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Blog

Data sovereignty for HR data: what it means and why it matters

By Alon Working Group  Published On May 2026

The question HR will get sooner than expected

If you work with HR data, you may be asked a question that sounds simple: where is our data stored and processed? Pay transparency often brings that question to the surface, but it does not stop there. Employee records, contracts, job architecture, performance data, and reporting workflows raise the same issue. In practice, the answer often involves more than one system, region, or contract.

In short

  • Data residency is about location
  • Data sovereignty is about control, jurisdiction, and proof
  • For HR teams, the real task is to explain how employee data moves, who can access it, and how that can be evidenced

What data sovereignty means in practice

At its core, data sovereignty is about control. It asks four practical questions at the same time: where HR data sits, which jurisdiction applies, who can access it, and how those choices can be proven.

That is why data sovereignty is broader than storage location alone. A system can keep data in the EU and still raise sovereignty questions if access, support, subcontracting, or transfer arrangements sit elsewhere.

For internal discussions, it helps to separate data sovereignty from two related terms.

Term What it usually means in practice A useful question to ask
Data residency Where your data is stored (and backed up) Which regions store our HR data at rest and in backups
Data localisation A rule that some data must stay in a specific country or region Do any laws, contracts, or employee agreements require local storage
Data sovereignty Whether you can show which rules apply, who can access, and how transfers are controlled If access is requested from outside the EU, what safeguards apply and what evidence do we have

Seen this way, data sovereignty is not a hosting preference. It is the combined question of location, access, jurisdiction, transfers, and evidence.

Why it matters for HR data

HR data rarely sits in one place. Once you start with compensation data, you quickly touch employee records, contracts, payroll inputs, performance data, and reporting outputs. That is why data sovereignty questions often show up early in HR work, not only in pay transparency projects.

  • You need to be able to explain how employee, contract, role, and pay data is handled across HR, payroll, and analytics
  • You need traceability when something changes: who changed it, when, and why
  • You often need a controlled way to share outputs internally without exporting raw data everywhere

Those are operational questions, but they are shaped by a wider EU context. That context is what makes sovereignty a governance issue, not only a technical one.

The EU lens: three facts worth keeping straight

Three EU-level reference points can help HR, IT, and procurement align quickly.

1 — GDPR
Transfers are not only a contract
Following the CJEU Schrems II ruling, the EDPB states that organisations relying on Standard Contractual Clauses must verify, case by case, whether the law of the third country ensures an essentially equivalent level of protection. Where SCCs are not sufficient, supplementary measures may be needed.
2 — EU Data Act
A newer layer on cloud contracts and access requests
The Data Act entered into force in January 2024 and applies from 12 September 2025. It covers switching measures including removal of switching charges from 12 January 2027, and safeguards relating to unlawful third country government access to non-personal data held in the EU.
3 — Cloud Sovereignty Framework
A practical definition used in procurement
In April 2026, the European Commission described its Cloud Sovereignty Framework, measuring sovereignty across eight objectives using SEAL levels. SEAL-2 eligibility required abiding by EU laws without additional technical measures by the customer. Union entities can procure sovereign cloud services for up to EUR 180 million over six years.

What this means in practice

The three EU reference points above point in the same direction. HR teams need more than a statement that data is "in Europe". They need a clearer picture of jurisdiction, access, transfers, and evidence.

Three takeaways matter most:

Location matters, but location alone is not enough
Hosting in the EU does not automatically answer jurisdiction, access, or transfer questions.
Access and transfer controls matter just as much as storage
Who can reach data, under which conditions, and what safeguards apply are equally important questions.
Teams need a model they can explain and evidence
If HR data supports decisions on pay, roles, contracts, or performance, that model needs to hold up to internal review.

That is the practical standard to work from. It is what helps HR, IT, procurement, and legal teams assess whether the setup is clear enough for internal review, reporting, and change over time.

A practical checklist HR can use with IT and procurement

With that in mind, start with questions that lead to concrete evidence:

→ Where is our HR data stored at rest and in backups
→ Where is it processed, including for HR operations, analytics, and reporting
→ Who has administrator access, and how is it controlled (roles, approvals, logging)
→ What subprocessors, contracts, and integrations touch the data
→ How are international transfers handled, where they apply
→ What audit trail exists for changes to employee, role, contract, and pay-related fields and exports
→ If we needed to switch providers, what would the process look like and what would it cost

How Alon supports this conversation

In practice, Alon supports this work through:

Governed source of truth
Unified data across employee, role, performance, and pay
Audit-ready access controls
Change logs, role-based access, and consistent retention
Flexible deployment
Public cloud, private cloud, or on-premise on a cloud-native Kubernetes architecture
Directive-ready reporting
Reports with traceable audit history for EU Pay Transparency compliance
Read more in our deployment models overview

Ready to map your HR data sovereignty setup?

Connect with our team to discuss your data governance and infrastructure requirements, and see how Alon can be deployed to match your organisation's needs.

Contact Us
Request a Demo

Disclaimer: This article is informational only and does not constitute legal advice. If you are assessing GDPR transfer obligations or local legal requirements, involve your legal counsel.

References

  • European Commission, Commission advances cloud sovereignty through strategic procurement (17 April 2026)
  • European Commission, Data Act enters into force: what it means for you (11 January 2024)
  • European Commission, Data Act explained (last update 15 December 2025)
  • European Data Protection Board, 41st Plenary session: EDPB adopts recommendations on supplementary measures following Schrems II (11 November 2020)

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