The European Union has announced an agreement between Greece, the EU and the IMF on the final details of €28bn worth of savings that Athens needs to implement over the next five years.
The commission said the deal among international backers on the ground in Athens now has to be 'translated into concrete legislative measures'.
That also goes for a related plan to raise tens of billions of euro from selling off state holdings.
'The commission is looking forward to the voting of both legislative bills next week in the Greek parliament', by 30 June, it added.
Eurozone leaders pledged a second bailout for Greece, provided its parliament enacts its austerity plan.
Eurozone finance ministers are to complete work on outstanding elements for a new bailout to allow the necessary decisions to be taken by early next month.
Member states, led by Germany, insist any second aid package for Greece must involve the private sector despite the concerns of credit rating agencies that they would consider even a voluntary debt rollover as a selective default.
President of the European Council Herman von Rompuy said such a default would not happen.
Meanwhile, Taoiseach Enda Kenny held a brief meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy on the margins of the EU Summit in Brussels.
The meeting was part of efforts to secure a lower interest rate on Ireland's bailout.