image for article on right to disconnect

France gives workers the legal right to disconnect from work email

For millions of workers, the end of the workday stopped meaning much once smartphones arrived. Emails kept coming. Expectations followed. And the line between professional life and personal time blurred into something most people stopped trying to defend. In 2016 C.E., France decided to push back — legally.

What the law requires

  • Right to disconnect: Starting January 1, 2016 C.E., French companies with more than 50 employees are required by law to negotiate with workers over their right to ignore work communications outside of office hours.
  • Work-life balance law: If no agreement is reached between employer and employees, the company must publish a charter that explicitly defines what is expected of workers — and what rights they hold — during evenings, weekends, and holidays.
  • Always-on culture: A study by French research group Eleas found that more than a third of French workers were using devices for work tasks outside of hours every single day, with around 60% supporting some form of legal regulation.

How France got here

The law did not appear out of nowhere. Labour minister Myriam El Khomri commissioned a report in 2015 C.E. that documented what it called “info-obesity” — the condition of being permanently saturated with work communications to the point of exhaustion. That report made a direct link between compulsive checking of work devices and rising rates of burnout, sleep disruption, and strained personal relationships. Trade unions in France had pushed for this kind of protection for years. France already operates one of the most regulated working weeks in the developed world, capped at 35 hours — and unions saw the digital blurring of that boundary as a direct threat to hard-won protections. The new law became part of a broader and often controversial overhaul of French labour rules. Critics of the wider reform package argued it weakened some protections in other areas. The right to disconnect, however, drew relatively broad support.

What it actually does — and doesn’t do

The law is notably structural rather than punitive. It does not fine companies that fail to respect boundaries or penalize managers who send late-night emails. What it does is mandate a conversation — one that had rarely been happening formally before. Companies must now sit down with workers or their representatives and reach an explicit agreement about out-of-hours expectations. That agreement must address not just what the company expects, but what employees are genuinely entitled to refuse. Workplace expert Xavier Zunigo noted at the time that workers themselves were not simply demanding total disconnection. Many valued the flexibility that digital tools gave them — the ability to leave early, manage a school pickup, work later in the evening on their own terms. The goal was not to eliminate technology from personal time, but to establish that ignoring a message at 10 p.m. should never carry professional consequences.

A global conversation starting in one country

France was among the first countries to enshrine this principle in law, but it was not alone in grappling with the problem. Several major corporations had already moved independently — Germany’s Volkswagen and Daimler both introduced systems to block or automatically delete emails sent to employees outside working hours. France’s Areva and insurer Axa had taken similar steps internally. What the French law did was shift the conversation from voluntary corporate policy to a matter of legal obligation and worker rights. That shift carried weight well beyond France’s borders. In the years following, similar proposals emerged in several other countries, including Germany, Italy, and Ireland — reflecting a shared recognition that the “always-on” model of work carried real costs in human health and dignity.

Lasting impact

The right to disconnect framework established something that workplaces had rarely formalized: the idea that availability is not the same as commitment, and that rest is not a reward for productivity but a condition of it. That principle, once named in law, became harder to dismiss as sentiment. Anna Cox, a computing and work-life balance researcher at University College London, pointed out that the deeper value of the law was in prompting structured conversations within organizations — conversations about expectations, boundaries, and what it actually means to work together across flexible and distributed arrangements. Those conversations, she argued, were overdue regardless of what any specific agreement concluded.

Blindspots and limits

The law’s most significant weakness is the absence of meaningful enforcement. Without sanctions for companies that ignore the requirement or define boundaries in ways that still favor availability, the protection exists mostly on paper for workers without strong union backing or negotiating power. In industries with high informal pressure to be always reachable — consulting, finance, tech — the law’s practical effect has been uneven. Precarious and gig workers, who were not covered at all under the 50-employee threshold, were left entirely outside the framework.

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For more on this story, see: The Guardian

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