
A voluntary single portal promises less red tape, but enforcement will decide whether mobile workers gain clearer protection
The European Union is advancing towards a single digital declaration system for posted workers, following a provisional agreement by Council and Parliament negotiators. This aims to simplify cross-border services and enhance labor protection oversight. The agreement could reduce administrative burdens for companies, but its success hinges on member states’ participation and the platform’s ability to provide reliable information for detecting abuse.
The agreement, dated 23 June, mandates the European Commission to create a multilingual interface for companies to declare workers sent to another EU country temporarily. A posted worker is employed in one member state but sent by the employer to provide services in another for a limited time.
Under the provisional EU agreement, national participation is voluntary. However, a participating member state must rely exclusively on the common interface without additional systems for the same purpose.
A single market reform with labor consequences
For Brussels, this initiative intersects with two policy goals: facilitating the single market’s use and ensuring labor mobility doesn’t bypass national employment regulations.
According to the Council, the platform is a key deliverable under the “One Europe, One Market” roadmap. It addresses years of complaints about uncertainty due to disparate national posting systems, affecting especially smaller service providers.
The scope is substantial. The Council cites European Labour Authority figures showing about 3.6 million postings involving 2.6 million workers within the EU, with 1.2 million workers active in multiple states. The Commission estimates a standard electronic form could reduce posting declaration time by 73% and cut administrative costs by 58% even with limited participation.
The driving question is not just the ease of form submission, but whether the system enhances labor authorities’ ability to oversee working conditions and employer compliance.
What the new platform would do
The agreement tasks the Commission with creating a standard online form based on common information requirements. Member states using the form can’t demand more data than the system requires, though they may request less.
The platform would allow service providers to upload documents, replacing some national processes. It includes data validation, communication channels, and electronic extracts accessible to posted workers.
This is crucial as workers often lack knowledge about their filed paperwork or applicable protections, as previously reported by The European Times in cases of unclear employment terms. Employment information is vital for enforcing pay, hours, and protections.
The posting regime has been revised to balance service freedom with equal treatment in host labor markets. The European Parliament notes enforcement rules allow member states to require inspectable declarations, with national authorities central to system application.
The enforcement gap remains the central risk
Trade unions support better digital tools but warn that focusing on reducing business burdens may weaken enforcement if data are incomplete or inaccessible for monitoring. The European Trade Union Confederation advocates for traceable, compliance-checking declarations accessible to workers.
The agreement partially addresses this by granting workers access to electronic declaration extracts and preserving data-protection safeguards. However, questions remain until the final legal text and implementation are tested.
First, voluntary participation could lead to a two-speed system. Broad participation could create a common infrastructure; patchy participation might leave a fragmented landscape.
Second, common requirements may ease administration but may limit authorities that require detailed data in high-risk sectors like construction, transport, and agriculture. The Commission’s five-year post













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