Belgium Hiring Guide

Hire in Belgium compliantly. Navigate one of Western Europe’s most structured employment markets, with employer social contributions of 25-27%, the Single Status notice framework that replaced probation in 2014, mandatory contracts in the language of the region (Dutch in Flanders, French in Wallonia, German in the Eastern Cantons), and approximately 180 joint committees that override individual contracts on most material terms.

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Capital

Brussels

Language

FR, GER, DT

Average Salary

โ‚ฌ4,076

Payroll Cycle

Monthly

Employer Cost

25-27%

Paid Leave

20 days

Public Holidays

10 days

Tax Rates

25-50%

Belgium

Belgium Guides

Hiring guides covering regulations, contributions and costs when you hire in Belgium. Updated for 2026.

Best Employer of Record in Belgium

Belgium’s 25-27% employer social contributions are mid-range for Western Europe, but the structural complexity sits elsewhere: the Loi du 24 juillet 1987 restricting third-party labour leasing, ~180 joint committees overriding individual contracts, the Single Status notice scaling sharply with tenure, language-of-region contract requirements, and Single Permit immigration sponsorship handled separately by Flanders, Wallonia, and Brussels-Capital.

Our assessment of EOR providers in Belgium evaluates joint committee classification, RSZ/ONSS payroll accuracy, language-of-region contract drafting, Single Status notice handling, Single Permit sponsorship, and onboarding speed.

Best EORs in Belgium
Belgium brussels statue picture

Before You Hire in Belgium

  • Total employer cost is 145-155% of gross salary. Employer RSZ/ONSS is 25-27% (white-collar) and around 33% (blue-collar), but the real loading comes from the mandatory double holiday allowance, end-of-year bonus, meal vouchers, eco-cheques, and supplementary pension contributions.
  • There is no probation period in Belgium. The Single Status introduced in 2014 abolished probation periods entirely. In its place are very short statutory notice periods during the early months of employment; 1-2 weeks during the first 3 months, rising to 7 weeks at one year and 12 weeks at three years.
  • Contracts must be in the language of the region. Dutch in Flanders, French in Wallonia, German in the Eastern Cantons, Dutch or French in Brussels-Capital depending on the employer’s language regime. A contract drafted in the wrong language is null and void on the employer side.
  • Joint committees override individual contracts. Approximately 180 joint committees (paritair comitรฉs / commissions paritaires) establish sector-specific CBAs covering minimum wages, working time, end-of-year bonuses, eco-cheques, meal vouchers, and supplementary pensions.
  • Termination notice scales steeply with tenure under the Single Status. Notice runs in weeks: 7 weeks at 1 year of tenure, 12 weeks at 3 years, exceeding 60 weeks for very long-tenured employees. There is no statutory severance separate from notice. Procedural errors expose the employer to abusive dismissal claims of an additional 3-17 weeks’ salary.

Why hire in Belgium

EU institutional and corporate hub

Brussels hosts the European Commission, European Parliament, NATO, and more than 100,000 expatriate professionals across institutional, financial, legal, and consulting sectors. Belgium offers immediate access to EU policy networks and one of the most multilingual professional workforces in Europe.

Logistics and biotech corridors

Antwerp anchors one of Europe's largest port and logistics ecosystems. The Ghent-Leuven corridor has emerged as a fast-growing technology and biotech hub, with strong university partnerships at KU Leuven, UGent, and ULB driving deep R&D talent supply.

Strategic Western European location

Belgium sits at the geographic and economic centre of Western Europe, with proximity to Germany, France, the Netherlands, and the UK. EU single market membership, Schengen area access, and the eurozone make it a natural expansion point for companies building Western European teams.

Tri-lingual workforce with deep EU integration

Belgian professionals routinely operate in two or three languages (Dutch, French, English, often German). The country ranks consistently in the top 5 globally for English proficiency outside native English-speaking countries, making cross-border collaboration seamless.

Key Employment Facts

Key Employment Facts (2026)
Topic Belgium Standard
Standard Working Week 38 hours (often reduced to 36-37 by joint committee CBA)
Maximum Daily Hours 8 hours (40 hours weekly absolute ceiling)
Overtime Compensation 150% on weekdays, 200% on Sundays and public holidays
Probation Period None (abolished in 2014 under the Single Status)
Annual Leave 20 days (accrued on previous calendar year)
Public Holidays 10 federal holidays (joint committees may add 1-5 days)
Double Holiday Allowance ~92% of one month’s salary, paid annually in May or June
End-of-Year Bonus (13th Month) ~one month’s salary in many joint committees
Sick Leave (white-collar) 30 days at 100% from employer, then mutual fund at 60%
Sick Leave (blue-collar) 7 days at 100%, then percentage tail before mutual fund
Maternity Leave 15 weeks (with extension for multiple births)
Paternity / Birth Leave 20 days within 4 months of birth
Notice Period (1 year tenure) 7 weeks under the Single Status
Notice Period (3 years tenure) 12 weeks under the Single Status
Statutory Severance None separate from notice (indemnity in lieu uses same scale)
Payroll Cycle Monthly, typically end of month

Good to Know: Belgian sick leave for white-collar employees is paid by the employer at 100% for the first 30 calendar days (the “guaranteed salary period”). For blue-collar employees, the first 7 days are at 100%, then a percentage scale takes over before mutual fund coverage begins. From day 31 onwards (white-collar) or day 15 onwards (blue-collar), the mutual health insurance fund pays 60% of capped salary. The double holiday allowance (equal to ~92% of one month’s salary) is mandatory and paid annually in May or June. Many joint committees also require a 13th-month end-of-year bonus. Belgium’s Labour Code requires written contracts in the official language of the region of work; bilingual or English-only contracts are not legally valid.

What to Watch When Hiring in Belgium

Joint committee classification is the single biggest risk

Misclassifying an employee under the wrong paritair comitรฉ is the most common compliance failure for foreign employers in Belgium. Each joint committee has its own CBAs governing wages, working time, end-of-year bonus, meal vouchers, and supplementary pensions, and the wrong classification means the wrong wage floor and the wrong benefits package.

Termination cost scales sharply with tenure

The Single Status notice formula produces some of the longest notice periods in Western Europe for long-tenured employees. A senior employee with 10+ years of service can require 30+ weeks of notice or payment in lieu, and abusive dismissal claims can add a further 3-17 weeks.

Language-of-region contract violations are common

Drafting a contract in English or in the wrong regional language renders the contract null and void on the employer side. The employee can invoke its terms but the employer cannot rely on them. Foreign EOR providers without native Dutch/French/German contract drafting capability frequently issue English-only contracts that are technically unenforceable.

Annual leave accrues on the previous year

Annual leave entitlement in Belgium operates on a deferred accrual basis: leave taken in any given year is earned during the previous calendar year. New hires therefore have limited annual leave entitlement during their first calendar year and accrue full entitlement only from the second year.

Employer Costs and Employee Taxes in Belgium

Employer Contributions (2026)
Contribution Employer Rate
Base RSZ/ONSS Contribution 25.00%
Sector and Other Levies 0-2%
Additional Blue-Collar Contributions up to 6%
Total Employer Cost (white-collar, normal conditions) 25-27%
Employee Taxes (2026)
Tax / Contribution Employee Rate
RSZ/ONSS Personal Contribution 13.07%
Personal Income Tax: up to โ‚ฌ15,820 25%
Personal Income Tax: โ‚ฌ15,820 to โ‚ฌ27,920 40%
Personal Income Tax: โ‚ฌ27,920 to โ‚ฌ48,320 45%
Personal Income Tax: above โ‚ฌ48,320 50%
Municipal Surcharge (on federal tax due) 6-9%
Total Employee Deductions (mid-range earner) 35-50%

Good to Know: Belgium’s total employment cost is among the highest in the EU once mandatory benefits are included. For an employee on โ‚ฌ4,000/month gross (~โ‚ฌ48,000/year), the employer pays approximately โ‚ฌ60,000-66,000/year in total cost once RSZ/ONSS contributions, double holiday allowance, end-of-year bonus, meal vouchers, and supplementary pension are accounted for. Compare with the Czech Republic (~138% of gross), Romania (~102.25%), or France (~145%). Foreign employers benchmarking against the headline 25-27% employer rate routinely under-budget by 20-30%. The municipal surcharge varies meaningfully by commune โ€” Brussels-Capital communes typically run at 6-7%, while certain Walloon and Flemish communes can reach 8-9%.

Public Holidays in Belgium (2026)

Date

Holiday

January 1

New Year’s Day (Nieuwjaar / Nouvel An)

April 6

Easter Monday (Paasmaandag / Lundi de Pรขques)

May 1

Labour Day (Dag van de Arbeid / Fรชte du Travail)

May 14

Ascension Day (O.L.H. Hemelvaart / Ascension)

May 25

Pentecost Monday (Pinkstermaandag / Lundi de Pentecรดte)

July 21

Belgian National Day (Nationale feestdag / Fรชte nationale)

August 15

Assumption of the Virgin Mary (O.L.V. Hemelvaart / Assomption)

November 1

All Saints’ Day (Allerheiligen / Toussaint)

November 11

Armistice Day (Wapenstilstand / Armistice)

December 25

Christmas Day (Kerstmis / Noรซl)

Good to Know: Belgium’s 10 federal public holidays are fewer than France (11), Spain (14), or Italy (12). However, joint committee CBAs frequently add sector-specific days, particularly in industrial sectors, meaning effective time off varies materially by paritair comitรฉ. The Belgian National Day on July 21 commemorates the 1831 oath of King Leopold I and is a strict national holiday. When a holiday falls on a weekend, the replacement day is typically the next working day, but the exact rule is determined by joint committee CBA or company-level agreement. Employees from religious denominations not represented in the national calendar may negotiate substitute days through their joint committee or work regulations.

Review providers in Belgium

Multiplier
Multiplier

4.5 / 5.0

Deel
Deel

4.5 / 5.0

SD Worx
SD Worx

3.8 / 5.0

Parakar
Parakar

2.4 / 5.0

Lano
Lano

4.2 / 5.0