EU Whistleblowing Directive - Compliance Guide

Complete EU Directive 2019/1937 compliance guide. 7-day acknowledgment, 3-month feedback, anonymous reporting, confidentiality protection, and anti-retaliation measures.

EU Whistleblowing Directive Compliance

How Disclosurely helps you comply with EU Directive 2019/1937 on the protection of whistleblowers.

Overview

The EU Whistleblowing Directive (2019/1937) establishes minimum standards for whistleblower protection across all EU member states. All member states were required to transpose the Directive into national law by December 17, 2021.

Disclosurely is built for full compliance with the Directive's requirements.

Who Must Comply

Covered Organizations

Private Sector:

  • 50+ employees: Must establish internal reporting channels
  • Certain sectors: All entities regardless of size
    • Financial services
    • Prevention of money laundering and terrorist financing
    • Transport safety
    • Environmental protection
    • Food safety
    • Public health
    • Consumer protection
    • Privacy and data protection
    • Network and information security

Public Sector:

  • All public authorities and institutions
  • Regardless of size
  • Includes local, regional, and national levels

Transition Period:

  • Organizations with 50-249 employees: 2-year grace period (until December 17, 2023)
  • Organizations with 250+ employees: Immediate compliance required

Member State Implementation

Each EU member state has implemented the Directive through national legislation:

  • Ireland: Protected Disclosures (Amendment) Act 2022
  • Germany: Hinweisgeberschutzgesetz (HinSchG)
  • France: Law No. 2022-401 (Loi Waserman)
  • Spain: Law 2/2023
  • Italy: Legislative Decree No. 24/2023
  • Netherlands: House for Whistleblowers Act (Wet bescherming klokkenluiders)
  • And others: Check your jurisdiction

Important: While the Directive sets minimum standards, member states may have additional or stricter requirements.

Key Requirements

1. Internal Reporting Channels

Article 8 - Obligation to Establish Internal Reporting Channels

Requirements:

  • Secure channels for receiving reports
  • Anonymous reporting option recommended
  • Clear procedures for handling reports
  • Information provided to employees about channels

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ Secure web-based reporting portal
  • Anonymous reporting via tracking ID
  • ✅ Confidential reporting with identity protection
  • ✅ Military-grade AES-256 encryption
  • ✅ Customizable reporting forms
  • ✅ Information pages for reporters

Setup:

  1. Configure reporting portal
  2. Enable anonymous reporting
  3. Customize branding (optional)
  4. Set up custom domain
  5. Add information about reporting process
  6. Publish portal URL to employees

2. Acknowledgment of Receipt

Article 9(1)(b) - Diligent Follow-Up

Requirement: Acknowledge receipt of report within 7 days

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ Automatic acknowledgment email sent immediately upon submission
  • ✅ Timestamp recorded in audit trail
  • ✅ Reporter receives confirmation with tracking ID
  • ✅ No manual action required
  • ✅ Compliance tracking dashboard

What Reporters Receive:

  • Immediate confirmation of submission
  • Unique tracking ID for follow-up
  • Expected timeline for investigation
  • How to send additional information
  • Contact for questions

Monitoring Compliance:

  • Dashboard shows all acknowledgments sent
  • Filter cases by acknowledgment date
  • Alerts if acknowledgment delayed (system issue)
  • Audit trail proves compliance

3. Feedback to Reporter

Article 9(1)(f) - Providing Feedback

Requirement: Provide feedback on investigation outcome within 3 months (extendable to 6 months for complex cases)

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • Secure messaging system for communication
  • ✅ Case status updates
  • ✅ Investigation outcome notification
  • ✅ Timeline tracking with alerts
  • ✅ Automated compliance monitoring

Timeline Management:

  1. Case created → 3-month timer starts
  2. Alerts at 60 days, 75 days, 85 days
  3. Extend to 6 months if needed (document reason)
  4. Provide feedback before deadline
  5. Audit trail documents compliance

Feedback Content:

  • Whether allegations substantiated
  • General actions taken (not specific discipline)
  • Changes implemented to prevent recurrence
  • Appreciation for reporting

What NOT to Share:

  • Specific disciplinary actions
  • Subject's employment status
  • Confidential investigation details
  • Other employees' information

4. Impartial Person Responsible

Article 8(7) - Designated Person or Department

Requirement: Designate impartial person or department to handle reports

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ Role-based access controls
  • ✅ Team management
  • ✅ Assignment workflows
  • ✅ Conflict of interest tracking
  • ✅ Segregation of duties

Best Practices:

  • Designate compliance officer or team
  • Provide training on investigation procedures
  • Ensure independence from subjects
  • Document conflicts of interest
  • Rotate assignments if needed

In Disclosurely:

  1. Create "Compliance Team" or designated role
  2. Assign investigations to impartial investigators
  3. Document impartiality
  4. Flag conflicts of interest
  5. Re-assign if conflict discovered

5. Confidentiality Protection

Article 16 - Protection of Identity

Requirement: Protect confidentiality of reporter's identity

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ Anonymous reporting option (no identity collected)
  • ✅ Confidential reporting (identity encrypted)
  • ✅ Zero-knowledge architecture
  • ✅ Role-based access to identity information
  • ✅ Audit trail of identity access
  • ✅ Confidentiality reminders throughout interface

Technical Protections:

  • AES-256 encryption
  • Identity stored separately from report
  • Access logged in audit trail
  • Only authorized users can see identity
  • Cannot be disclosed without authorization

Procedural Protections:

  • Confidentiality policies
  • Staff training
  • Non-disclosure agreements
  • Disciplinary consequences for breaches
  • Limited "need to know" access

Exceptions (when identity may be disclosed):

  • Legal obligation (court order)
  • Necessary for investigation (with consent)
  • Subject's right to defense (subject may infer)

6. Data Protection

Article 17 - Processing of Personal Data

Requirement: Comply with GDPR when processing personal data

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ GDPR-compliant data processing
  • ✅ Data minimization
  • ✅ Purpose limitation
  • ✅ Retention policies
  • ✅ Data subject rights support
  • ✅ Data processing agreements

See: GDPR Compliance for detailed information

Key Points:

  • Process only necessary data
  • Retain only as long as needed
  • Secure storage and transmission
  • Support data subject access requests
  • Document legal basis for processing

7. Record Keeping

Article 18 - Maintenance of Records

Requirement: Maintain records of reports and follow-up actions

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ Complete case records
  • ✅ Tamper-evident audit trail
  • ✅ Evidence management
  • ✅ Status tracking
  • ✅ Investigation documentation
  • ✅ Long-term retention and archiving

What's Recorded:

  • Report submission date and time
  • Acknowledgment sent
  • Investigation activities
  • Status changes
  • Communications with reporter
  • Investigation outcome
  • Actions taken
  • Feedback provided

Audit Trail:

  • Hash chain integrity
  • Cannot be altered
  • Proves compliance with timelines
  • Available for regulatory inspection
  • Retained per retention policy

8. Information and Training

Article 8(6) & Recital 55 - Information About Channels

Requirement: Provide clear, accessible information about internal reporting channels

Disclosurely Compliance:

  • ✅ Customizable information pages
  • ✅ Reporting procedures documented
  • ✅ Multi-language support
  • ✅ Accessible design
  • ✅ Clear explanations of process

What to Communicate:

  • How to submit a report
  • Anonymous vs. confidential options
  • What information to include
  • Timeline expectations
  • Protection from retaliation
  • Follow-up process
  • External reporting options

Communication Methods:

  • Employee handbook
  • Intranet/internal website
  • Email announcements
  • Training sessions
  • Posters in workplace
  • Onboarding for new employees

9. Prohibition of Retaliation

Articles 19-22 - Protection from Retaliation

Requirement: Prohibit and prevent retaliation against whistleblowers

Types of Retaliation Prohibited:

  • Suspension, dismissal, demotion
  • Withholding promotion or training
  • Negative performance evaluations
  • Coercion, intimidation, harassment
  • Discrimination
  • Unfavorable treatment
  • Damage to reputation

Disclosurely Features:

  • ✅ Anonymous reporting prevents identification
  • ✅ Confidential reporting protects identity
  • ✅ Retaliation flagging
  • ✅ Monitoring capability
  • ✅ Documentation of protections

Organizational Measures:

  • Written anti-retaliation policy
  • Training for managers
  • Monitoring for retaliation signs
  • Separate retaliation reporting channel
  • Swift investigation of retaliation claims
  • Disciplinary action for retaliators
  • Remedies for affected reporters

Burden of Proof:

  • Directive shifts burden to employer
  • Employer must prove adverse action was not retaliation
  • Protects reporters from having to prove retaliation

Compliance Checklist

Initial Setup

✅ Establish internal reporting channel (Disclosurely portal) ✅ Enable anonymous reporting option ✅ Designate impartial person/team to handle reports ✅ Configure automatic acknowledgment ✅ Set up case assignment workflows ✅ Configure timeline alerts (7 days, 3 months) ✅ Create feedback templates ✅ Customize information pages for reporters ✅ Set up encryption and access controls ✅ Configure audit trail ✅ Establish data retention policies ✅ Create GDPR-compliant processing records

Policy and Procedures

✅ Draft whistleblowing policy ✅ Document investigation procedures ✅ Create anti-retaliation policy ✅ Establish confidentiality protocols ✅ Define escalation procedures ✅ Set retention and deletion policies ✅ Document GDPR compliance measures

Communication and Training

✅ Communicate reporting channels to all employees ✅ Provide information on reporting process ✅ Train designated personnel on investigation procedures ✅ Train managers on anti-retaliation ✅ Include in employee handbook ✅ Include in new employee onboarding ✅ Periodic reminders to staff

Ongoing Compliance

✅ Acknowledge reports within 7 days (automatic) ✅ Provide feedback within 3 months (or 6 if extended) ✅ Maintain confidentiality ✅ Document all investigation activities ✅ Protect against retaliation ✅ Maintain audit trail ✅ Conduct regular compliance reviews ✅ Update procedures as needed ✅ Respond to data subject requests ✅ Cooperate with authorities

Monitoring Compliance

Compliance Dashboard

Disclosurely Provides:

Acknowledgment Compliance:

  • All reports acknowledged within 7 days
  • Late acknowledgments flagged (if system issue)
  • 100% compliance rate typical (automatic)

Feedback Compliance:

  • Cases approaching 3-month deadline
  • Cases past 3-month deadline (alert)
  • Cases extended to 6 months
  • Compliance rate by month
  • Average feedback time

Overall Metrics:

  • Total reports received
  • Reports acknowledged timely
  • Feedback provided timely
  • Average investigation time
  • Compliance rate (%)

Access Dashboard:

  1. Dashboard > Compliance > EU Directive
  2. View compliance metrics
  3. Filter by date range
  4. Export reports
  5. Address any compliance gaps

Alerts and Reminders

Automatic Alerts:

7-Day Acknowledgment:

  • Acknowledgment sent automatically
  • Alert only if system failure (rare)

3-Month Feedback:

  • 60 days: First reminder
  • 75 days: Second reminder
  • 85 days: Urgent reminder
  • 90 days: Overdue alert

Recipients:

  • Assigned investigator
  • Compliance officer
  • Case handler
  • Administrator

Actions:

  • Provide feedback to reporter
  • Extend to 6 months (document reason)
  • Escalate case if stuck

Reporting

Generate Compliance Reports:

  1. Dashboard > Reports > Compliance
  2. Select "EU Directive Compliance Report"
  3. Choose date range
  4. Include:
    • Total reports
    • Acknowledgment compliance
    • Feedback compliance
    • Average timelines
    • Compliance rate
  5. Export PDF or CSV

Use For:

  • Board reporting
  • Compliance committee meetings
  • Internal audits
  • External audits
  • Regulatory inquiries
  • Annual reviews

External Reporting Channels

When Whistleblowers May Go External

Article 10 - External Reporting Channels

Reporters may go directly to authorities if:

  • No internal channels available
  • Internal channels not functioning properly
  • Reasonable belief that retaliation will occur
  • Reasonable belief that breach may constitute imminent or manifest danger to public interest
  • Reasonable belief that investigation won't be handled appropriately
  • Previous internal report not followed up

Implication: Organizations should ensure internal channels are effective to encourage internal reporting first.

Competent Authorities

Each member state must designate authorities to receive external reports:

Examples:

  • Financial regulators
  • Data protection authorities
  • Environmental agencies
  • Health and safety authorities
  • Anti-corruption bodies

Your Responsibility:

  • Inform employees about external reporting options
  • Provide contact information for relevant authorities
  • Include in whistleblowing policy
  • Do not discourage external reporting

In Disclosurely:

  • Customize information pages to include external channels
  • Provide links to national authorities
  • Explain when external reporting appropriate
  • Demonstrate internal channels are effective

Member State Variations

Check Your Jurisdiction

While the Directive sets minimums, member states may:

  • Extend protection to more categories of workers
  • Lower the 50-employee threshold
  • Add reporting channel requirements
  • Impose stricter timelines
  • Require additional measures
  • Impose penalties for non-compliance

Examples of Variations:

Germany (HinSchG):

  • Requires external "ombudsperson" option for some organizations
  • Stricter penalties for non-compliance
  • Specific requirements for verbal reporting

France (Loi Waserman):

  • Applies to all organizations with 50+ employees (no sector exceptions)
  • Specific requirements for report handling
  • Integration with existing alert systems

Spain (Law 2/2023):

  • Detailed requirements for investigation procedures
  • Specific timeline for initiating investigation
  • Obligation to inform reporter of investigation start

Netherlands (House for Whistleblowers Act):

  • Strong focus on external authority
  • Specific investigation requirements
  • Integration with existing whistleblower infrastructure

Consult Local Counsel

Important: This documentation provides general guidance on the EU Directive. Always consult local employment and compliance counsel to ensure full compliance with your member state's specific implementation.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Member State Penalties

Each member state establishes penalties for:

  • Failure to establish internal channels
  • Breaching confidentiality
  • Retaliating against whistleblowers
  • Obstructing reporting
  • Not following up on reports

Examples:

  • Fines (amounts vary by member state)
  • Criminal penalties in some jurisdictions
  • Personal liability for managers
  • Injunctions to establish channels
  • Reputational damage

Consequences

Beyond Regulatory Penalties:

  • Damage to reputation
  • Loss of employee trust
  • Litigation from whistleblowers
  • Employment tribunal claims
  • Regulatory investigations
  • Media attention
  • Investor concerns

Best Practice: Proactive compliance is far less costly than reactive remediation.

Best Practices

Go Beyond Minimum Requirements

Recommended:

  • Encourage speak-up culture
  • Multiple reporting channels (in addition to Disclosurely)
  • Train all employees, not just investigators
  • Regular communication about channels
  • Anonymous reporting as default option
  • Faster timelines than required
  • Comprehensive anti-retaliation measures

Regular Reviews

Quarterly:

  • Review compliance metrics
  • Address any overdue feedback
  • Check acknowledgment compliance
  • Assess reporter satisfaction
  • Update procedures if needed

Annually:

  • Comprehensive policy review
  • Regulatory changes check
  • Training effectiveness assessment
  • Communicate with employees
  • Board reporting
  • External audit preparation

Document Everything

Maintain Records of:

  • Whistleblowing policy
  • Procedures and workflows
  • Training provided
  • Communications to employees
  • Compliance reports
  • Policy reviews and updates
  • Regulatory consultations

Demonstrates:

  • Good faith compliance effort
  • Proactive approach
  • Continuous improvement
  • Accountability

Culture of Speaking Up

Beyond Compliance:

  • Leadership commitment
  • Speak-up encouragement
  • No tolerance for retaliation
  • Recognition for reporters (appropriately)
  • Learning from reports
  • Continuous improvement
  • Transparency about outcomes (aggregated)

Related:

EU Whistleblowing Directive - Compliance Guide | Disclosurely Docs