- Hotel employees in Heraklion will receive a temporary wage supplement.
- The additional payment equals 2% of each worker’s basic monthly salary.
- The supplement became mandatory on June 1, 2026.
- The payment replaces an employer contribution intended for a future Occupational Insurance Fund.
- The measure remains in force until the fund is officially established.
- The union urges workers to check their payroll statements carefully.
Thousands of hotel workers across Heraklion may have discovered that administrative delays occasionally produce an unexpected winner.
A provision hidden inside the Local Sectoral Collective Labor Agreement has now come into effect because the long-discussed Occupational Insurance Fund, known as the TEA, still exists more as an intention than as a functioning institution.
The agreement originally required hotel employers to contribute an amount equal to 2% of each employee’s basic monthly salary to the future fund. The idea was straightforward. Employers would make regular contributions, and workers would benefit from an additional layer of occupational insurance over time.
The problem is that the fund has not yet materialized.
Because negotiators anticipated the possibility of delays, they included a safeguard in Article 15 of the agreement. The clause states that if the fund is not operational by the agreed deadline, employers must pay an equivalent amount directly to workers as a temporary allowance.
That deadline has now passed.
As a result, hotel businesses covered by the agreement must begin paying an additional amount equal to 2% of the basic monthly salary of every eligible employee starting on June 1, 2026.
What the Additional Payment Means
The temporary allowance applies to all salary categories covered by the local collective agreement and is calculated directly from each employee’s basic wage.
Although the increase may appear modest when viewed as a percentage, it arrives during a period when tourism workers continue to face rising living costs and seasonal employment pressures. For many employees, even a relatively small increase can help offset everyday expenses that seem determined to climb faster than hotel occupancy rates.
The supplement will remain in place until the Occupational Insurance Fund is formally established and begins operating according to the terms outlined in the agreement.
In practical terms, workers receive the money now rather than waiting indefinitely for a fund that remains trapped somewhere in the administrative machinery.
Union Calls on Workers to Review Their Payroll
The Hotel Employees Union of Heraklion has reminded workers that the provision is not optional.
According to the union, every hotel business covered by the collective agreement must implement the measure immediately and include the supplement in payroll calculations beginning with wages earned after June 1, 2026.
Union representatives are encouraging employees to review their pay statements carefully over the coming months. Workers who discover that the allowance has not been included are being asked to contact the union so that the issue can be examined and addressed.
The situation offers an unusual reminder that collective agreements often contain provisions that receive little public attention until a specific circumstance activates them. In this case, the delayed launch of a pension-related fund has produced an immediate financial benefit for hotel employees, proving that sometimes the fine print turns out to be worth reading after all.
For now, Heraklion’s hotel workers will receive the extra 2%, while the Occupational Insurance Fund continues its journey through the familiar Greek obstacle course known as “coming soon.”