Employees entitled to minimum employment rights
All.
Working hours
The standard number of working hours for employees is 8 hours per day and 40 hours per week.
However, the maximum number of working hours cannot exceed 10 hours per day or 48 hours per week.
Overtime
As a principle, overtime is compensated either with time off equivalent to the excess hours worked (for each overtime hour, 1.5 hours' time off or allocated to a time saving account) or with a supplementary payment of 140 percent of regular wages. Overtime payment is not required for senior executives.
For companies who apply reference periods, overtime is performed:
- When the hours worked during the reference period exceed the average of 40 hours a week and/or
- when the hours worked exceed a certain threshold:
- Any hour exceeding 20 percent beyond the normal working hours (ie, 48 hours a week or 192 hours a month) over a reference period of up to 1 month
- Any hour exceeding 12.5 percent beyond the normal working hours (ie, 45 hours a week or 180 hours a month) over a reference period of over 1 month and less than 3 months or
- Any hour exceeding 10 percent beyond the normal working hours (44 hours a week and 176 hours a month) over a reference period of exceeding 3 months and up to 4 months.
Wages
EUR2,570.93 minimum wage per month for unqualified employees and EUR3,085.11 per month for qualified employees (index 944,43). A "qualified employee" is an employee who exercises a profession comprising a professional qualification normally acquired by means of education or training attested by an official certificate recognized by the Luxembourg State.
A “qualified employee” is one who holds:
- An official certificate at least equivalent to a vocational skills certificate
- A vocational diploma
- A manual skills certificate
- A certificate of vocational ability and has at least 2 years' practical experience
- A vocational initiation certificate and has at least 5 years' practical experience
Certain other employees may also be categorized as "qualified" even if they have no official certificate, subject to having accrued sufficient years of practical professional experience.
Vacation
26 days per year, plus 11 days of public holidays.
Sick leave & pay
An employer must continue to pay the employee in case of sickness leave due to illness or an occupational accident and must do so until the end of the month during which the 77th day of sickness leave occurs, over a reference period of 18 successive months. As from the month following the 77th day of sickness leave, the National Health Fund (Caisse Nationale de Santé or CNS) takes over payment of sickness benefits to the employee on sickness leave.
However, during the sick leave, the CNS may make a "refusal decision" pursuant to which the employee's entitlement to full salary ceases. In such cases, the employer must abide by the refusal decision once the period of 40 days allowed to lodge an appeal against the decision expires.
Maternity/parental leave & pay
Maternity leave starts 8 weeks before the expected date of birth and continues for 12 weeks after the actual date of birth.
During maternity leave, the employee is paid by the National Health Fund (Caisse Nationale de Sante or CNS).
Maternity allowances cannot be lower than the social minimum wage (gross amount of EUR2,570.93 per month as of September 1, 2023) and may not exceed an amount equal to 5 times the social minimum wage (gross amount of EUR12,854.65 per month as of September 1, 2023).
Parental leave has been recently reformed. There are 2 types of parental leave:
- First parental leave directly following the maternity leave and
- Second parental leave to be taken before the 6th birthday of the child (or the 12th birthday in case of adoption).
The amount of parental leave allowance is linked to the employee's income and replaces, proportionately, the income lost by the employee taking parental leave. The allowance will be set between EUR2,570.93 and EUR4,284.88 per month and will be paid by the Children's Future Fund (Caisse pour l’avenir des enfants). An employee earning less than EUR4,284.88 per month is entitled to an equivalent amount to replace their salary. An employee earning more than EUR4,284.88 per month is entitled to that amount as a maximum.
Other leave/time off work
Employees may also be entitled to paid or unpaid leave for other purposes, such as bereavement, parental representation leave (ie, member of the national school commission), athletics, emergency service volunteering, training, social mandate and Luxembourgish language learning.