Issue Monitoring – Labour Legislative Focus #2 | February 18 – March 1, 2026
Legislative developments in the labor code and work relations sectors
DomainLabour
PeriodFebruary 18 – March 1, 2026
EditionWeek 2 /
LanguageEN
Executive overview
HIGH IMPACT Minimum Wage Increase:
National gross minimum salary set at 4,325 lei/month starting July 1, 2026
HIGH IMPACTWorkplace Burnout Prevention Framework:
New organizational obligations for employers, including psychosocial risk assessments and recovery measures
HIGH IMPACTEmployment and Unemployment Insurance Reform:
Digitalization of ANOFM services, expanded support for vulnerable groups, and a new stability bonus for NEET youth
Legislative developments
National gross minimum salary set to increase
What is changing
The Government has drafted a decision to increase the national gross minimum basic wage to 4,325 RON per month starting July 1, 2026, based on a full-time schedule of 166.667 hours (25.949 lei/hour). The measure continues the annual adjustment of the statutory minimum wage to reflect economic developments and income policy objectives, ensuring a uniform minimum pay floor across all sectors not covered by higher sectoral minimums. The increase follows the recent trend of stepwise minimum-wage adjustments aimed at supporting purchasing power and income convergence.
The Government analyzed the draft decision during a meeting, and it could soon be adopted and published in the Official Gazette.
Why this matters
Employers will face a direct increase in payroll costs for all employees remunerated at or near the minimum wage, including related contributions and salary-linked benefits. The measure may also generate upward pressure on wage scales above the minimum tomaintaininternal pay differentials. Sectors with labor-intensive operations or a high share of minimum-wage workers—such as retail, manufacturing, construction, and services—are likely to experience the most significant cost impact, potentially affecting pricing,margins, and staffing strategies. At the same time, the announced entry-into-force date provides short-term predictability for budgeting and workforce planning.
Next steps (internal)
Employers should identify affected employees, update employment contracts and payroll systems to reflect the new minimum threshold from July 1, 2026, recalculate related allowances and benefits, and incorporate the increased labor costs into financial and operational planning.
How relevant is this initiative?Thank you — we’ll use your feedback in future reports.
Workplace burnout prevention obligations for employers
What is changing
A legislative proposal establishing a legal framework to prevent burnout through organizational and psychosocial measures at the workplace level, without classifying burnout as a medical diagnosis, could be adopted by the Senate. The initiative places responsibility on employers to inform employees annually about burnout risks and to integrate psychosocial risks into the general occupational risk assessment. Companies with more than 50 employees would be subject to additional obligations, including conducting specific psychosocial risk assessments using tools, adopting an annual prevention plan, and implementing confidential internal reporting mechanisms. The proposal also allows employers to grant paid professional recovery days upon employee request, without medical justification. The Ministry of Labor would publish guidelines, standards, and self-assessment tools within 180 days of entry into force. The law would enter into force 30 days after publication, with a 12-month compliance period for employers.
The Senate’s Committee for labor will issue a report and, if it is a positive one, the Senate will most likely adopt the proposal, which will then be registered with the Chamber of Deputies as the decisional chamber.
Why this matters
Employers would face new compliance and organizational obligations, particularly those with over 50 employees,whomust implement structured psychosocial risk assessments and formal prevention plans. This may require engaging external specialists, updating occupational health and safety documentation, training HR personnel, and introducing confidential reporting systems. While these measures may generateadditionaladministrative and financial costs, they could also contribute to improved employeewell-being, reduced absenteeism, lower turnover, and enhanced productivity over the medium term. The optional introduction of paid recovery days and employer-supported counseling services may further influence workforce management policies and benefit structures.
Next steps (internal)
Employers should assess current occupational health and safety frameworks, map psychosocial risk management practices, evaluate workforce size thresholds, plan budget allocations for compliance measures, and monitor the publication of ministerial guidelines to implement the required mechanisms within the 12-month transition period.
How relevant is this initiative?Thank you — we’ll use your feedback in future reports.
Digitalization of ANOFM services, along with expanded support for vulnerable groups
What is changing
The legislative framework governing employment stimulation and unemployment insurance could be updated, with a focus on digitalization, simplification, and targeted support for vulnerable groups. The initiative enables the National Agency for Employment (ANOFM) to provide mediation, counseling, and vocational training services online, and eliminates the obligation for unemployed persons to renew their registration every six months, maintaining their status until employment or loss of benefit eligibility. The proposal expands the categories eligible for support by including NEET youth (16–30 years old) and victims of domestic violence among vulnerable groups, raising the age threshold for older unemployed persons from 45 to 50 years, and introducing new eligible categories such as mothers with at least three dependent children and persons who have served custodial or non-custodial sentences. The bill also expands the mixed financing regime (national and European funds) for active employment measures, strengthens support for vulnerable persons as defined by social economy legislation, and provides financial incentives for social insertion enterprises employing such individuals under solidarity contracts that include personalized social accompaniment. Employers in insolvency, bankruptcy, reorganization, or with outstanding non-rescheduled tax debts are excluded from financial support schemes. The Ministry of Labour will update secondary legislation within 60 days of the law’s publication.
The Government analyzed the draft bill and, after its adoption, will send it to Parliament for debate and adoption before it enters into force.
Why this matters
Employers maybenefitfrom expanded access to subsidies and financial incentives when hiring from newly defined vulnerable groups, particularly NEET youth and beneficiaries within the social economy framework. The introduction of the stability bonus may support workforce retention in entry-level or hard-to-fill roles, while digitalized ANOFM services could streamline recruitment and interaction with employment authorities. However, companies must ensure compliance with eligibility conditions, includingmaintainingemployment relationships for the required duration and verifying that they meet fiscal andlegal criteria to access funding. Social insertion enterprises will faceadditionaloperational responsibilities related to solidarity contracts and personalized accompaniment mechanisms.
Next steps (internal)
Employers should assess eligibility for employment subsidies, review workforce planning strategies in light of the new vulnerable group definitions, prepare documentation and compliance checks for accessing financial incentives, and monitor the adoption of secondary legislation.
How relevant is this initiative?Thank you — we’ll use your feedback in future reports.
Ministry of Finance – Minister Alexandru Nazare
Ministry of Labor – Minister Florin Manole
Ministry of Justice – Minister Radu Marinescu
Minister of Economy – Radu Miriuță
Awaiting adoption by the Government
Workplace burnout prevention obligations for employers
Senate and Chamber of Deputies’ Labor Committees
Marius Humelnicu (PSD) and Adrian Solomon (PSD) – Committees’ presidents
Set to receive the report from the Labor Committee
Digitalization of ANOFM services, along with expanded support for vulnerable groups
Ministry of Finance – Minister Alexandru Nazare
Ministry of Labor – Minister Florin Manole
Ministry of Justice – Minister Radu Marinescu
Minister of Internal Affairs – Cătălin Predoiu
Senate and Chamber of Deputies’ Labor Committees
Marius Humelnicu (PSD) and Adrian Solomon (PSD) – Committees’ presidents
To be adopted in the Government sitting
Help us improve future reports
Your feedback is valuable to us. It helps us refine the structure, clarity, and usefulness of our Legislative Focus reports. We review all feedback received and use it to continuously improve how we monitor, structure, and present legislative developments.
Cookie-urile ne ajută să vă îmbunătățim experiența pe site-ul nostru. Prin continuarea navigării pe site-ul issuemonitoring.eu, veți accepta implicit folosirea de cookie-uri pe parcursul vizitei dumneavoastră. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Privacy Overview
Acest site utilizează module cookie pentru a vă îmbunătăți experiența în timp ce navigați pe site. Din aceste cookie-uri, cookie-urile clasificate ca necesare sunt stocate în browser-ul dvs., deoarece sunt esențiale pentru funcționarea funcțiilor de bază ale site-ului. De asemenea, folosim module cookie de la terțe părți care ne ajută să analizăm și să înțelegem cum utilizați acest site web. Aceste cookie-uri vor fi stocate în browserul dvs. numai cu acordul dvs. De asemenea, aveți opțiunea de a renunța la aceste cookie-uri. Renunțarea la unele dintre aceste cookie-uri poate avea un efect asupra experienței dvs. de navigare.
Cookie-urile necesare sunt absolut esențiale pentru ca site-ul să funcționeze corect. Această categorie include numai cookie-urile care asigură funcționalitățile de bază și caracteristicile de securitate ale site-ului web. Aceste cookie-uri nu stochează informații personale.
Orice cookie-uri care pot să nu fie obligatorii pentru ca site-ul să funcționeze și să fie folosite în mod specific pentru colectarea datelor personale ale utilizatorilor prin intermediul analizelor, a anunțurilor și a altor conținuturi încorporate sunt denumite cookie-uri inutile. Acestea vor fi colectate doar în situația în care v-ați exprimat consimțământul.
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Cookie
Durată
Descriere
pll_language
1 year
The pll _language cookie is used by Polylang to remember the language selected by the user when returning to the website, and also to get the language information when not available in another way.
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Cookie
Durată
Descriere
_ga
2 years
The _ga cookie, installed by Google Analytics, calculates visitor, session and campaign data and also keeps track of site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookie stores information anonymously and assigns a randomly generated number to recognize unique visitors.
_ga_B9EPW2VBQN
2 years
This cookie is installed by Google Analytics.
_gat_gtag_UA_99102321_1
1 minute
Set by Google to distinguish users.
_gid
1 day
Installed by Google Analytics, _gid cookie stores information on how visitors use a website, while also creating an analytics report of the website's performance. Some of the data that are collected include the number of visitors, their source, and the pages they visit anonymously.
vuid
2 years
Vimeo installs this cookie to collect tracking information by setting a unique ID to embed videos to the website.
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.