European works council agreement template

European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils

What are European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils?

European Works Councils (EWCs) and European Company (Societas Europaea, SE) Works Councils (SE-WCs) are key information and consultation mechanisms for collectively representing the European workforce. European Works Councils are an essential European extension of national-level workers’ participation, while SE Works Councils are to be established in companies applying the uniquely European corporate form laid down in the European Company (SE) Statute. While their legal base may differ, they are as a rule negotiated structures designed to engage in information and consultation with central management on cross-border issues.

According to the ETUI European Works Council database (EWCDB), as of July 2024, multinational corporations (MNCs) with an active European Works Council or SE Works Council totalled 1,250; the number of European Works Councils ever created is 1,786. 1,018 active European Works Councils and 242 active SE works councils are recorded. There are five companies whose representation bodies are still to be specified.

Why focus on European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils?

Transnational and democratic representation of workers is vital given recognition of their rights to information and consultation as EU fundamental rights, particularly as company operations increasingly Europeanise and restructure.

In the worker-participation.eu website, the focus on European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils recognises their ongoing importance as transnational workplace instruments across Europe. More than 1,250 European Works Councils and a smaller number of European Company Works Councils are in operation. Knowledge of how they function and are framed by regulation equips workers, trade unions, and other stakeholders with a solid grasp of their meaning for, and utility in, the pursuit of workers’ rights, participation, and influence in the region.

Revisions in EU law for these transnational workplace instruments over outlined in this historical overview .

Special topics

On this worker-participation.eu website, we provide commentary and analysis of special topics concerning European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils:

What ETUI does on European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils

The ETUI conducts a wide range of research on European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Council issues. Workers, trade unions, and other stakeholders' understanding of how European Works Councils and European Company (SE) Works Councils function, and how such representation may develop, is key to augmenting workers' influence and company performance informed by workers’ knowledge and democratic participation.

Research areas

The worker-participation.eu website houses a suite of ETUI studies on significant European Works Council and European Company (SE) Works Council issues. These span quantitative and qualitative assessments, often drawing on the extensive European Works Council database (EWCdb).

Older material on European Works Councils and European Company Works Councils is also archived on the worker-participation.eu website ( Other resources ).

Facts and figures

Regulation and national transposition laws

EU-level regulation frames and has been transposed into national law on European Works Councils and European Company Works Councils. European Works Councils have developed in response to the adoption of European Works Council Directives 94/45/EC and the Recast 2009/38/EC. The development of European Company Works Councils has been enabled by the adoption of the European Company (SE) 2001/86/EC with regard to the involvement of employees.

European Works Council (EWC) regulation

You can also find all the national transposition acts of the EU Directive 2009/38/EC on the EWC database in original languages and an English translation (automated).

European Company (SE) Works Council regulation