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Ireland – Gender Pay Transparency Obligations

Ireland – Gender Pay Transparency Obligations

Last updated 2025-08-22

Quick overview

Ireland has had mandatory gender pay gap reporting since the Gender Pay Gap Information Act 2021. Reporting obligations have been phased in by employer size and will extend to all employers with 50 or more employees by June 2025. Reports must include detailed data on pay, bonuses and benefits and an accompanying statement explaining causes and measures to close gaps.

In January 2025, Ireland published its draft bill implementing the EU Pay Transparency Directive. The proposal goes further than EU minimums, notably by requiring salary ranges in job ads and banning salary history questions. By 2026, employers will face expanded transparency obligations and a new central reporting portal.

Reporting requirements

Which companies must report?Which companies must report?

  • Since 2022: employers with 250+ employees

  • Since June 2024: employers with 150+ employees

  • Since June 2025: employers with 50+ employees

  • Employers with fewer than 50 employees are exempt

What information needs to be reported?

Employers must report on:

  • Percentage differences in mean and median hourly pay between men and women, part-time employees and temporary contract workers

  • Percentage differences in mean and median bonuses between men and women, part-time employees and temporary contract workers

  • Percentage of male and female employees receiving bonuses

  • Percentage of male and female employees receiving benefits in kind

  • Distribution of male and female employees across pay quartiles (lower, lower middle, upper middle, upper quartile)

  • Employer’s explanation of causes for pay gaps

  • Measures taken or proposed to reduce pay gaps

When and where to send the data?

Employers select a snapshot date in June each year

  • Data must cover the 12 months preceding the snapshot date

  • Reports must be published five months later, moving the annual deadline to November from 2025 onward

  • Until Autumn 2025: reports must be published on the company’s website or made available at the workplace

  • From Autumn 2025: reports must be uploaded to a new government online portal accessible to the public

Who can see the results?

  • Reports are public and must be available to employees

  • From Autumn 2025, reports will be in a central searchable government database

Equal pay laws

  • Irish Equality law guarantees equal pay for like work

  • Like work is defined as work that is the same, similar or of equal value

  • The Employment Equality Acts 1998–2015 prohibit discrimination in pay and conditions across nine protected characteristics, including gender

Employee rights

  • Employees have the right to equal pay for equal or equivalent work

  • Employees may bring equal pay claims to the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) or to the Circuit Court (gender claims only)

  • WRC can order up to three years’ arrears of remuneration, equal pay going forward and corrective actions

  • Circuit Court can order up to six years’ arrears, equal pay going forward and corrective actions

Risks of non-compliance

  • Complaints can be filed with the WRC, which investigates compliance

  • Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission (IHREC) can seek enforcement orders in Circuit Court or High Court

  • No direct financial fines for failing to publish gender pay gap reports

  • Reputational risk: WRC publishes decisions with employer names

  • Equal pay violations can lead to significant arrears of pay and court orders

What will change by 2026

New EU-wide rules

The EU Pay Transparency Directive requires:

  • Salary ranges provided to applicants

  • Ban on asking salary history questions

  • Rights for employees to request pay information

  • Limits on confidentiality clauses around pay

  • Expanded reporting including categories of workers, not just employees

How Ireland is likely to apply them

Ireland’s draft bill (January 2025) already goes further than the directive:

  • Salary ranges must be included in job ads (not just provided before interviews)

  • Salary history questions banned

  • Expanded gender pay reporting obligations including categories of worker

  • New government portal for central publication of reports

  • Deadline for report submission brought forward from December to November

Employers should prepare for:

  • Publishing salary ranges in all job ads

  • Removing salary history questions from recruitment processes

  • Updating internal processes to handle employee information requests

  • Running test analyses of pay gaps by worker category

FAQ

Do small employers need to report?
No. Employers with fewer than 50 employees remain exempt.

Is there a penalty for missing the reporting deadline?
There are no automatic fines, but the WRC can order corrective actions and public decisions can damage reputation.

Do reports need to be audited?
No independent audit is required, but employers must ensure accuracy.

Are employee representatives entitled to a copy of the report?
The law does not require specific provision to representatives, but reports must be public and accessible.

Will existing reports need to be re-uploaded once the government portal launches?
Yes, all in-scope employers will need to upload reports to the new centralised portal starting Autumn 2025.

Helpful resources

  • Workplace Relations Commission

  • Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission

  • Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth

Sysarb erbjuder Europas ledande Pay Equity-lösning och allt-i-ett-plattformen för Pay Transparency.


Järntorget 12 A

732 30 Arboga

+46 589-501 60

support@sysarb.com

© 2025 Sysarb AB

Sysarb erbjuder Europas ledande Pay Equity-lösning och allt-i-ett-plattformen för Pay Transparency.


Järntorget 12 A

732 30 Arboga

+46 589-501 60

support@sysarb.com

© 2025 Sysarb AB

Sysarb erbjuder Europas ledande Pay Equity-lösning och allt-i-ett-plattformen för Pay Transparency.


Järntorget 12 A

732 30 Arboga

+46 589-501 60

support@sysarb.com

© 2025 Sysarb AB

Sysarb erbjuder Europas ledande Pay Equity-lösning och allt-i-ett-plattformen för Pay Transparency.


Järntorget 12 A

732 30 Arboga

+46 589-501 60

support@sysarb.com

© 2025 Sysarb AB