The pay register is mandatory for every employer — including micro-businesses
Preparation and maintenance of the mandatory pay register for all companies in Spain. Compliance with RD 902/2020 — data by category and sex, gender pay gap calculation, and preparation for EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970.
Why the mandatory pay register applies to every employer in Spain and how gender pay gap audits build on it
Our pay register preparation and gender pay gap compliance process
Remuneration Structure Analysis
We review all remuneration components: base salary, personal supplements, job supplements, bonus payments, variable pay, benefits in kind, and non-salary perceptions. We identify the occupational groups and professional categories in the applicable collective agreement.
Pay Register Preparation
We build the register with mean values, medians, and percentiles for each remuneration component, disaggregated by sex and by professional category, occupational group, and job grade. We calculate the gender pay gap for each category and for the company as a whole.
Gap Analysis and Justification
Where pay differences exist between male and female employees, we analyse whether they reflect objectively justifiable factors — differences in seniority, level of responsibility, shift premiums, performance assessment — or constitute indirect pay discrimination.
Equality Plan Coordination
For companies with more than 50 employees, we coordinate the pay register with the mandatory pay audit required within the equality plan, eliminating duplication and ensuring documentary coherence.
Employee-Representative Access Procedure
We draft the procedure for the RLT (representación legal de los trabajadores — employee representatives) to consult the pay register in accordance with the regulations and applicable data-protection limits.
Annual Update and Directive 2023/970 Preparation
We maintain the register updated as required (at minimum annually) and prepare the progressive adaptation to the EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970, whose transposition into Spanish law is due by June 2026.
The challenge
The pay register is mandatory for all companies in Spain, from sole traders with employees to large corporations — with no minimum headcount threshold. Many employers confuse it with the equality plan (which applies only to companies with more than 50 employees) and wrongly assume they are exempt. Non-compliance with RD 902/2020 is a serious infringement under the LISOS (Labour Infringements and Sanctions Act), and the EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970 (to be transposed by June 2026) introduces further obligations that companies should anticipate now.
Our solution
We prepare and maintain your company's pay register in accordance with RD 902/2020: data by professional category, occupational group, and job grade, with mean and median values for base salary, supplements, and non-salary remuneration, disaggregated by sex. For companies with an equality plan, we coordinate the pay register with the mandatory pay audit. We produce documentation ready for immediate presentation in any Labour Inspectorate visit.
Universal Obligation — No Size Threshold
Royal Decree 902/2020, of 13 October, on equal pay between women and men, implements the principle of equal pay for work of equal value established in Art. 28 of the Workers’ Statute. Unlike the equality plan — which applies only to companies with more than 50 employees — the pay register obligation applies to every employer in Spain that has employees, from a sole trader with one member of staff to a multinational group.
The three instruments introduced by RD 902/2020 are:
- Pay register (Art. 5): mandatory for ALL companies
- Pay audit (Art. 8): mandatory only for companies required to have an equality plan (more than 50 employees)
- Job evaluation system (Arts. 10–12): tool to determine which jobs are of “equal value” irrespective of job title
What the Pay Register Must Include
For each professional category, occupational group, or job grade recognised in the applicable collective agreement or in the company’s own classification system, the register must include — for men and women separately:
- Mean base salary + median base salary
- Mean and median of each salary supplement — seniority allowance, hazard premium, shift-work premium, personal supplement, performance bonus, etc.
- Mean and median of non-salary perceptions — subsistence allowances, transport allowance, meal vouchers, employer-paid health insurance
- Mean and median of total remuneration (all above combined)
- Percentage gender pay gap for each component and for total remuneration
A register that includes only base salary is formally incomplete and does not discharge the obligation.
Calculating the Gender Pay Gap
The gender pay gap in the RD 902/2020 context is not the economy-wide gap published by national statistics (which compares all men with all women): it is the category-adjusted gap comparing men and women in equivalent work within the same company.
Formula: Gap (%) = ((Mean male pay – Mean female pay) / Mean male pay) × 100
When the register identifies a gap in any category, the company must document the objective factors justifying it — seniority, performance rating, specialist qualifications, shift work patterns — or acknowledge and begin addressing an unjustified disparity. An undocumented gap is as legally exposed as a missing register: Labour Inspectorate officers will ask for the justification document.
Pay Register vs. Pay Audit
| Feature | Pay register | Pay audit |
|---|---|---|
| Who is obliged | ALL companies | Companies with equality plan (50+ employees) |
| Legal basis | Art. 5 RD 902/2020 | Art. 8 RD 902/2020 |
| Content | Statistical means/medians by sex and category | Causal analysis: job evaluation, explanatory factors |
| Frequency | Annual minimum | With equality plan (every 4 years + updates) |
| RLT negotiation | Consultation | Negotiation within the equality plan committee |
| Output | Statistical data | Diagnosis + corrective measures |
Companies with more than 50 employees must comply with both obligations. Companies with fewer than 50 employees need only the register.
Employee-Representative Access
Under Art. 5.4 of RD 902/2020 and Art. 28.2 of the Workers’ Statute:
- Where employee representatives exist, they may access the full register: means, medians, and gaps across all categories
- Where no representatives exist, employees may access percentage differences between male and female means, without the absolute figures
GDPR protection: the register must not contain individually identifiable data. Where a category has fewer than five persons, categories must be grouped or data rounded to prevent identification of any specific individual’s pay in compliance with the GDPR and the Spanish LOPDGDD.
EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970 — The 2026 Horizon
Directive 2023/970/EU (10 May 2023) must be transposed into Spanish law by 7 June 2026. Key obligations that companies should begin anticipating:
- Pre-employment salary information: companies must communicate the salary band to candidates in the job offer or before the interview — all companies, regardless of size
- Employee right to comparative information: any employee may directly request the mean pay of their category disaggregated by sex; the company must respond within the statutory deadline
- Periodic pay-gap reports: companies with 100–149 and 150–249 employees — every three years; 250+ employees — annually
- Joint pay audit trigger: where the report shows a gap exceeding 5% in any category without objective justification, the company must conduct a joint pay audit with employee representatives within six months
- Enhanced sanctions: the Directive requires penalties that are effective, proportionate, and dissuasive, with a presumption of discrimination where the employer cannot justify pay differences
Companies with a fully up-to-date pay register and a functioning equality plan are significantly better positioned for the 2026 transition — the data and processes required by RD 902/2020 form the foundation of the Directive’s obligations.
This service is part of our employment law and labour compliance practice.
The experience behind our work
We thought the pay register only applied to large companies. When the Labour Inspectorate visited for another reason, they checked the register too and we didn't have one. BMC prepared it in a week and now we also use the data to review our pay policy. It has been useful well beyond compliance.
Experienced team with local insight and international reach
Concrete deliverables
Pay register preparation
means, medians, all supplement and non-salary components
Gender pay gap calculation per category and for company as a whole
Gender pay gap calculation per category and for company as a whole.
Objective-factor justification documentation for identified differences
Objective-factor justification documentation for identified differences.
Employee-representative access procedure with GDPR-compliant safeguards
Employee-representative access procedure with GDPR-compliant safeguards.
EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970 gap analysis and preparation
EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970 gap analysis and preparation.
Analysis and perspectives
Frequently asked questions
Does this apply to your business?
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Does your company have an up-to-date pay register with data disaggregated by sex and professional category?
Do you know the gender pay gap in your company by category?
Could your company justify any pay differences between men and women to the Labour Inspectorate?
Is your company prepared for the new obligations under EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970?
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Pay Register and Gender Pay Gap
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