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Legal Compliance Employment Law: Employer Obligations

Employer legal obligations in employment law: mandatory notices, registers, DUERP, teleworking agreement and retention of electronically signed documents.

Certyneo Team4 min read

Certyneo Team

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Introduction

Legal compliance in employment law constitutes a major strategic issue for any organisation, whether in the public or private sector. French employers operate in a dense regulatory environment, structured by the Labour Code, enriched by industry collective agreements and governed by European directives. Non-compliance with these obligations exposes the company to financial penalties, employment tribunal disputes and significant reputational risks. From drafting employment contracts, respecting applicable collective agreements, managing contract terminations and protecting employees' personal data (GDPR), HR managers must master an ever-evolving body of law. This article provides a comprehensive overview of employer obligations to secure your HR practices.

1. Formalising employment contracts

The employment contract forms the legal foundation of the employer-employee relationship. Since the transposition of European Directive 2019/1152 on transparent and predictable working conditions, employers must provide in writing, within a maximum of 7 calendar days, essential information about the employment relationship: identity of the parties, place of work, role, employment date, remuneration and working hours.

The Labour Code (articles L.1221-1 et seq.) imposes specific provisions depending on the type of contract. The indefinite-term contract (CDI) remains the normal and general form of employment relationship (article L.1221-2). The fixed-term contract (CDD), strictly governed by articles L.1242-1 et seq., may only be concluded for limited reasons: replacement, temporary increase in activity, seasonal work. The absence of a written document results in automatic reclassification as a CDI.

For specific contracts (apprenticeship, professional development, temporary agency work), enhanced formalities apply. Any breach constitutes a significant legal risk that may result in substantial damages before the Employment Tribunal.

2. Applying collective agreements

Collective agreements supplement the Labour Code and may provide more favourable provisions for employees. The employer must identify the applicable agreement based on its main activity (NAF/APE code) and display it in the workplace in accordance with article R.2262-1 of the Labour Code.

Collective agreement obligations include in particular: minimum wage scales, bonuses (seniority, 13th month), working hours, additional leave, notice periods, and redundancy compensation. In retail and commerce, the national collective agreement for retail commerce imposes, for example, specific increases for Sunday working. In manufacturing industry, the metalworking agreement (revised in 2024) defines a classification system by benchmark jobs.

The employer must also respect company agreements negotiated with representative trade union organisations (articles L.2232-12 et seq.), which, since the Macron ordinances of 2017, may take precedence over industry agreements in many areas.

3. Compliant management of contract terminations

Contract termination represents sensitive litigation. Dismissal for personal reasons requires a real and serious reason (article L.1232-1), a rigorous procedure: summons to a prior meeting, meeting, reasoned notification respecting the reflection period. Dismissal for economic reasons (articles L.1233-1 et seq.) imposes enhanced obligations: redundancy criteria, redeployment, employment protection plan for companies with more than 50 employees making at least 10 redundancies.

Termination by mutual agreement, introduced by the law of 25 June 2008, requires strict compliance with formalities: meeting(s), signature of the CERFA form, reflection period of 15 calendar days, approval by DREETS. Any irregularity may result in cancellation of the termination and its reclassification as dismissal without real and serious reason.

4. Data protection and health and safety

The GDPR (EU Regulation 2016/679) and the amended Data Protection Act impose rigorous management of employee personal data: legal basis for processing, retention period, informing individuals, maintaining a processing register. The CNIL actively monitors these obligations with sanctions that can reach 4% of global turnover.

With regard to health and safety, the employer is subject to a duty of care to achieve results (article L.4121-1). ISO 45001 standard provides a recognised methodological framework for structuring a health and safety management system, particularly relevant in manufacturing industry.

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