Authors
DPAs have imposed a total of 191 fines (+40 fines in comparison to the ETR 2025) related to the processing of employee data. The total amount in this category has increased to above EUR 360 million. The average fine amount has slightly decreased to EUR 1.9 million (-EUR 0.5 million in comparison to the ETR 2025). The highest fine since publication of the ETR 2025 was issued by the Polish National Personal Data Protection Office (UODO) in an amount of EUR 4.0 million (ETid-2757) in July 2025.
Key numbers
Let's take a closer look
- The current 'employment record fine' was recorded in July 2024 when the Dutch supervisory authority issued its EUR 290 million fine against a mobility service provider for transferring personal data of European drivers to the USA without sufficient privacy safeguards (ETid-2447). The DPA’s investigation was launched after a complaint by 170 French drivers. It revealed that the provider had stored sensitive personal data – such as location information, payment details, identity documents and health data – on US servers for over two years without adequate safeguards, as required by the standard contractual clauses.
- Special attention should be paid to the implementation of technical and organisational measures in the employment context: The Polish DPA imposed a fine of EUR 4.0 million on McDonald’s Polska Sp. z o.o. (ETid-2757). The controller used a third-party processor (see ETid-2758) for the purpose of managing work schedules. The controller failed to ensure that the processor had implemented sufficient technical and organisational measures, resulting in a data breach.
- Several other new fines were based on employer missteps related to internal investigations and employee surveillance (ETid-2569; ETid-3043).
Main takeaways
Compliance hotspots
- Insufficient legal basis for data processing
- Transparency and employee information rights
Outlook
It is safe to assume that the compliance hotspots outlined above, in particular, will continue to be relevant for employers across Europe.
The selection of transparency obligations as the topic for the EDPB’s coordinated enforcement action in 2026 shows that companies should be particularly vigilant when it comes to transparency obligations towards employees. The correct and extensive information of applicants and employees could, particularly in case of tensions between the employment parties, potentially be examined more frequently by supervisory authorities in the future.