The top UK and EU rules to keep on top of 2025
Disclaimer – this is general information, not legal advice. Always check local counsel and official guidance for the most up to date information.

1. Gender Pay Gap Reporting, UK
Applies to: Employers with 250 or more employees on the snapshot date. You must publish mean and median pay gaps, bonus gaps, and quartiles on GOV.UK and your site within a year.
Recruiters should: Capture clean offer data and job level, so HR can report accurately. Keep a link from the hiring record to payroll for starters.
Do now: Align job architecture and test your data feed before the snapshot.
Proof to keep: Starting pay, job level, and the basis for offers.

2. Equality Act 2010, UK
Applies to: All UK employers. Covers recruitment, pay, training, promotion, and dismissal. Protects people with characteristics such as age, disability, race, and sex. Job applicants are covered.
Recruiters should: Use fair adverts and selection criteria, make reasonable adjustments for candidates, use consistent criteria, and documented reasons for decisions. You should also avoid asking about health unless an exception applies.
Do now: Publish an adjustments route, use anchored scoring for panels, and keep decision notes with the decision.
Proof to keep: Criteria, scores, reasons, and adjustment records in a single audit trail.

3. UK GDPR and Data Protection Act 2018
Applies to: All UK employers processing candidate data. Individuals have a right of access and can make a subject access request in writing or verbally. Most responses are due within one month.
Recruiters should: State what you collect and why, capture consent where needed, keep data secure, limit access, and control retention. You must locate and supply personal data when asked.
Do now: Map what you collect, set retention by role and country, and test a full DSAR run from request to response.
Proof to keep: Privacy notices, consent logs, retention rules, and a complete export of notes and messages when requested.

4. EU Pay Transparency Directive
Applies to: Employers in EU member states, and non-EU employers with staff in an EU state. Member states must transpose by 7 June 2026. Obligations scale with size.
Recruiters should: Provide salary ranges in job adverts or by first interview, stop asking about salary history, and be ready to give pay information for comparable roles. If unexplained gaps exceed a set threshold, a joint pay assessment with employee representatives may be required. The burden of proof in pay discrimination claims can shift to the employer.
Do now: Identify EU roles, agree band formats, remove salary history questions, and prepare standard wording for candidate information rights.
Proof to keep: Adverts with bands, selection records, and pay data grouped by role.

5. EU Artificial Intelligence Act
Applies to: Organisations that place or use AI systems in the EU. Recruitment and employee management tools are likely to be treated as high-risk, with phased duties from 2025 to 2027.
Recruiters should: Document how AI is used, keep humans in the loop (HITL) , and be able to explain automated decisions.
Do now: Inventory any AI in your hiring stack, define human oversight, and prepare technical and process notes.
Proof to keep: Model documentation, risk controls, review checkpoints, and decision logs.