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posted 1 hour ago
Last updated: June 18, 2026
Pay transparency in Liechtenstein is moving from a loosely observed principle to a concrete set of employer obligations, driven by the EU Pay Transparency Directive and its expected incorporation into EEA law. The Directive, which EU Member States must transpose by 7 June 2026, introduces mandatory salary-range disclosure for job candidates, a ban on pay-history questions, and periodic gender pay-gap reporting requirements that will reshape recruitment and compensation practices across Europe. Liechtenstein, as an EEA member through the EFTA pillar, is preparing its own draft implementation measures that are expected to mirror these core obligations.
For HR directors, general counsel and compliance officers operating in the Principality, the window for voluntary preparation is closing, and the cost of inaction is rising.
The EU Pay Transparency Directive (Directive (EU) 2023/970) was adopted by the European Parliament and Council in May 2023 with a transposition deadline of 7 June 2026 for all EU Member States. Its stated purpose is to strengthen the application of the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value between men and women through pay transparency mechanisms and enforcement tools.
The Directive’s core requirements fall into four pillars. First, pre-employment salary transparency: employers must provide job applicants with the initial pay or pay range for the advertised position, either in the job posting itself or before the interview stage. Second, a salary-history ban: employers may not ask candidates about their current or previous remuneration. Third, employee information rights: current employees gain the right to request information about average pay levels, broken down by gender, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Fourth, gender pay-gap reporting: organisations above certain employee thresholds must report on their gender pay gap at regular intervals and undertake joint pay assessments where unjustified gaps are identified.
Although Liechtenstein is not an EU Member State, it is part of the European Economic Area through its EFTA membership. EEA-relevant EU directives are routinely incorporated into the EEA Agreement and subsequently transposed into Liechtenstein national law via the Landtag (parliament) or ministerial ordinance. According to the Trusaic Global Pay Transparency Center, Liechtenstein’s draft implementation will require all employers to adopt key transparency measures, including salary-range disclosure and the salary-history ban, from mid-2026. The Liechtenstein government’s own equal-pay guidance, published through the Office for Human and Equal Rights (LLV), already establishes the constitutional and statutory basis for pay equality that these new rules will build upon.
| Date / period | Milestone |
|---|---|
| May 2023 | EU adopts Directive (EU) 2023/970 on pay transparency |
| 2024–2025 | EU Member States begin national transposition processes; early movers include Belgium, Ireland and the Netherlands |
| 7 June 2026 | Transposition deadline for all EU Member States |
| Mid-2026 (expected) | Liechtenstein draft implementation measures take effect following EEA Joint Committee incorporation |
| 2027 onwards | First reporting cycles begin for larger employers; enforcement activity expected to increase across EEA |
Industry observers note that transposition progress across Europe remains uneven, with only a minority of EU Member States having completed the process by the June 2026 deadline. For Liechtenstein, the practical effect will be that employers should prepare for compliance now, even if the precise national implementing text is finalised slightly after the EU deadline.
The mechanism by which EU directives reach Liechtenstein law is well established. The EEA Joint Committee adopts a decision incorporating the directive into the EEA Agreement; the Liechtenstein government then prepares a national implementation act or ordinance, which the Landtag votes on where legislative changes are required. For employment-related directives, particularly those grounded in the equal-treatment acquis, Liechtenstein has a strong track record of timely adoption.
This means that the question for most employers is not whether the rules will apply, but when and how they will be calibrated to local conditions. Employers should apply the following practical test to determine their exposure to pay transparency in Liechtenstein:
Employers who answer “yes” to any of the above should treat compliance as imminent and begin the audit steps described below.
The pay disclosure rules flowing from the Directive establish two distinct categories of obligation: disclosures made during recruitment and ongoing reporting to employees, regulators or the public. Understanding the boundary between these categories is essential for employer obligations in Liechtenstein.
During recruitment, employers must provide the initial pay or a salary range for the advertised position. This information must reach the candidate before the first interview, it can be included in the job advertisement itself or communicated in writing at an earlier stage of the hiring process. Employers are simultaneously prohibited from asking candidates about their current or past pay. Job titles and descriptions must use gender-neutral language.
For existing employees, the Directive creates a right to request and receive information on individual and average pay levels, broken down by gender, for categories of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. Employers must respond within a reasonable period and in an accessible format.
For equal pay reporting, the data fields are expected to include: the mean and median gender pay gap (overall and by employee category), the proportion of male and female employees in each pay quartile, the mean and median gender pay gap in complementary or variable components (bonuses, allowances), and the percentage of employees of each gender receiving such components.
The Directive itself does not mandate that salary ranges appear in publicly visible job advertisements, only that the information reaches candidates before the interview. However, early indications suggest that many employers across the EEA are choosing to include salary bands directly in job postings, both for compliance simplicity and competitive advantage in tight labour markets. Liechtenstein employers advertising roles through Swiss or EU job platforms should be aware that the rules of the jurisdiction where the work is to be performed will govern disclosure obligations.
| Employer Size / Threshold | Disclosure Obligations (Job Ads / Candidate) | Reporting and Audit Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Fewer than 100 employees | Disclose salary range to candidate before first interview; salary-history ban applies; gender-neutral job descriptions required | No mandatory periodic reporting under the Directive (Liechtenstein may impose additional requirements, confirm against final implementing text) |
| 100–249 employees | All of the above; proactive disclosure of salary bands in job ads recommended | Gender pay-gap report required every three years; joint pay assessment triggered where unjustified gap exceeds 5% |
| 250 or more employees | All of the above; mandatory salary-band disclosure in advertisements; proactive publication of aggregated pay data | Annual gender pay-gap reporting; joint pay assessment mandatory where gap exceeds 5%; detailed external reporting and remediation plans |
Note: The employee-size thresholds above reflect the Directive’s framework. The precise thresholds in Liechtenstein’s implementing law should be confirmed against the final national text once published by the LLV.
A credible gender pay-gap analysis is the foundation of pay reporting compliance. The following methodology is tailored to Liechtenstein payroll practices, where salaries are denominated in Swiss francs (CHF), employment contracts frequently reference CBA pay grades, and part-time work is common.
Assemble payroll data for the relevant reporting period. This should include: gross monthly base salary (CHF), variable pay components (bonuses, commissions, allowances), contracted weekly hours, full-time equivalent (FTE) status, job title, department, job grade or CBA classification, contract type (permanent, fixed-term, temporary), gender as recorded in HR systems, and start date of employment.
Group employees into categories of “same work” or “work of equal value.” This requires a structured job-evaluation exercise that considers skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions, not job titles alone. Where a CBA applies, existing pay grades provide a useful starting framework, but they must be tested against the Directive’s criteria to ensure they do not embed historical bias.
For each employee category and for the workforce as a whole, calculate:
Normalise all figures to an hourly rate to ensure comparability between full-time and part-time employees. Use gross pay before deductions but after salary sacrifice arrangements.
Liechtenstein employers must comply with the Data Protection Act (DSG) and applicable EEA data-protection standards when handling personal salary data for pay-gap analysis. Anonymise outputs before sharing externally. Where a category contains fewer than five employees of one gender, aggregate it with the nearest comparable category to prevent individual identification. Retain underlying data for the period required by the implementing legislation and any applicable limitation periods for equal-pay claims.
Consider a Liechtenstein employer with 150 employees. Within the “Professional Services” job category, 40 women have a median hourly rate of CHF 52.00 and 35 men have a median hourly rate of CHF 56.50. The median gender pay gap for this category is: (56.50 – 52.00) ÷ 56.50 = 7.96%. Because this exceeds the five per cent threshold set by the Directive, a joint pay assessment with employee representatives would be required to determine whether the gap can be justified by objective, gender-neutral factors such as seniority, qualifications or performance.
Employers should not wait for the final implementing text to begin preparation. The following ten-point checklist covers the actions that can, and should, be taken now:
The following sample clauses are provided for illustrative purposes. Employers should adapt them to their specific circumstances and have them reviewed by qualified Liechtenstein employment counsel before adoption.
Clause 1, Salary-Range Disclosure (Recruitment):
“For every externally or internally advertised vacancy, [Company] will include the applicable salary range in the job advertisement or provide it in writing to candidates before the first interview. The stated range reflects the minimum and maximum gross monthly salary (CHF) for the role, based on the relevant job grade and applicable collective bargaining agreement.”
Clause 2, Salary-History Prohibition:
“No representative of [Company], including hiring managers, HR personnel and external recruitment agencies acting on [Company]’s behalf, shall request or otherwise seek to obtain information about a candidate’s current or previous remuneration at any stage of the recruitment process.”
Clause 3, Employee Right to Pay Information:
“Any employee may submit a written request to [HR Department] for information on the average pay levels, broken down by gender, of the category of workers performing the same work or work of equal value. [Company] will respond in writing within [60] calendar days.”
| Function | Role in Compliance | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| HR / People | Data collection, job mapping, policy drafting, employee communications | Months 1–2 |
| Legal / Compliance | Review implementing law, approve policy language, advise on data-protection safeguards | Months 1–3 |
| Finance / Payroll | Validate pay data, model remediation costs, approve budget for pay adjustments | Months 2–3 |
| Board / Managing Director | Final sign-off on policy, remediation spend and external reporting | Month 3 |
The EU Pay Transparency Directive requires Member States, and, by extension, EEA states, to establish effective, proportionate and dissuasive penalties for non-compliance. While the precise penalties in Liechtenstein will be determined by the implementing legislation, the Directive’s framework and emerging practice across the EEA provide a clear indication of the enforcement landscape employers should expect.
Key enforcement mechanisms are likely to include:
Common litigation triggers include unexplained pay gaps exceeding five per cent, inconsistent application of job-evaluation criteria, and failure to respond to employee information requests within the prescribed period. Proactive auditing and remediation remain the most effective risk-mitigation strategies.
Liechtenstein’s unique position creates specific cross-border considerations that employers must address. The Principality’s workforce is heavily international: a substantial proportion of employees commute daily from Austria, Switzerland and Germany. This means a single Liechtenstein employer may be advertising roles that attract candidates from multiple jurisdictions, each with its own pay-transparency rules and timelines.
Key practical considerations include:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Thomas Wiedl at Ospelt & Partner, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Employers seeking to accelerate their compliance journey can take the following immediate steps:
For a tailored compliance review, employers can consult a qualified employment law specialist with experience in Liechtenstein regulatory requirements.
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