The purpose of the EWTD is to protect the health and safety of employees. It also brings benefits for employers by ensuring they’ll have a healthy and productive workforce.
EU employers are required to do three things when it comes to tracking time and attendance:
Track time and attendance for all their employees
Meet minimum standards outlined by the EWTD
Comply with state regulations regarding time and attendance tracking
Additionally, according to the EWTD, employers must follow these rules:
Work hours and daily rest
“The average working time for each seven-day period, including overtime, does not exceed 48 hours.”
Employers need to ensure that their employees don’t work for more than 48 hours over a seven-day period. This includes overtime work and is calculated as a four-month average.
“Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that, per each seven-day period, every worker is entitled to a minimum uninterrupted rest period of 24 hours plus the 11 hours' daily rest referred to in Article 3.”
Additionally, all employees are entitled to at least 11 hours of uninterrupted rest daily, as well as 24 hours of uninterrupted rest after every seven-day period.
Note that some EU member states have even more strict regulations regarding rest time. For example, Slovenia requires employers to give employees a minimum of 12 hours of rest between workdays.
Night work
“It is important that night workers should be entitled to a free health assessment prior to their assignment and thereafter at regular intervals and that whenever possible they should be transferred to day work for which they are suited if they suffer from health problems.”
The EWTD classifies a night worker as an employee that “works at night for at least three hours a day.”
Night time is defined as “any period of not less than seven hours, as defined by national law, and which must include, in any case, the period between midnight and 05:00.”
Night workers should not work for more than 8 hours in a 24-hour period. They also have the right to free periodical health assessments.
Rest breaks
“Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that, where the working day is longer than six hours, every worker is entitled to a rest break, the details of which, including duration and the terms on which it is granted, shall be laid down in collective agreements or agreements between the two sides of industry or, failing that, by national legislation.”
Employees that work for more than six hours a day are entitled to a daily rest break. Member states determine the required duration of that break on their own.
Taking Slovenia as an example again, it requires employers to provide employees with a 30-minute break that’s calculated into their working time.
Annual leave
“Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that every worker is entitled to paid annual leave of at least four weeks in accordance with the conditions for entitlement to, and granting of, such leave laid down by national legislation and/or practice.”
European employers are required to provide employees with a minimum of four weeks of paid annual leave.
The annual leave cannot be replaced by an allowance. The only exception here is if an employee leaves the company or is fired before taking their annual leave.