

Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for Statutory Adoption Leave and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for Statutory Adoption Leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions and for intended parents of surrogacy arrangements.
Note there are additional notification and eligibility requirements for Statutory Adoption Pay.
An 'adopter' is defined as 'a person who has been matched with a child for adoption'. An employee is 'matched with a child for adoption when an adoption agency decides that the employee would be a suitable adoptive parent for the child, either individually or jointly with another person'. Where two people have been matched jointly, the 'adopter' is 'whichever of them has elected to be the child's adopter for the purposes of the regulations. The employee becomes the child's adopter when he or she agrees with the other person, at the time at which they are matched with the child, that he or she will be the adopter.
An adopter may therefore be an individual who adopts or one member of a couple where the couple adopts jointly. This means that where a couple adopts jointly only one member of that couple can claim adoption leave. However, the other member of the couple, or the partner (this includes same-sex partners) of an individual who adopts, may be entitled to paternity leave and pay. The fact that adoption leave is only available to those who have been matched with a child through an agency means that, for example, stepfathers and stepmothers who wish to adopt their stepchildren are not eligible for adoption leave.
The definition of 'adopter' is modified slightly for overseas adoptions, to refer to 'a person by whom a child has been or is to be adopted' (as opposed to a person who has been matched with a child for adoption).
An employee qualifies for 52 weeks' Statutory Adoption Leave when they adopt a child in the UK if they:
It does not matter how long the employee has worked for you.
The Statutory Adoption Leave period is made up of 26 weeks of ordinary adoption leave followed immediately by 26 weeks of additional adoption leave.
In addition, since the introduction of shared parental leave and pay on 5 April 2015, adopters can bring their adoption leave and pay to an early end to opt into shared parental leave and pay with their partner.
Adopters are also entitled to time off to attend pre-adoptions appointments - see statutory time off work for parental reasons.
An employee qualifies for 52 weeks' Statutory Adoption Leave when they adopt a child from overseas if they:
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority stating that the authority either is prepared to issue a certificate to the overseas authority dealing with the adoption of the child or has issued a certificate and sent it to that authority.
In either case, the certificate confirms that the adopter has been approved by them as being a suitable adoptive parent to adopt a child from overseas.
An employee needs to have 26 weeks of continuous employment at the date of the official notification.
Where a couple is adopting jointly, they can choose who will take Statutory Adoption Leave and who (regardless of gender) will take Statutory Paternity Leave. They cannot both take Statutory Adoption Leave or Statutory Paternity Leave.
If an employee is adopting individually, only they are eligible for Statutory Adoption Leave - although their partner (regardless of gender) may be eligible for Statutory Paternity Leave.
A foster parent may be able to take Statutory Adoption Leave if they go on to adopt a child, but only if:
The usual notification criteria still apply. The adoption leave only relates to the actual placement for adoption - any period of ordinary foster care does not count.
A special guardian is usually someone with a close relationship with the child, such as a family member, former foster carer, or family friend. They need to apply to a court which will consider their suitability and the child's needs, based on a report from the local authority.
Statutory Adoption Leave is not available to special guardians.
An employee who becomes a parent through an arrangement with a surrogate mother is now also entitled to Statutory Adoption Leave and Statutory Adoption Pay.
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement (also known as Parental Order) may be eligible for adoption leave and pay where they intend to apply for or have already obtained, a Parental Order making them the legal parents of the child. Where a couple applies for a Parental Order only one of the couple will be able to take adoption leave and/or pay in relation to the child.
The eligibility criteria for adoption leave and pay are:
They will also be entitled to the right to request a flexible working arrangement from their employer. See the right to request flexible working: eligibility criteria.
In a couple, the intended parent who does not take adoption leave and pay may be eligible for paternity leave and pay. Intended parents may also qualify for shared parental leave and pay where the parent who qualifies for adoption leave and pay chooses to return to work before the end of the adoption leave period.
Intended parents may also be entitled to unpaid time off to attend ante-natal appointments with the surrogate mother - see statutory time off work for parental reasons.
If they don't qualify for these, they could take annual leave or an agreed period of unpaid leave.
Employers can make enhanced adoption leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you could allow employees with more than a year's service to take more than 52 weeks' leave.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. When exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Employee and employer obligations regarding adoption leave notification.
To qualify for Statutory Adoption Leave, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after they are notified of having been matched with a child:
They can tell you earlier than this if they choose.
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
If the employee has not given you the correct notice, you can delay the start of their Statutory Adoption Leave (and pay) until they give the correct notice. However, you cannot postpone the start of leave beyond the date of placement.
You may request this notification in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to give notice of the date for the start of Statutory Adoption Pay at the same time. The date for the start of Statutory Adoption Pay can be the same as the start date for Statutory Adoption Leave. See adoption pay.
An employee can change the start date of their leave - see when adoption leave can begin.
Employees do not have to prove that they are eligible for Statutory Adoption Leave unless you ask them to. However, they do need to provide evidence to prove eligibility for Statutory Adoption Pay - see adoption pay.
If you choose to ask an employee to prove their eligibility for Statutory Adoption Leave, they must give you the documentation they were given by the adoption agency, which must contain the following:
If the employee notifies you as early as possible of their intention to take Statutory Adoption Leave, you can start making arrangements to cover the period while they are away.
After receiving their notification, you must in turn notify the employee of the date on which their Statutory Adoption Leave will end. This will normally be 52 weeks from the intended start of their Statutory Adoption Leave. This will inform the employee of when he or she has to return to work. Download our model adoption leave acknowledgement letter (DOC, 136K).
You must give the employee this information within 28 days of their notification unless the employee has since changed the date their leave will start. In that case, you must notify them of the end date within 28 days of the start of their leave.
If you fail to give the employee proper notification and the employee subsequently doesn't return to work on time, you cannot discipline them.
In addition, if they want to change their return dates, they may not be obliged to comply with the notice requirements.
Note that an employee may choose to take less than 52 weeks of Statutory Adoption Leave by notifying you of this:
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Employees adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take Statutory Adoption Leave.
Employees adopting a child from overseas must give employers notice in three stages that they intend to take Statutory Adoption Leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it.
If they are also entitled to Statutory Adoption Pay, they must give you the evidence required at the same time - see adoption pay.
The employee must inform you of the date:
For an explanation of the official notification, see qualifying for adoption leave.
They must give you this information within 28 days of receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In all cases, the employee must give you at least 28 days' notice of the actual date they want their Statutory Adoption Leave (and Statutory Adoption Pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Statutory Adoption Leave cannot start before the child enters Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Employees must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry. If the adopter is also claiming Statutory Adoption Pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
You must respond to the employee's notification of the date they wish their Statutory Adoption Leave to start (the second notification stage) within 28 days, confirming the date their Statutory Adoption Leave will end. This will inform the employee of when he or she has to return to work. Download our model adoption leave acknowledgement letter (DOC, 136K).
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Notification and confirmation of adoption leave in relation to surrogacy cases.
With surrogacy cases the employee must:
You must respond to the employee's notification of the date they wish their Statutory Adoption Leave to start within 28 days, confirming the date their Statutory Adoption Leave will end. This will inform the employee of when he or she has to return to work. Download our model adoption leave surrogacy acknowledgement letter (DOC, 136K).
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Beginning statutory adoption leave and changing the start date if the adoption doesn't take place as planned.
When an employee can choose to start their Statutory Adoption Leave depends on whether they are adopting a child from within the UK or from overseas, or are an intended parent of a surrogacy arrangement.
An employee can choose to begin their Statutory Adoption Leave (and Statutory Adoption Pay) on either of the following:
If they have chosen to start their leave on the day the child is placed with them and they are at work on that day, the period of Statutory Adoption Leave and Statutory Adoption Pay can start on the next day. The leave can start on any day of the week.
If the date of placement changes before the employee begins their Statutory Adoption Leave, they should:
If you are unable to agree on the dates of Statutory Adoption Leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
Employees may choose to start their Statutory Adoption Leave from either the date the child enters Northern Ireland or a fixed date (as notified to you) no later than 28 days after the date the child enters Northern Ireland.
If they have chosen to start their leave on the day the child is placed with them and they are at work on the day, the period of Statutory Adoption Leave and Statutory Adoption Pay can start on the next day. The adoption leave can start on any day of the week.
Statutory Adoption Leave cannot be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
Adoption leave will commence on the day the child is born, but if the employee is at work on that day, then leave will commence on the next day.
This does not apply to surrogacy cases.
The employee can change their intended Statutory Adoption Leave start date as long as they notify you of the new start date. They must do this by whichever is the earlier of:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to give you this much notice, they should give you as much notice as possible.
You may request this notification in writing.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Certain terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory adoption leave.
Adoption leave is made up of 26 weeks' Ordinary Adoption Leave followed by 26 weeks' Additional Adoption Leave. An employee's employment contract continues throughout both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it or it expires.
During both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave, ie the entire Statutory Adoption Leave period, an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work. The only exceptions are terms relating to wages or salary - though you are still obliged to pay them statutory adoption pay if they are eligible. See adoption pay.
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during Statutory Adoption Leave include:
Whether or not you should pay a bonus to an employee on Statutory Adoption Leave depends on the type of bonus and the terms of the particular bonus scheme.
Statutory Adoption Leave doesn't break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, the entire Statutory Adoption Leave period counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
Both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave count for assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contracts of employment of employees who have had a child placed with them for adoption on or after 5 October 2008, or who have a child adopted from overseas that entered (or will enter) Northern Ireland on or after 5 October 2008.
However, for employees who had a child placed with them before 5 October 2008, you only had to count the period of Ordinary Adoption Leave for assessing the length of service payments.
Therefore, when assessing the length of service for a pay raise for example, it's possible that an employee who has adopted twice or more while in your employment could have a later period of Additional Adoption Leave count towards their length of service but not an earlier one.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
An employee's contractual benefits continue during ordinary and additional adoption leave.
During Statutory Adoption Leave, an employee continues to accrue annual leave. They may also continue to benefit from occupational pension scheme contributions.
An employee continues to accrue their full statutory paid annual leave entitlement of 5.6 weeks and any additional contractual entitlement throughout both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave.
Employees will be able to carry over 5.6 weeks leave into the next holiday year if they are unable to take the leave due to having taken adoption leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during Statutory Adoption Leave. You should instead allow the employee to take any untaken annual leave before and/or after their Statutory Adoption Leave.
Note that you cannot pay an employee in lieu of any untaken statutory annual leave unless the contract is terminated.
Also, note that an employee's Statutory Adoption Leave begins automatically if the child is unexpectedly placed with them for adoption during a period of annual leave - see when adoption leave can begin.
For more information on annual leave entitlements, see know how much holiday to give your staff.
During Ordinary Adoption Leave (whether or not the employee is receiving statutory and/or enhanced adoption pay) and any period of paid Additional Adoption Leave, you should calculate the employer's contribution to an occupational pension scheme contributions as if the employee is working normally and receiving the normal remuneration for doing so.
During any period that your employee is on Additional Adoption Leave but not receiving any adoption pay - eg during the last 13 weeks of Additional Adoption Leave - you do not have to make any employer contributions to an occupational pension scheme unless the contract of employment provides otherwise.
If the occupational pension scheme rules require employee contributions to continue during Statutory Adoption Leave, their contributions should be based on the amount of statutory and/or enhanced adoption pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop during any period of unpaid adoption leave - eg during the last 13 weeks of Additional Adoption Leave - but the occupational pension scheme rules may allow them to still make voluntary contributions.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Making reasonable contact with an employee during Statutory Adoption Leave.
During the Statutory Adoption Leave period, as an employer, you can make reasonable contact with an employee during their leave period - and they can choose to make contact with you.
In addition, an employee can come to work as a way of keeping in touch with workplace developments.
Employers can make reasonable contact with the employee on adoption leave by any means, eg telephone, email, letter, or a meeting in the workplace.
The frequency and nature of any contact with them will depend on things like:
What amount of contact is reasonable depends on the employee and whether they prefer to have frequent or minimal contact with you and the workplace issues to be discussed. You should discuss this with your employee before the Statutory Adoption Leave period begins, as part of your planning for the employee's Statutory Adoption Leave.
Remember that you must keep an employee informed of promotion opportunities and other information relating to their job that they would normally be made aware of if they were at work, eg redundancy situations.
Employees may, in agreement with you, work for up to ten days - known as keeping-in-touch days - under their employment contract during their adoption leave period without it affecting their right to Statutory Adoption Leave or Statutory Adoption Pay.
During keeping-in-touch days, employees can actually carry out work for you. This could be their normal day-to-day work or could, for example, be attending a conference, undertaking training, or attending a team meeting.
Any amount of work done on a keeping-in-touch day counts as one keeping-in-touch day. Therefore, if an employee comes in for a one-hour training session and does no other work that day, they will have used up one of their keeping-in-touch days.
If work on a keeping-in-touch 'day' spans midnight, this counts as one keeping-in-touch day - as long as this is the employee's normal working pattern.
You and the employee should agree on how much you will pay them for a keeping-in-touch day - this could be set out in their employment contract or you may decide on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. When exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
If the employee is receiving Statutory Adoption Pay when they work a keeping-in-touch day, you must continue to pay their Statutory Adoption Pay for that week.
If the employee does more than ten days' work for you in their Statutory Adoption Pay period, they are not entitled to Statutory Adoption Pay for any week in which they work if they have already worked ten keeping-in-touch days. You do not have to pay them Statutory Adoption Pay for any week in which they have worked both the last of their keeping-in-touch days and any additional days.
The Statutory Adoption Pay the employee receives for the week in which they work a keeping-in-touch day can count towards any contractual pay you agree with them for working that keeping-in-touch day. However, you could agree that they will receive their normal daily rate in addition to the Statutory Adoption Pay for that week.
Whatever the arrangement, you can still continue to recover Statutory Adoption Pay from HM Revenue & Customs as normal - see adoption pay.
You will need to comply with your statutory obligations, such as paying at least the national minimum wage and ensuring women and men receive equal pay for work of equal value. See National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - rates and overview.
An employee can only work a keeping-in-touch day if they want to and you agree to it - you cannot make an employee work a keeping-in-touch day against their wishes, nor can the employee insist they work a keeping-in-touch day if you don't agree to it.
It is unlawful for you to treat an employee unfairly or dismiss them because they:
If an employee believes that you have treated them unfairly or dismissed them under these circumstances, they may do either of the following:
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Notification from employees regarding changes to their return date or if they don't intend to return to work at all.
Unless the employee has notified you otherwise, the date on which they return to work will normally be the first working day 52 weeks after their Statutory Adoption Leave began.
If an employee wishes to return to work before the planned return date (usually the date you confirmed to them before they went on leave), they must give you notice at least eight weeks before their new return date - although you can accept less or no notice .
For example, if an employee was due to return to work after 52 weeks Statutory Adoption Leave on 1 August, but then decided to return to work after 39 weeks of leave on 9 May, they would need to give you eight weeks' notice of the new date, ie by 14 March.
Note that if you didn't provide appropriate notification of when their adoption leave should end, the employee does not have to give you eight weeks' notice - see UK adoptions: notification and confirmation of adoption leave.
If the employee attempts to return to work earlier than planned without giving you notice, you can postpone their return until after the eight weeks have elapsed.
However, you may not postpone their return to a date later than the end of their 52-week Statutory Adoption Leave period.
If the employee still comes to work during the period of postponement, you do not have to pay them.
If an employee wishes to return to work after the planned return date, they should give you notice of this new date of return at least eight weeks before the originally planned return date.
For example, if an employee was due to return to work at the end of their Ordinary Adoption Leave (ie after 26 weeks) on 1 October but - while on leave - decides that they wish to take their full entitlement of 52 weeks, they must notify you of this eight weeks before 1 October, ie by 6 August.
An employee who does not wish to return to work after their Statutory Adoption Leave must give you notice of this. This will be the usual notice of resignation as required by their employment contract.
However, as long as they specify the date on which they wish to terminate the contract (eg the date they were due back at work after Statutory Adoption Leave), their adoption leave continues.
In addition, if they terminate their contract before the end of their Statutory Adoption Pay period, you must continue to pay them Statutory Adoption Pay, provided they have not started work for another employer.
Employees who don't return to work are not required to pay back any statutory adoption pay they have received. See adoption pay.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Whether or not an employee has the automatic right to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job that they had before going on Statutory Adoption Leave if they take only Ordinary Adoption Leave, ie the initial 26-week period of leave. The rules are different where an employee takes all or some of their Additional Adoption Leave, ie the second 26-week period of leave.
An employee who returns to work during, or at the end of, their Ordinary Adoption Leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent unless a redundancy situation has arisen.
If you prevent an employee from returning to work, they may make a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal.
If they return to work but you don't give them their old job back, they may do either of the following:
See adoption leave and protection against detriment or dismissal.
An employee who returns to work during or at the end of their Additional Adoption Leave period is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned.
If you offer the employee a job that doesn't fulfil the criteria, they may do either of the following:
You should try to consult with employees during their Statutory Adoption Leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return. See the page in this guide on reasonable contact and work during adoption leave.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately following the end of their Statutory Adoption Leave.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job as before if the parental leave meets both of the following conditions:
If the parental leave period is longer than four weeks and/or is preceded by a period of Additional Adoption Leave, the employee is treated as though they were returning to work after Additional Adoption Leave.
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
An employee on Statutory Adoption Leave is entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay, or other terms and conditions, which are introduced for their grade or class of work - as if they hadn't been away.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to adjust their start or finish times, work from home, or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take Statutory Adoption Leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take, Statutory Adoption Leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you would normally have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them unfairly under these circumstances, they may:
If a redundancy situation arises at any stage during an employee's adoption leave, you may not be able to continue to employ them under their existing contract of employment.
In these circumstances, an employee has the right to be offered (before that contract ends) any suitable alternative vacancy, where one is available. This includes a vacancy with an associated employer or with a successor to the original employer.
The new job must start immediately after the end of the original one and must both:
If you fail to comply with these requirements and dismiss the employee, the dismissal will be automatically unfair if the reason or principal reason for the dismissal is redundancy.
If you end up making an employee on adoption leave redundant because you had no suitable alternative work to offer them, the dismissal may be potentially fair.
Note that, on dismissal, the employee's adoption leave period comes to an end, but their entitlement to Statutory Adoption Pay continues until the end of the 39-week Statutory Adoption Pay period (if it hasn't already ended) or they start working for another employer, whichever is earlier.
The dismissal of an employee will automatically be an unfair dismissal if you dismiss them - or select them for redundancy in preference to other comparable employees - solely or mainly because they:
However, a dismissal may be potentially fair if, on the employee's return from additional adoption leave, you:
See returning to work from adoption leave.
It is still possible for you to fairly dismiss an employee who is on - or who has recently returned from - adoption leave if the reason for the dismissal is not:
You must comply with the correct statutory procedure when dismissing employees.
You can fairly dismiss an employee you took on to replace an employee on adoption leave. However, make sure you inform them that their position is only for adoption cover before they start and that the arrangement with you will end when the individual returns from leave. You should also comply with the statutory dismissal procedure when ending the employment.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Who qualifies for Statutory Adoption Pay, and how employers may recover payments and offer enhanced adoption pay.
Statutory Adoption Pay is paid for 39 weeks and usually covers the first 39 weeks of an employee's adoption leave.
There are different eligibility criteria for Statutory Adoption Pay for UK and overseas adoptions. See adoption pay and leave: eligibility.
In Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, adoption pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The adoption agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of adoption leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply.
For the first six weeks, you must pay your employee Statutory Adoption Pay a weekly rate equal to 90% of their average weekly earnings.
For the next 33 weeks, you must pay them the lower of the following:
You can recover some or all of your Statutory Adoption Pay payments from HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can offer enhanced adoption pay arrangements to attract and retain employees which are more generous than the statutory entitlements. For example, you could:
You could change the qualification criteria for these adoption pay enhancements, eg the employee needs a year's continuous service.
You can offer these enhanced adoption pay arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. When exercising discretion caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
You can still recover from HMRC the Statutory Adoption Pay portion of any enhanced adoption pay.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for births and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave of up to two weeks and pay provided they meet certain conditions:
A partner includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long-term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.
In addition, they must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
You should treat the employee as having the necessary length of service if:
If you think the employee does not qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - births and surrogacy births.
For information on how eligible employees should notify you that they intend to take paternity leave, see employee notification of paternity leave - births.
Paternity leave remains at two weeks regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
If an employee's wife or partner gives birth to a stillborn baby, they are still entitled to paternity leave - but only if the birth happens after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
The employee is still entitled to paternity leave if they would have been entitled to it but for the fact that the mother of the baby has died.
Where a pregnancy ends before 24 weeks and the child does not survive, the father (or mother's spouse, civil partner, or partner) will not be eligible for paternity leave. They may take sick leave, or you could consider allowing them to take annual leave, compassionate leave, or unpaid leave instead.
If the baby is born alive but then later dies, the employee is still entitled to paternity leave. Bereaved parents are also entitled to up to 2 weeks of absence within the 56 weeks following the death of a child through parental bereavement leave. This leave can be used immediately before or after paternity leave or at any time within the 56-week period. See Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you may consider allowing all employees to take two weeks of paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Who qualifies for statutory paternity leave for adoptions and surrogacy and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from the UK if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if:
If you think the employee doesn't qualify for paternity leave and they dispute this, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee qualifies for paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas if they:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they have previously taken shared parental leave in respect of the child.
For more information on how much paternity leave eligible employees can take and when their leave can start, see the start and duration of paternity leave - adoptions.
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority (usually the Department of Health) that the authority either:
In either case, the notification certificate confirms that the other or main adopter:
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement may be eligible for adoption leave and pay and paternity leave and pay where they are eligible for and intend to apply for a parental order (or have already obtained such).
If one of the intended parents is eligible for paternity leave and pay, they can take one week or two consecutive weeks of leave and pay. The leave and pay must be taken within the first 56 days of birth (ie before the baby is nine weeks old).
To qualify for paternity leave the intended parent must:
However, an employee will not qualify for paternity leave if they are taking adoption leave and pay or have already taken shared parental leave or pay in respect of the child.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity leave arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could allow all employees to take paternity leave - regardless of their length of service.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. If exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay, which was introduced in Northern Ireland in April 2015.
Employee and employer obligations for statutory paternity leave notification.
To qualify for paternity leave, an employee should notify you no later than the end of the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth (EWC) - or as soon as is reasonably practicable - of:
The EWC is the week in which the expected date of the baby's birth falls - starting with the preceding Sunday and ending the following Saturday. If the birth date falls on a Sunday, that date is the first day in the EWC.
The employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the pregnancy.
Once the notice is received by the employer, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration - see statutory paternity pay.
If you receive this declaration for payment no later than the end of the 15th week before the EWC, the employee has complied with the leave notification requirements anyway.
The employee should tell you the actual date of birth - and in writing if you request it. However, the employee does not have to give you any medical evidence of the birth.
Statutory paternity leave for an adoption or surrogacy arrangement notification obligations for employees and employers.
The notification requirements for paternity leave differ for surrogacy births and UK and overseas adoptions.
To qualify for paternity leave when adopting a child from within the UK, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after the adopter is notified they've been matched with a child:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
Once you receive employee notification, it is advisable to discuss the date the employee is expected to return to work from paternity leave. However, you are not under any legal obligation to give the employee confirmation of the end date of their paternity leave.
Employees intending to take paternity leave when adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take paternity leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it. If the employee is also entitled to statutory paternity pay (SPP), they must give you the evidence required at the same time.
In the first stage, the employee must inform you of:
Where the employee already has the necessary 26 weeks' qualifying service when the adopter receives official notification, they must give you this information within 28 days of the adopter receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
Where the employee receives official notification before they have the necessary qualifying service, they must give you notice within 28 days of completing the 26 weeks' qualifying service. Again, at this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In the second stage, the employee must give you at least 28 days notice of the actual date they want their paternity leave (and statutory paternity pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Paternity leave cannot start before the child has entered Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their paternity leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
For the third stage, which is after the child has entered Northern Ireland, the employee must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry.
If they are also claiming statutory paternity pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
The intended parent that will take paternity leave and/or statutory paternity pay must notify their employer of their entitlement by the 15th week before the expected week of birth. They must provide:
If requested by their employer, the employee must supply a declaration within 14 days of receipt of the request, that:
As soon as practicable after the child is born the employee must notify you of the date of birth.
You may request notification of paternity leave in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to claim statutory paternity pay at the same time. However, to do this, they must also make a declaration. If the employee makes this declaration for statutory paternity pay, they have complied with the notification requirements.
If the employee is not eligible for statutory paternity pay but you still want written notification, you can ask the employee to give you a completed self-certificate Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave: becoming a birth parent (form SC3). You should accept this unless you have strong reasons for suspecting that it is false.
Employees can choose when they want their paternity leave to begin but can change this date if they give enough notice.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
The duration of paternity leave remains the same regardless of the number of children resulting from a single pregnancy.
An employee cannot start their paternity leave until the birth of the baby. Otherwise, an employee can choose to start their leave:
Employees must give you the required notice of their paternity leave - see employee notification of paternity leave - births and employee notification of paternity leave - adoptions and surrogacy arrangements.
If an employee specifies the date of birth as the day they wish to start their leave and they are at work on that day, their leave will begin on the next day.
In circumstances where the employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time, they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
As long as the employee has given the required notice, their paternity leave can start on any day of the week. However, their leave must finish:
How an employee can choose and change leave dates for statutory paternity leave for adoptions.
Eligible employees can choose to take a single block of either one week or two consecutive weeks' paternity leave. They cannot take it as odd days or as two separate weeks.
Paternity leave (and pay) can begin any time from the date of the child's placement with the adopter but must be completed within 56 days of this date.
The employee can choose to begin paternity leave on one of the following:
In the circumstances where an employee decides to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you the following notice where they want to change their leave, so it starts on:
If they cannot give the notice in time (eg the adoption agency alters the date of placement at short notice), they should tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
If you are unable to agree on the dates of paternity leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
An employee adopting a child from overseas may choose to start their paternity leave from:
They must complete their leave within 56 days of the date the child enters Northern Ireland. They can start their leave on any day of the week.
Paternity leave is not meant to be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
If the employee wants to change the start date of their paternity leave, they must give you 28 days notice of the change.
You can ask for this notification in writing.
Where an employee has changed the start date of their leave, they should fill in a new self-certificate - see statutory paternity pay.
Almost all existing terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory paternity leave.
An employee's contract of employment continues throughout paternity leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it, or it expires.
During paternity leave an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work, except for the terms relating to wages or salary (unless their contract provides otherwise).
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during paternity leave include:
Paternity leave does not break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, paternity leave counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
It also counts towards assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contract of employment.
An employee continues to accrue statutory - and any contractual - annual leave entitlement throughout paternity leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during paternity leave - but may take it immediately before or after paternity leave.
While your employee is on paternity leave, you should calculate employer contributions to their pension scheme as if they are working normally and receiving normal pay for doing so. This is regardless of whether or not the employee is receiving ordinary statutory and/or enhanced paternity pay.
If the rules require employee contributions to continue during paternity leave, the employee's contributions should be based on the amount of ordinary statutory and/or contractual paternity pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop if the employee is not receiving any paternity pay - but the pension scheme rules may still allow them to make voluntary contributions.
An employee returning to work at the end of statutory paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent on paternity leave.
They are also entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay or other terms and conditions introduced while they are away.
In addition, fathers, spouses, civil partners, or partners may be eligible for shared parental leave and pay.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately after the end of their paternity leave - see parental leave and time off for dependants.
A period of parental leave of four weeks or less has no impact on the employee's right of return.
An employee who takes a period of parental leave of more than four weeks straight after the end of their paternity leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned. You should put the offer in writing and retain a copy. The offer should be as detailed as possible.
If you offer the employee a job that does not fulfil the above criteria, the employee may:
You should try to consult with employees during their paternity-parental leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to work from home or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take statutory paternity leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take paternity leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you normally would have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them detrimentally under these circumstances, they may raise a grievance with you. This may result in an industrial tribunal claim for detrimental treatment if you fail to address it.
You must not:
If you dismiss an employee in these circumstances, they may take a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal - regardless of their length of service.
If there is a redundancy situation at the same time as an employee's paternity leave, you must treat them the same as any other employee under the circumstances. This might be consulting them about the redundancy or considering them for any other suitable job vacancies.
Who qualifies for SPP, how to recover SPP payments, and offering SPP enhancements.
For information about eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay (SPP) see statutory paternity pay and leave.
(Note that in Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, statutory paternity pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of paternity leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply).
Note that the meaning of the term 'employee' for SPP purposes is different from the meaning of paternity leave and other employment rights. This means that some workers who are not employees, eg agency workers, may qualify for SPP, even though they do not qualify for paternity leave.
Someone legally classed as a worker who is not entitled to statutory paternity pay might still want to take time off after a birth. You should discuss other options with them, for example, paid holiday or special leave paid or unpaid.
You must pay eligible employees the lower of:
You can recover some or all of your SPP payments from HM Revenue & Customs - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can have enhanced paternity pay arrangements, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements, to attract and retain employees.
For example, you could:
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. Be careful when using discretion to avoid complaints of unfair treatment or discrimination.
Who qualifies for Statutory Adoption Leave and how employers may offer enhanced leave rights.
To qualify for Statutory Adoption Leave, an employee must meet certain qualifying criteria. The criteria differ for UK and overseas adoptions and for intended parents of surrogacy arrangements.
Note there are additional notification and eligibility requirements for Statutory Adoption Pay.
An 'adopter' is defined as 'a person who has been matched with a child for adoption'. An employee is 'matched with a child for adoption when an adoption agency decides that the employee would be a suitable adoptive parent for the child, either individually or jointly with another person'. Where two people have been matched jointly, the 'adopter' is 'whichever of them has elected to be the child's adopter for the purposes of the regulations. The employee becomes the child's adopter when he or she agrees with the other person, at the time at which they are matched with the child, that he or she will be the adopter.
An adopter may therefore be an individual who adopts or one member of a couple where the couple adopts jointly. This means that where a couple adopts jointly only one member of that couple can claim adoption leave. However, the other member of the couple, or the partner (this includes same-sex partners) of an individual who adopts, may be entitled to paternity leave and pay. The fact that adoption leave is only available to those who have been matched with a child through an agency means that, for example, stepfathers and stepmothers who wish to adopt their stepchildren are not eligible for adoption leave.
The definition of 'adopter' is modified slightly for overseas adoptions, to refer to 'a person by whom a child has been or is to be adopted' (as opposed to a person who has been matched with a child for adoption).
An employee qualifies for 52 weeks' Statutory Adoption Leave when they adopt a child in the UK if they:
It does not matter how long the employee has worked for you.
The Statutory Adoption Leave period is made up of 26 weeks of ordinary adoption leave followed immediately by 26 weeks of additional adoption leave.
In addition, since the introduction of shared parental leave and pay on 5 April 2015, adopters can bring their adoption leave and pay to an early end to opt into shared parental leave and pay with their partner.
Adopters are also entitled to time off to attend pre-adoptions appointments - see statutory time off work for parental reasons.
An employee qualifies for 52 weeks' Statutory Adoption Leave when they adopt a child from overseas if they:
Official notification is written notification issued by or on behalf of the relevant domestic authority stating that the authority either is prepared to issue a certificate to the overseas authority dealing with the adoption of the child or has issued a certificate and sent it to that authority.
In either case, the certificate confirms that the adopter has been approved by them as being a suitable adoptive parent to adopt a child from overseas.
An employee needs to have 26 weeks of continuous employment at the date of the official notification.
Where a couple is adopting jointly, they can choose who will take Statutory Adoption Leave and who (regardless of gender) will take Statutory Paternity Leave. They cannot both take Statutory Adoption Leave or Statutory Paternity Leave.
If an employee is adopting individually, only they are eligible for Statutory Adoption Leave - although their partner (regardless of gender) may be eligible for Statutory Paternity Leave.
A foster parent may be able to take Statutory Adoption Leave if they go on to adopt a child, but only if:
The usual notification criteria still apply. The adoption leave only relates to the actual placement for adoption - any period of ordinary foster care does not count.
A special guardian is usually someone with a close relationship with the child, such as a family member, former foster carer, or family friend. They need to apply to a court which will consider their suitability and the child's needs, based on a report from the local authority.
Statutory Adoption Leave is not available to special guardians.
An employee who becomes a parent through an arrangement with a surrogate mother is now also entitled to Statutory Adoption Leave and Statutory Adoption Pay.
The intended parents in a surrogacy arrangement (also known as Parental Order) may be eligible for adoption leave and pay where they intend to apply for or have already obtained, a Parental Order making them the legal parents of the child. Where a couple applies for a Parental Order only one of the couple will be able to take adoption leave and/or pay in relation to the child.
The eligibility criteria for adoption leave and pay are:
They will also be entitled to the right to request a flexible working arrangement from their employer. See the right to request flexible working: eligibility criteria.
In a couple, the intended parent who does not take adoption leave and pay may be eligible for paternity leave and pay. Intended parents may also qualify for shared parental leave and pay where the parent who qualifies for adoption leave and pay chooses to return to work before the end of the adoption leave period.
Intended parents may also be entitled to unpaid time off to attend ante-natal appointments with the surrogate mother - see statutory time off work for parental reasons.
If they don't qualify for these, they could take annual leave or an agreed period of unpaid leave.
Employers can make enhanced adoption leave arrangements to attract and retain employees, which are more generous than the statutory entitlements.
For example, you could allow employees with more than a year's service to take more than 52 weeks' leave.
You can offer these arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. When exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Employee and employer obligations regarding adoption leave notification.
To qualify for Statutory Adoption Leave, an employee should notify you no more than seven days after they are notified of having been matched with a child:
They can tell you earlier than this if they choose.
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to meet this deadline, they should notify you as soon as possible.
If the employee has not given you the correct notice, you can delay the start of their Statutory Adoption Leave (and pay) until they give the correct notice. However, you cannot postpone the start of leave beyond the date of placement.
You may request this notification in writing.
Many employees will find it convenient to give notice of the date for the start of Statutory Adoption Pay at the same time. The date for the start of Statutory Adoption Pay can be the same as the start date for Statutory Adoption Leave. See adoption pay.
An employee can change the start date of their leave - see when adoption leave can begin.
Employees do not have to prove that they are eligible for Statutory Adoption Leave unless you ask them to. However, they do need to provide evidence to prove eligibility for Statutory Adoption Pay - see adoption pay.
If you choose to ask an employee to prove their eligibility for Statutory Adoption Leave, they must give you the documentation they were given by the adoption agency, which must contain the following:
If the employee notifies you as early as possible of their intention to take Statutory Adoption Leave, you can start making arrangements to cover the period while they are away.
After receiving their notification, you must in turn notify the employee of the date on which their Statutory Adoption Leave will end. This will normally be 52 weeks from the intended start of their Statutory Adoption Leave. This will inform the employee of when he or she has to return to work. Download our model adoption leave acknowledgement letter (DOC, 136K).
You must give the employee this information within 28 days of their notification unless the employee has since changed the date their leave will start. In that case, you must notify them of the end date within 28 days of the start of their leave.
If you fail to give the employee proper notification and the employee subsequently doesn't return to work on time, you cannot discipline them.
In addition, if they want to change their return dates, they may not be obliged to comply with the notice requirements.
Note that an employee may choose to take less than 52 weeks of Statutory Adoption Leave by notifying you of this:
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Employees adopting a child from overseas must give you notice in three stages that they intend to take Statutory Adoption Leave.
Employees adopting a child from overseas must give employers notice in three stages that they intend to take Statutory Adoption Leave.
Employees must give you the information required in writing if you request it.
If they are also entitled to Statutory Adoption Pay, they must give you the evidence required at the same time - see adoption pay.
The employee must inform you of the date:
For an explanation of the official notification, see qualifying for adoption leave.
They must give you this information within 28 days of receiving official notification. At this point, the employee should know roughly when the child will enter Northern Ireland.
In all cases, the employee must give you at least 28 days' notice of the actual date they want their Statutory Adoption Leave (and Statutory Adoption Pay if they qualify) to start. They can give this notice at the first notification stage if they know the date. Statutory Adoption Leave cannot start before the child enters Northern Ireland.
Employees can change their mind about the date on which they want their leave to start providing they tell you at least 28 days in advance of the new date, or as soon as is reasonably practicable.
Employees must tell you the date the child entered Northern Ireland. They must tell you this within 28 days of the child's date of entry. If the adopter is also claiming Statutory Adoption Pay, they will need to give evidence of the date of entry.
Employees must tell you as soon as is reasonably practicable if they find out that the child will not be entering Northern Ireland.
You must respond to the employee's notification of the date they wish their Statutory Adoption Leave to start (the second notification stage) within 28 days, confirming the date their Statutory Adoption Leave will end. This will inform the employee of when he or she has to return to work. Download our model adoption leave acknowledgement letter (DOC, 136K).
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Notification and confirmation of adoption leave in relation to surrogacy cases.
With surrogacy cases the employee must:
You must respond to the employee's notification of the date they wish their Statutory Adoption Leave to start within 28 days, confirming the date their Statutory Adoption Leave will end. This will inform the employee of when he or she has to return to work. Download our model adoption leave surrogacy acknowledgement letter (DOC, 136K).
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Beginning statutory adoption leave and changing the start date if the adoption doesn't take place as planned.
When an employee can choose to start their Statutory Adoption Leave depends on whether they are adopting a child from within the UK or from overseas, or are an intended parent of a surrogacy arrangement.
An employee can choose to begin their Statutory Adoption Leave (and Statutory Adoption Pay) on either of the following:
If they have chosen to start their leave on the day the child is placed with them and they are at work on that day, the period of Statutory Adoption Leave and Statutory Adoption Pay can start on the next day. The leave can start on any day of the week.
If the date of placement changes before the employee begins their Statutory Adoption Leave, they should:
If you are unable to agree on the dates of Statutory Adoption Leave, contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Workplace Information Service on Tel 03300 555 300.
Employees may choose to start their Statutory Adoption Leave from either the date the child enters Northern Ireland or a fixed date (as notified to you) no later than 28 days after the date the child enters Northern Ireland.
If they have chosen to start their leave on the day the child is placed with them and they are at work on the day, the period of Statutory Adoption Leave and Statutory Adoption Pay can start on the next day. The adoption leave can start on any day of the week.
Statutory Adoption Leave cannot be used to cover the period employees spend travelling overseas to arrange the adoption or visit the child. However, you could allow the employee to take annual leave or unpaid leave for these purposes.
Adoption leave will commence on the day the child is born, but if the employee is at work on that day, then leave will commence on the next day.
This does not apply to surrogacy cases.
The employee can change their intended Statutory Adoption Leave start date as long as they notify you of the new start date. They must do this by whichever is the earlier of:
If it is not reasonably practicable for them to give you this much notice, they should give you as much notice as possible.
You may request this notification in writing.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Certain terms and conditions continue to apply during statutory adoption leave.
Adoption leave is made up of 26 weeks' Ordinary Adoption Leave followed by 26 weeks' Additional Adoption Leave. An employee's employment contract continues throughout both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave unless either you or the employee expressly ends it or it expires.
During both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave, ie the entire Statutory Adoption Leave period, an employee has a statutory right to continue to benefit from all the terms and conditions of employment which would have applied to them had they been at work. The only exceptions are terms relating to wages or salary - though you are still obliged to pay them statutory adoption pay if they are eligible. See adoption pay.
Examples of contractual terms and conditions that continue during Statutory Adoption Leave include:
Whether or not you should pay a bonus to an employee on Statutory Adoption Leave depends on the type of bonus and the terms of the particular bonus scheme.
Statutory Adoption Leave doesn't break the continuity of employment.
Similarly, the entire Statutory Adoption Leave period counts towards an employee's period of continuous employment for the purposes of entitlement to other statutory employment rights, eg the right to a redundancy payment.
Both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave count for assessing seniority and personal length-of-service payments, such as pay increments, under the contracts of employment of employees who have had a child placed with them for adoption on or after 5 October 2008, or who have a child adopted from overseas that entered (or will enter) Northern Ireland on or after 5 October 2008.
However, for employees who had a child placed with them before 5 October 2008, you only had to count the period of Ordinary Adoption Leave for assessing the length of service payments.
Therefore, when assessing the length of service for a pay raise for example, it's possible that an employee who has adopted twice or more while in your employment could have a later period of Additional Adoption Leave count towards their length of service but not an earlier one.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
An employee's contractual benefits continue during ordinary and additional adoption leave.
During Statutory Adoption Leave, an employee continues to accrue annual leave. They may also continue to benefit from occupational pension scheme contributions.
An employee continues to accrue their full statutory paid annual leave entitlement of 5.6 weeks and any additional contractual entitlement throughout both Ordinary Adoption Leave and Additional Adoption Leave.
Employees will be able to carry over 5.6 weeks leave into the next holiday year if they are unable to take the leave due to having taken adoption leave.
An employee may not take annual leave during Statutory Adoption Leave. You should instead allow the employee to take any untaken annual leave before and/or after their Statutory Adoption Leave.
Note that you cannot pay an employee in lieu of any untaken statutory annual leave unless the contract is terminated.
Also, note that an employee's Statutory Adoption Leave begins automatically if the child is unexpectedly placed with them for adoption during a period of annual leave - see when adoption leave can begin.
For more information on annual leave entitlements, see know how much holiday to give your staff.
During Ordinary Adoption Leave (whether or not the employee is receiving statutory and/or enhanced adoption pay) and any period of paid Additional Adoption Leave, you should calculate the employer's contribution to an occupational pension scheme contributions as if the employee is working normally and receiving the normal remuneration for doing so.
During any period that your employee is on Additional Adoption Leave but not receiving any adoption pay - eg during the last 13 weeks of Additional Adoption Leave - you do not have to make any employer contributions to an occupational pension scheme unless the contract of employment provides otherwise.
If the occupational pension scheme rules require employee contributions to continue during Statutory Adoption Leave, their contributions should be based on the amount of statutory and/or enhanced adoption pay they are receiving.
Employee contributions will therefore stop during any period of unpaid adoption leave - eg during the last 13 weeks of Additional Adoption Leave - but the occupational pension scheme rules may allow them to still make voluntary contributions.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Making reasonable contact with an employee during Statutory Adoption Leave.
During the Statutory Adoption Leave period, as an employer, you can make reasonable contact with an employee during their leave period - and they can choose to make contact with you.
In addition, an employee can come to work as a way of keeping in touch with workplace developments.
Employers can make reasonable contact with the employee on adoption leave by any means, eg telephone, email, letter, or a meeting in the workplace.
The frequency and nature of any contact with them will depend on things like:
What amount of contact is reasonable depends on the employee and whether they prefer to have frequent or minimal contact with you and the workplace issues to be discussed. You should discuss this with your employee before the Statutory Adoption Leave period begins, as part of your planning for the employee's Statutory Adoption Leave.
Remember that you must keep an employee informed of promotion opportunities and other information relating to their job that they would normally be made aware of if they were at work, eg redundancy situations.
Employees may, in agreement with you, work for up to ten days - known as keeping-in-touch days - under their employment contract during their adoption leave period without it affecting their right to Statutory Adoption Leave or Statutory Adoption Pay.
During keeping-in-touch days, employees can actually carry out work for you. This could be their normal day-to-day work or could, for example, be attending a conference, undertaking training, or attending a team meeting.
Any amount of work done on a keeping-in-touch day counts as one keeping-in-touch day. Therefore, if an employee comes in for a one-hour training session and does no other work that day, they will have used up one of their keeping-in-touch days.
If work on a keeping-in-touch 'day' spans midnight, this counts as one keeping-in-touch day - as long as this is the employee's normal working pattern.
You and the employee should agree on how much you will pay them for a keeping-in-touch day - this could be set out in their employment contract or you may decide on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. When exercising discretion, caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
If the employee is receiving Statutory Adoption Pay when they work a keeping-in-touch day, you must continue to pay their Statutory Adoption Pay for that week.
If the employee does more than ten days' work for you in their Statutory Adoption Pay period, they are not entitled to Statutory Adoption Pay for any week in which they work if they have already worked ten keeping-in-touch days. You do not have to pay them Statutory Adoption Pay for any week in which they have worked both the last of their keeping-in-touch days and any additional days.
The Statutory Adoption Pay the employee receives for the week in which they work a keeping-in-touch day can count towards any contractual pay you agree with them for working that keeping-in-touch day. However, you could agree that they will receive their normal daily rate in addition to the Statutory Adoption Pay for that week.
Whatever the arrangement, you can still continue to recover Statutory Adoption Pay from HM Revenue & Customs as normal - see adoption pay.
You will need to comply with your statutory obligations, such as paying at least the national minimum wage and ensuring women and men receive equal pay for work of equal value. See National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - rates and overview.
An employee can only work a keeping-in-touch day if they want to and you agree to it - you cannot make an employee work a keeping-in-touch day against their wishes, nor can the employee insist they work a keeping-in-touch day if you don't agree to it.
It is unlawful for you to treat an employee unfairly or dismiss them because they:
If an employee believes that you have treated them unfairly or dismissed them under these circumstances, they may do either of the following:
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Notification from employees regarding changes to their return date or if they don't intend to return to work at all.
Unless the employee has notified you otherwise, the date on which they return to work will normally be the first working day 52 weeks after their Statutory Adoption Leave began.
If an employee wishes to return to work before the planned return date (usually the date you confirmed to them before they went on leave), they must give you notice at least eight weeks before their new return date - although you can accept less or no notice .
For example, if an employee was due to return to work after 52 weeks Statutory Adoption Leave on 1 August, but then decided to return to work after 39 weeks of leave on 9 May, they would need to give you eight weeks' notice of the new date, ie by 14 March.
Note that if you didn't provide appropriate notification of when their adoption leave should end, the employee does not have to give you eight weeks' notice - see UK adoptions: notification and confirmation of adoption leave.
If the employee attempts to return to work earlier than planned without giving you notice, you can postpone their return until after the eight weeks have elapsed.
However, you may not postpone their return to a date later than the end of their 52-week Statutory Adoption Leave period.
If the employee still comes to work during the period of postponement, you do not have to pay them.
If an employee wishes to return to work after the planned return date, they should give you notice of this new date of return at least eight weeks before the originally planned return date.
For example, if an employee was due to return to work at the end of their Ordinary Adoption Leave (ie after 26 weeks) on 1 October but - while on leave - decides that they wish to take their full entitlement of 52 weeks, they must notify you of this eight weeks before 1 October, ie by 6 August.
An employee who does not wish to return to work after their Statutory Adoption Leave must give you notice of this. This will be the usual notice of resignation as required by their employment contract.
However, as long as they specify the date on which they wish to terminate the contract (eg the date they were due back at work after Statutory Adoption Leave), their adoption leave continues.
In addition, if they terminate their contract before the end of their Statutory Adoption Pay period, you must continue to pay them Statutory Adoption Pay, provided they have not started work for another employer.
Employees who don't return to work are not required to pay back any statutory adoption pay they have received. See adoption pay.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Whether or not an employee has the automatic right to return to the same job.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job that they had before going on Statutory Adoption Leave if they take only Ordinary Adoption Leave, ie the initial 26-week period of leave. The rules are different where an employee takes all or some of their Additional Adoption Leave, ie the second 26-week period of leave.
An employee who returns to work during, or at the end of, their Ordinary Adoption Leave is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent unless a redundancy situation has arisen.
If you prevent an employee from returning to work, they may make a complaint of unfair dismissal to an industrial tribunal.
If they return to work but you don't give them their old job back, they may do either of the following:
See adoption leave and protection against detriment or dismissal.
An employee who returns to work during or at the end of their Additional Adoption Leave period is entitled to return to the same job on the same terms and conditions of employment as if they had not been absent.
However, if it is not reasonably practicable for you to let them return to their old job, you should offer them a job:
If you offer the employee a job that fulfils the criteria above and they unreasonably refuse it, they will have effectively resigned.
If you offer the employee a job that doesn't fulfil the criteria, they may do either of the following:
You should try to consult with employees during their Statutory Adoption Leave about any proposed changes to their job in preparation for their return. See the page in this guide on reasonable contact and work during adoption leave.
Employees who qualify for parental leave may take some of this leave immediately following the end of their Statutory Adoption Leave.
An employee is entitled to return to the same job as before if the parental leave meets both of the following conditions:
If the parental leave period is longer than four weeks and/or is preceded by a period of Additional Adoption Leave, the employee is treated as though they were returning to work after Additional Adoption Leave.
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
An employee on Statutory Adoption Leave is entitled to benefit from any general improvements to the rate of pay, or other terms and conditions, which are introduced for their grade or class of work - as if they hadn't been away.
Providing they meet the qualifying criteria, an employee returning to work may make a request to work flexibly, eg to adjust their start or finish times, work from home, or do part-time hours. Read more on flexible working: the law and best practice.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
You must not unfairly treat or dismiss employees because they are taking, took, or seeking to take Statutory Adoption Leave.
Employees are protected from suffering a detriment or dismissal for taking or seeking to take, Statutory Adoption Leave.
You must not subject an employee to any detriment by acting, or deliberately failing to act, because they:
Examples of detrimental treatment include denial of promotion, facilities, or training opportunities that you would normally have made available to the employee.
If an employee believes you have treated them unfairly under these circumstances, they may:
If a redundancy situation arises at any stage during an employee's adoption leave, you may not be able to continue to employ them under their existing contract of employment.
In these circumstances, an employee has the right to be offered (before that contract ends) any suitable alternative vacancy, where one is available. This includes a vacancy with an associated employer or with a successor to the original employer.
The new job must start immediately after the end of the original one and must both:
If you fail to comply with these requirements and dismiss the employee, the dismissal will be automatically unfair if the reason or principal reason for the dismissal is redundancy.
If you end up making an employee on adoption leave redundant because you had no suitable alternative work to offer them, the dismissal may be potentially fair.
Note that, on dismissal, the employee's adoption leave period comes to an end, but their entitlement to Statutory Adoption Pay continues until the end of the 39-week Statutory Adoption Pay period (if it hasn't already ended) or they start working for another employer, whichever is earlier.
The dismissal of an employee will automatically be an unfair dismissal if you dismiss them - or select them for redundancy in preference to other comparable employees - solely or mainly because they:
However, a dismissal may be potentially fair if, on the employee's return from additional adoption leave, you:
See returning to work from adoption leave.
It is still possible for you to fairly dismiss an employee who is on - or who has recently returned from - adoption leave if the reason for the dismissal is not:
You must comply with the correct statutory procedure when dismissing employees.
You can fairly dismiss an employee you took on to replace an employee on adoption leave. However, make sure you inform them that their position is only for adoption cover before they start and that the arrangement with you will end when the individual returns from leave. You should also comply with the statutory dismissal procedure when ending the employment.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).
Who qualifies for Statutory Adoption Pay, and how employers may recover payments and offer enhanced adoption pay.
Statutory Adoption Pay is paid for 39 weeks and usually covers the first 39 weeks of an employee's adoption leave.
There are different eligibility criteria for Statutory Adoption Pay for UK and overseas adoptions. See adoption pay and leave: eligibility.
In Northern Ireland, in exceptional cases, adoption pay may be payable where an adoption agency places a child with approved foster parents who are also approved, prospective adopters. The adoption agency will supply the foster parents with correspondence which can be shown to the employer explaining that they have met the relevant criteria for being matched with the child for the purposes of adoption leave and pay, and other entitlements open to adopters. The usual notification and service criteria will apply.
For the first six weeks, you must pay your employee Statutory Adoption Pay a weekly rate equal to 90% of their average weekly earnings.
For the next 33 weeks, you must pay them the lower of the following:
You can recover some or all of your Statutory Adoption Pay payments from HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) - the proportion you can recover depends on the size of your annual National Insurance Contributions liability.
If you wish, you can offer enhanced adoption pay arrangements to attract and retain employees which are more generous than the statutory entitlements. For example, you could:
You could change the qualification criteria for these adoption pay enhancements, eg the employee needs a year's continuous service.
You can offer these enhanced adoption pay arrangements either as a contractual right or on a discretionary, case-by-case basis. When exercising discretion caution should be taken to avoid claims of unfair treatment or discrimination.
You can still recover from HMRC the Statutory Adoption Pay portion of any enhanced adoption pay.
See the Invest Northern Ireland Employers' Handbook guidance on adoption leave and pay (PDF, 48K).