Working in Belgium

Salary and working conditions

Working in Belgium

Belgium has long been a prosperous region in Europe, and salaries are generally above average, although not as high as those in Germany and France.

Annual salary increases are often controlled by an industry collective agreement and pegged to local cost of living increases. In Belgium, your salary may depend on your age. Salary levels rarely appear in job advertisements, the desired age range will give you an idea of what an employer is willing to pay.

Taxes in Belgium are higher than what you may be used to in your home country, particularly if you’re coming from the UK or the US, so remember to take this into account when considering your salary.

If you have friends or acquaintances living in Belgium or who have lived there, ask them what an average or good salary is for your trade or profession. For many employees, particularly executives and senior managers, their remuneration is much more than the money they receive in their monthly pay packets. Some companies provide benefits such as a company car, private school fees, interest-free home or other loans, and membership of local clubs or sporting organisations. These additional benefits are usually taxable, however, and this should be taken into account when calculating your net take-home pay or comparing competing job offers.

13th Month’s Salary & Bonuses

Many employers pay a 13th month ‘bonus’ to their employees; a few even add a half of a 14th month’s pay to that, usually payable at the end of the year. This year-end or Christmas bonus (prime de fin d’année/jaarpremie) should be incorporated into your contract if you’ve been quoted an annual salary. In your first and last year of employment, the 13th month bonus (and any holiday bonus related to vacation time) is paid pro rata if you don’t work a full calendar year. Some employers offer a variable profit sharing or productivity bonus (participation aux benefices/aandeel in de winst or prime de productivité/produktiviteitspremie), depending on the performance of the company, branch or department.

In Belgium, you’re entitled to a holiday (vacation) bonus of 85 per cent of a month’s salary, normally paid during the summer or whenever you take your main annual holiday. This should be included in your employment contract and the amount of the bonus included in the annual salary figure you’ve been quoted. (You may need to divide your annual salary by 13.85 to find your gross monthly salary.)

Some employers operate a separate profit-sharing or performance-related bonus system, whereby they pay an annual sum (usually at the end of the year or the end of the fiscal year if the company doesn’t operate on a calendar year system). The amount of the bonus depends on the company’s overall performance, the attainment of specific goals during the year, and may be calculated as a percentage of each employee’s annual or monthly salary over the period. Your eligibility for this type of bonus may or may not be part of your employment contract.

Working Hours & Overtime

Working hours in Belgium vary according to your employer, your position, the industry in which you’re employed and the regional or industry collective agreements that apply to your employer.

The standard working week (i.e. the hours you’re expected to work on a regular basis) can be no longer than 39 hours in Belgium. After that, workers must be paid overtime, at rates that vary according to the requirements and conditions of the extra hours worked. Of course, none of these restrictions applies to you if you’re a top executive (direction/directie) or manager (cadres/kaderleden) or if you own your own company.

Although legally the standard working week in Belgium is 39 hours, most collective agreements call for shorter working weeks of between 35 and 38 hours. Some labour organisations are calling for a standard 35-hour week, in the hope that this will inspire more hiring, especially in industries threatened with workforce reductions.

Under Belgian law, overtime rates must be paid for all work in excess of eight hours per day or 39 hours per week, and every employee must be given at least one 24-hour rest period each week. Work time is normally limited to 11 hours per day and 50 hours per week, although these limits can be exceeded if the collective agreement allows it and the employer has obtained the permission of the works council.

Flexi-Time

Some Belgium companies operate flexi-time working hours. A flexi-time system requires all employees to be present between certain hours, known as the block time, for example, from 8.30 to 11.30am and from 1.30 to 4pm. Employees may make up their required working hours by starting earlier than the required block time, reducing their lunch break or working later. Most business premises are open from around 7am until 6 or 7pm.

Smaller companies may allow employees to work as late as they wish, provided they don’t exceed the maximum permitted daily working hours (see above). Because flexi-time rules are often quite complicated, they may be contained in a separate set of regulations.

This article is an extract from Living and Working in in Holland, Belgium & Luxembourg from Survival Books.

Further reading

Does this article help?

Do you have any comments, updates or questions on this topic? Ask them here: