employment Agency waiting period. The table below maps the key deadlines against a worked calendar example, an employer that plans its first dismissal on 1 October 2026.
| Event | Statutory deadline | Calendar example (first dismissal: 1 Oct 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Internal decision approved | No statutory deadline, complete before any notification | By 10 August 2026 |
| Written notification to employee representatives | At least 45 days before first dismissal | No later than 17 August 2026 |
| Written notification to Employment Agency | At least 30 days before first dismissal | No later than 1 September 2026 |
| Copy of Employment Agency notification to representatives | Simultaneously with filing | 1 September 2026 |
| Consultation period concludes | Not before 45 days from notification to representatives | Earliest 1 October 2026 |
| Employment Agency 30-day waiting period expires | 30 days from Agency receipt | 1 October 2026 |
| Individual termination notices served | After both deadlines above expire; subject to individual notice period | On or after 1 October 2026 |
| Termination effective date | After individual notice period runs (minimum 30 days for open-ended contracts) | 31 October 2026 (if 30-day notice served on 1 October) |
The critical point for employers is that the two clocks run concurrently but are not identical. Because the representative-notification deadline (45 days) is longer than the Employment Agency deadline (30 days), best practice is to notify representatives first and file the Agency notification shortly afterwards, ensuring both deadlines expire on or before the intended first-dismissal date. Miscounting by even one day can render the dismissals procedurally defective.
Employers should budget for both mandatory statutory costs and discretionary expenditures. The table below itemises the main cost categories, with a worked example based on an employee earning BGN 3,000 gross per month.
| Item | Amount / basis | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Notice pay | Employee’s gross salary for the notice period (minimum 30 days, maximum 3 months) | Example: BGN 3,000 for a 30-day notice period. Employer may elect to pay in lieu of notice. |
| Statutory severance, redundancy | Minimum one month’s gross remuneration (Labour Code, art. 222(1)) | Example: BGN 3,000. The employment contract or collective agreement may specify a higher amount. |
| Severance for unused annual leave | Pro-rated daily rate × unused leave days | Calculated on the basis of gross daily remuneration at the date of termination. |
| Social-security and health-insurance contributions on final payments | Employer’s share of social-security and health-insurance contributions (combined employer rate approximately 18–19 % of gross remuneration) | Payable on all remuneration elements including severance treated as compensation (not gratuity). |
| External legal and advisory fees | Variable, typically EUR 5,000–20,000 for a mid-size collective redundancy | Covers legal structuring, document drafting, consultation attendance and regulatory correspondence. |
| Penalties for non-compliance | Administrative fines of BGN 1,500–15,000 per violation for the employer, and BGN 250–2,500 for the responsible officer | Imposed by the General Labour Inspectorate for failure to notify, consult or comply with procedural requirements (Labour Code, art. 414). |
| Reinstatement and compensation orders | Up to six months’ gross remuneration per affected employee | Awarded by the court if the dismissal is declared unlawful; the employee is also entitled to reinstatement (Labour Code, art. 225). |
Tax treatment: statutory severance paid on redundancy under Labour Code article 222(1) is treated as taxable income for the employee and is subject to a 10 % flat personal income tax rate. Social-security contributions are also due on severance payments that constitute compensation for termination. Employers should obtain a payroll-tax sign-off before finalising calculations.
Bulgaria’s Labour Code provisions on collective redundancy (articles 130a–130d) have not been substantively amended by legislative act during the 2025–2026 period. The core thresholds, notification deadlines and consultation obligations remain as codified. However, several developments have shifted the practical landscape for employers:
Employers planning redundancies in the second half of 2026 should monitor the State Gazette and the Bulgaria employment law changes 2026 for any legislative developments.
Pre-termination quick checklist, five immediate checks before issuing any individual notice:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nina Tsifudina at Kinstellar, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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