The clock is running on a major European pay equity directive, and German companies are already bracing for a wave of legal risk well before the domestic legislation is passed. The deadline to transpose the EU’s pay transparency directive into national law expires on 7 June 2026, and while Berlin does not expect its own bill before early 2027, legal experts say the real shift could begin the very next day. From 8 June, German courts may start interpreting existing laws in a way that aligns with the directive — expanding employees’ rights to information about pay and imposing stricter standards on compensation structures. Companies with more than 250 staff also face new reporting obligations from June 2028.
While businesses eye that deadline, recent rulings from German labour courts are already reshaping day-to-day practices. A decision from the Baden-Württemberg Regional Labour Court (LAG Baden-Württemberg) on 19 December 2025 (case no. 4 Sa 56/23) shows how easily a termination can fail on procedural grounds. The case involved an extraordinary dismissal for procedural fraud, but the employer missed the two-week deadline prescribed by Section 626 Paragraph 2 of the German Civil Code (BGB). The employer had known the reasons since 17 February 2023 but only terminated on 8 March 2023. Seeking approval from the Integration Office did not extend the deadline — an error that rendered the dismissal invalid.
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Postal formalities are another trap. In Hamburg, the LAG ruled on 14 July 2025 (case no. 4 SLa 26/24) that a registered letter with proof of posting — known as an Einwurf-Einschreiben — does not reliably prove delivery of an invitation to a mandatory reintegration meeting (Betriebliches Eingliederungsmanagement). Scanner receipts are often generated before the letter is actually dispatched. The court advised employers to rely on personal delivery by a messenger or courier instead.
Probation periods and holiday rights are also drawing sharp lines from the bench. Germany’s Federal Labour Court (BAG) has set a clear rule: a probationary clause in a fixed-term contract cannot cover the entire duration of the contract; if it does, the clause is void. The standard maximum is six months, with a notice period of at least two weeks.
On annual leave, the Thuringia Regional Labour Court shook up standard practice on 2 March 2026 (case no. 4 Ta 15/26). An internal company rule limiting consecutive holiday to two weeks was struck down as a violation of Section 7 Paragraph 2 of the Federal Leave Act (BUrlG). The court sided with an employee who wanted three consecutive weeks off. Employers can only refuse longer absences if they cite specific operational reasons. Separately, the BAG confirmed on 15 July 2025 that for long-term sick employees, holiday entitlements expire only 15 months after the end of the relevant year.
Meanwhile, reform of the General Equal Treatment Act (AGG) is in motion. On 29 April 2026, the LAG Baden-Württemberg (case no. 4 Sa 71/25) dismissed a compensation claim from a severely disabled job applicant. The applicant’s disability was not clearly stated in either the cover letter or CV; uploading a disabled-persons ID card to an online portal was not enough unless the employer was explicitly made aware of it during the selection process. The federal government has now proposed a Second Act Amending the AGG. Under the draft, the filing period for discrimination claims would be extended from two to four months. A new mediation office would be established at the Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency, aiming to strengthen protection and align with EU requirements.
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All of this unfolds against a broader legislative push. Labour Minister Hubertus Heil has announced a draft reform of the Working Hours Act for June 2026, introducing mandatory electronic time tracking and shifting from rigid daily limits to more flexible weekly maximums. The 48-hour weekly cap stays. The law would not take effect before 2027 — but a BAG ruling from September 2022 already obliges employers to record working hours, meaning many firms are already on the hook. For employers navigating this landscape, the message from the courts is consistent: procedural discipline matters every bit as much as the substance of a decision.











