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Lithuania May Allow Unused Parental Leave and Benefits to Be Used Until Child Turns 8

An MP from the Democratic Faction “For Lithuania”, RΕ«ta MiliΕ«tΔ—, has submitted amendments to the Labour Code and the Law on Sickness and Maternity Social Insurance. The proposed change would allow parents to use any unused portion of parental leave and the related benefit until their child turns 8 years old β€” compared to the current limit of two years for the benefit and three years for leave.

Key facts:

  • What is proposed: unused parental leave and benefit could be taken at any point until the child turns 8
  • Current situation: benefit is available only for the first 2 years of the child’s life; leave only for the first 3 years
  • Who it affects: working parents who returned to work early and still have unused leave or benefit entitlement
  • Additional cost to the state: none β€” only the time window changes
  • Status: submitted to the Seimas, not yet passed

How It Works Now

Under the current rules:

  • Parental leave can only be taken within the first 3 years of the child’s life.
  • The parental benefit can only be received within the first 2 years.
  • If a parent returns to work early, any unused benefit is forfeited β€” it cannot be taken later.

According to the MP, this effectively acts as a financial penalty for returning to work early β€” parents must choose between receiving the full benefit or going back to work.

What Would Change?

Under the proposed amendment, any unused parental leave or benefit entitlement could be taken at any point up until the child’s 8th birthday. Parents could plan around their own needs β€” for example, when the child starts nursery, school, or when family circumstances change.

Similar systems already exist in: Germany, Ireland, Italy, Belgium, Sweden, the Netherlands (up to 8–12 years); Latvia, Denmark, Greece, Cyprus and several other countries (up to 8 years).

Why This Matters

Lithuania has one of the lowest birth rates in the EU. In 2025, the total fertility rate fell to a record low of 1.0 children per woman β€” far below the 2.1 needed for stable population. The MP argues that more flexible parental benefits would make it easier for families to plan childcare and encourage more equal participation by both parents.

The amendment would require no additional state budget β€” only the time frame within which an existing entitlement can be used would change.

Next Steps

The amendments have been submitted to the Seimas. Until a final decision is made and the law enters into force, the current rules apply.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this mean the benefit would be paid for 8 years continuously?

No. Only the unused remaining portion of the benefit β€” the part a parent missed by returning to work early β€” could be taken later. The total benefit amount does not increase.

Does this apply to fathers too?

Yes. The amendments cover both parents. The MP specifically emphasises that this would allow fathers to be more involved in childcare beyond the early years.

Is this already in effect?

No. The proposal has been submitted to the Seimas but not yet voted on. Current rules remain in force.

Bottom line: Lithuania is considering allowing parents to use unused parental leave and benefits until their child turns 8, rather than losing them after the first 2–3 years. There would be no extra cost to the state. A decision is still pending.

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