

Understand what counts as pay and what doesn't when paying a worker.
The following counts as pay:
Pay does not include:
Obligations for employers to issue itemised pay statements and penalties for not giving notice of variations in fixed deductions in staff pay.
As an employer, you are legally obliged to give each employee a written itemised pay statement, usually known as a payslip or wage slip. You must issue it at, or before, the time you pay your employee.
This right to receive an itemised pay statement does not apply to:
An itemised pay statement or pay slip must show:
A pay statement does not have to include the amount and purpose of every separate fixed deduction every time.
However, if you don't issue a payslip that does this, you must give the employee a standing written statement of fixed deductions at least once every 12 months.
This must state for each item deducted:
You must give the employee this statement at, or before, the time of issuing the first pay statement that quotes the total figure of fixed deductions.
If there is any change to an employee's fixed deductions, you must give them:
If a dispute occurs in the workplace between you and your employee, you may wish to seek advice and assistance from the Labour Relations Agency (LRA). The LRA may be able to help with resolving disputes before they escalate into a tribunal claim.
An employee may complain to an industrial tribunal where you have:
Employees must make their complaint while employed by you or within three months of leaving your employment.
An industrial tribunal cannot deal with a question that is only about the accuracy of an amount in a statement.
A tribunal may award an employee compensation at its discretion if it finds that you made un-notified deductions of pay, ie deductions that did not appear on a pay statement or a standing statement.
The discretionary amount awarded will not exceed the total of the un-notified deductions during the 13 weeks immediately before the date the employee made their application to the tribunal.
All un-notified deductions enter into this calculation, whether or not they were made in breach of a contract of employment.
The LRA provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
Employee entitlement to statutory payments.
An individual may be entitled to a statutory payment if they:
To qualify for statutory payments, the individual must be an employed earner, ie someone working for an employer who is liable to pay secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions on their wages or salary.
To be eligible for statutory maternity, statutory paternity, statutory adoption, statutory parental bereavement, or shared parental leave and pay, the individual must:
Under certain conditions, you may have to pay statutory sick pay to an employee.
This is the minimum level of payment you must make to someone who is off work through illness. Their contract with you may also entitle them to more than this.
The passing into law of the Domestic Abuse (Safe Leave) Act (Northern Ireland 2022 will mean that employers in Northern Ireland will have the duty to offer at least 10 days of paid leave for victims of domestic abuse each leave year for the purposes of dealing with issues related to domestic abuse.
Although the commencement date of the legislation is yet to be confirmed, employers can take steps within their businesses to prepare for it by creating an environment where employees feel safe to disclose that they are experiencing domestic abuse. See workplace policy on domestic and sexual abuse.
Find out more about qualifying for:
You can also call the HMRC Employer Helpline on Tel 0300 200 3200.
What guarantee pay is and who is eligible for it.
You may have to pay your employees a guarantee payment if you cannot provide them with employment on a day when they would normally work for you under their contract of employment.
This is to compensate for the loss, through no fault of their own, of what they would have earned in normal circumstances.
Individuals are entitled to guarantee pay if they meet the following conditions:
You do not have to pay guarantee pay to excluded employees. These are:
How to work out the amount of guarantee pay you must pay your staff and what the exceptions are.
To calculate guarantee pay, multiply the number of hours your employee would normally have worked on the day in question (as stated in their terms and conditions of employment) by their hourly rate.
Statutory guarantee pay is subject to an upper limit of £39 per day. This amount changes every year. Statutory entitlement is limited to five days in any three-month period. This entitlement is reduced pro rata for employees who work fewer than five days a week.
You do not have to pay guarantee pay for voluntary overtime.
The Department for the Economy can grant an exemption from the statutory provisions if you have your own collective agreement. For this agreement to be valid, all parties to the agreement must be making the application for exemption, ie you and your employee, and the guarantee payment must be as favourable overall to your employees as the statutory provisions.
The agreement must also provide a complaints procedure that either includes a right to independent arbitration in the event of a deadlock or specifies that your employee may complain to an industrial tribunal - in which case the tribunal would have jurisdiction over the agreement.
The Employment Rights (NI Order) 1996 also provides for an exemption being granted by the Department of Agriculture, Environment & Rural Affairs (DAERA) where there is an Agricultural wages order under which employees to whom the order relates have a right to guaranteed remuneration.
You do not have to pay statutory guarantee pay on top of any contractual entitlement.
It is unlawful to dismiss an employee for seeking guarantee pay.
It is also unlawful not to pay guarantee pay to an employee if they are entitled to it.
In both of these cases, the employee can complain to an industrial tribunal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Arbitration Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
You must ensure you pay your workers at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage depending on their eligibility.
Most workers who are above compulsory school age must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage.
The rate you must pay varies depending on the worker's circumstances.
To find out how to calculate a worker's pay for the purpose of comparing it to the appropriate minimum wage rate, see National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - calculating minimum wage pay.
Employees' entitlement to paid annual leave.
A worker is entitled to take at least 5.6 weeks paid annual leave.
This is equivalent to, for example:
The minimum paid annual leave entitlement can include bank and public holidays.
Workers have no statutory right to take a day's leave on any bank or public holiday or to higher rates of pay if they work on such days.
You must set out in an employee's written statement of employment their holiday entitlement, including arrangements for bank and public holidays, and holiday pay.
Workers must take at least four weeks' annual leave. Any additional leave may be carried over to the following leave year where this is agreed by you and your worker.
The only time you can make a payment in lieu of any outstanding holiday is when a worker's employment ends.
The rate of holiday pay is generally the normal rate for the worker. So for those workers who are paid monthly, their annual salary is divided into 12 equal payments and when they take a holiday it has no effect on their pay slip.
Case law has determined that guaranteed and non-guaranteed overtime should be considered when calculating a worker's statutory holiday pay. Further, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland determined that where voluntary overtime constitutes part of an employee's 'normal working week' - this also may need to be taken into account when calculating holiday pay.
You only have to work out a special payment where your workers have varying pay rates, such as piece work. In those cases, the holiday pay will be equal to the average rate over the 12 weeks before the holiday.
Any week in which no pay was due should be replaced by the last previous week in which pay was received to bring the total to twelve.
This only applies to the statutory holiday periods. If you offer extra leave over and above the 5.6 weeks (including bank and public holidays) the rate of pay for these can be whatever is agreed with your employees.
It is unlawful not to pay a worker while they are on holiday and instead include an amount for holiday pay in the hourly rate of pay - something known as 'rolled-up holiday pay'.
You must always pay a worker their normal pay while they are actually taking their leave.
If your workers do casual work with no normal hours, for example, on a zero-hours contract, the holiday pay of each worker will be based on the average pay they got over the previous 12 weeks.
These should be weeks in which they were paid. If they were not paid in one of those 12 weeks, because they did not work, the last paid week before that should be used to calculate their holiday pay.
Recent case law has determined workers employed on a continuous contract throughout the year, and who work for varying hours during certain weeks of the year, such as those who work only term-time, are entitled to 5.6 weeks of leave each year. This entitlement applies regardless of the fact that there are some weeks in the year when they do not work.
In such instances holiday pay is calculated by averaging the pay received during the 12 weeks prior to the commencement of their leave. If there are weeks during the 12-week period where no pay was received, these weeks are disregarded and the employer must count back to include a total of 12 weeks in which pay was received.
Although there may be times when a part-year worker receives a higher payment than a full-time worker - this is compliant with the Part-Time Workers (Prevention of Less favourable Treatment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2000, as the part-time worker is not being treated less favourably. There is no legislative provision to prevent part-time workers from being treated more favourably.
Legally required deductions such as National Insurance and income tax.
You must not make deductions from a worker's pay unless:
You don't always have to meet these conditions, for example, when:
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) of the Department for Communities (DfC) may ask you to make deductions from an employee's pay for child maintenance purposes. They may issue you with a deduction from the earnings order and ask you to establish a regular pattern of payments. See how to make child maintenance deductions from an employee's pay.
You may be asked as an employer to deduct benefit overpayments, including social fund loans, that an employee owes the Department for Communities (DfC) from their pay. Read more on Direct Earnings Attachments: making deductions from an employee's pay.
If your workers do retail work, you may make deductions from wages to recover cash shortages or stock deficiencies only if, in addition to meeting the above conditions, you:
You should ensure that any deductions for shortages or stock deficiencies are not made unless you have conducted a thorough investigation to establish that the employee is liable for these. You should also take care when making any deductions not to breach minimum wage, as deductions must not reduce your employee's pay below the current minimum wage rate.
The Department for Communities will write to you if you need to make DEA deductions for an employee.
Difficulty repaying a benefit or Welfare Supplementary Payment overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support Loan?
If your employee is having difficulty repaying their benefit overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support loan, they should act as soon as possible. Even if they have contacted the Department for Communities (DfC) before, they can get in touch to ask them to consider reducing the amount they repay.
If an employee is struggling financially or knows their repayments are no longer affordable, they can ask for them to be reduced by contacting Debt Management.
Further information is also available on financial support and advice from DfC.
As an employer, you may be asked to make deductions from an employee's pay towards benefit overpayments and Social Fund loans that the employee owes to the Department for Communities (DfC). This method of recovery is known as a Direct Earnings Attachment or DEA.
The DfC Debt Management will write to you with an instruction to set up and maintain a DEA if any of your employees are affected.
Any instruction you receive from the DfC will state the total amount to be recovered from the employee's salary. It is important to note that this is the total amount owed to the DfC and not a deduction amount which must be calculated as a percentage of net earnings. To operate the DEA, you will need to take the following steps:
You must keep a record of deductions and tell the DfC when an employee leaves your company.
You could be fined up to £1,000 if you don't make DEA deductions when requested to.
Download Direct Earnings Attachment employer guidance (PDF, 1.0MB).
You can also call the employer helpline if you have questions about how to run a DEA or pay the DfC:
0800 587 1322 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 4pm)
There are two deduction percentage rates which may be used for calculation - Standard Rate and Higher Rate.
The instruction from DfC Debt Management will let you know which of these rates to apply. The rate may change throughout the life of the DEA, from Standard to Higher and vice versa, and you will be notified of this by letter.
To calculate the deductions from your employee's salary, for each salary cycle you'll have to:
Note: if you are calculating a DEA based on a daily rate, you must also multiply the daily rate figure by the number of days in the pay period.
If payments are made every two or four weeks, calculate weekly pay and deduct the percentage in the table.
If the total of all deductions is more than 40% of the employee's net earnings, the DEA must be adjusted.
AMOUNT OF NET EARNINGS (Net earnings are gross pay, less income tax, Class 1 National Insurance, and superannuation contributions) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Standard) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Higher) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Daily Earnings |
Weekly Earnings |
Monthly Earnings |
||
Up to £15 |
Up to £100 |
Up to £430 |
Nil |
5% |
Between £15.01 and £23 |
Between £100.01 and £160 |
Between £430.01 and £690 |
3% |
6% |
Between £23.01 and £32 |
Between £160.01 and £220 |
Between £690.01 and £950 |
5% |
10% |
Between £32.01 and £39 |
Between £220.01 and £270 |
Between £950.01 and £1,160 |
7% |
14% |
Between £39.01 and £54 |
Between £270.01 and £375 |
Between £1,160.01 and £1,615 |
11% |
22% |
Between £54.01 and £75 |
Between £375.01 and £520 |
Between £1,615.01 and £2,240 |
15% |
30% |
£75.01 or more |
£520.01 or more |
£2,240.01 or more |
20% |
40% |
When calculating DEA payments, you should include as earnings:
Don't count:
The supporting payment schedule for a DEA that must be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account.
The Department for Communities (DfC) requires that a supporting payment schedule for Direct Earnings Attachment (DEA) be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account. This schedule is only required if you are making one overall payment in respect of several employees. However, if you are making a single DEA payment by cheque, you must send a payment schedule.
For a single DEA payment, please ensure that you include your employee's National Insurance number and not their name.
DfC Debt Management has introduced an email route to receive payment schedules from employers, this is the preferred way for payment schedules to be sent.
Download the payment schedule template for DEA (XLSX, 82K).
For data security reasons the data required for the email payment schedule is slightly different to that on the paper schedule. By restricting the data recorded on the email payment schedule DfC Debt Management will still have enough information to correctly allocate payments to our customer records, whilst minimising the risk of personal data being fraudulently used should the email fall into the hands of a third party. Schedules do not need to be encrypted before emailing.
The postal route for sending payment schedules remains in place and a schedule template for use when forwarding schedules is available in appendix 2 of the DEA: a guide for employers (PDF, 1.0MB).
Deductions to make from outstanding pay owed when an employee leaves the business.
When a worker leaves your employment, you must give them:
If the worker leaves before or during their statutory maternity or adoption pay period, you must also start paying - or continue to pay - them statutory maternity or adoption pay.
You could also give them:
You must deduct the following items from what you owe the worker:
You might also need to consider deductions in respect of matters such as:
Understand what counts as pay and what doesn't when paying a worker.
The following counts as pay:
Pay does not include:
Obligations for employers to issue itemised pay statements and penalties for not giving notice of variations in fixed deductions in staff pay.
As an employer, you are legally obliged to give each employee a written itemised pay statement, usually known as a payslip or wage slip. You must issue it at, or before, the time you pay your employee.
This right to receive an itemised pay statement does not apply to:
An itemised pay statement or pay slip must show:
A pay statement does not have to include the amount and purpose of every separate fixed deduction every time.
However, if you don't issue a payslip that does this, you must give the employee a standing written statement of fixed deductions at least once every 12 months.
This must state for each item deducted:
You must give the employee this statement at, or before, the time of issuing the first pay statement that quotes the total figure of fixed deductions.
If there is any change to an employee's fixed deductions, you must give them:
If a dispute occurs in the workplace between you and your employee, you may wish to seek advice and assistance from the Labour Relations Agency (LRA). The LRA may be able to help with resolving disputes before they escalate into a tribunal claim.
An employee may complain to an industrial tribunal where you have:
Employees must make their complaint while employed by you or within three months of leaving your employment.
An industrial tribunal cannot deal with a question that is only about the accuracy of an amount in a statement.
A tribunal may award an employee compensation at its discretion if it finds that you made un-notified deductions of pay, ie deductions that did not appear on a pay statement or a standing statement.
The discretionary amount awarded will not exceed the total of the un-notified deductions during the 13 weeks immediately before the date the employee made their application to the tribunal.
All un-notified deductions enter into this calculation, whether or not they were made in breach of a contract of employment.
The LRA provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
Employee entitlement to statutory payments.
An individual may be entitled to a statutory payment if they:
To qualify for statutory payments, the individual must be an employed earner, ie someone working for an employer who is liable to pay secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions on their wages or salary.
To be eligible for statutory maternity, statutory paternity, statutory adoption, statutory parental bereavement, or shared parental leave and pay, the individual must:
Under certain conditions, you may have to pay statutory sick pay to an employee.
This is the minimum level of payment you must make to someone who is off work through illness. Their contract with you may also entitle them to more than this.
The passing into law of the Domestic Abuse (Safe Leave) Act (Northern Ireland 2022 will mean that employers in Northern Ireland will have the duty to offer at least 10 days of paid leave for victims of domestic abuse each leave year for the purposes of dealing with issues related to domestic abuse.
Although the commencement date of the legislation is yet to be confirmed, employers can take steps within their businesses to prepare for it by creating an environment where employees feel safe to disclose that they are experiencing domestic abuse. See workplace policy on domestic and sexual abuse.
Find out more about qualifying for:
You can also call the HMRC Employer Helpline on Tel 0300 200 3200.
What guarantee pay is and who is eligible for it.
You may have to pay your employees a guarantee payment if you cannot provide them with employment on a day when they would normally work for you under their contract of employment.
This is to compensate for the loss, through no fault of their own, of what they would have earned in normal circumstances.
Individuals are entitled to guarantee pay if they meet the following conditions:
You do not have to pay guarantee pay to excluded employees. These are:
How to work out the amount of guarantee pay you must pay your staff and what the exceptions are.
To calculate guarantee pay, multiply the number of hours your employee would normally have worked on the day in question (as stated in their terms and conditions of employment) by their hourly rate.
Statutory guarantee pay is subject to an upper limit of £39 per day. This amount changes every year. Statutory entitlement is limited to five days in any three-month period. This entitlement is reduced pro rata for employees who work fewer than five days a week.
You do not have to pay guarantee pay for voluntary overtime.
The Department for the Economy can grant an exemption from the statutory provisions if you have your own collective agreement. For this agreement to be valid, all parties to the agreement must be making the application for exemption, ie you and your employee, and the guarantee payment must be as favourable overall to your employees as the statutory provisions.
The agreement must also provide a complaints procedure that either includes a right to independent arbitration in the event of a deadlock or specifies that your employee may complain to an industrial tribunal - in which case the tribunal would have jurisdiction over the agreement.
The Employment Rights (NI Order) 1996 also provides for an exemption being granted by the Department of Agriculture, Environment & Rural Affairs (DAERA) where there is an Agricultural wages order under which employees to whom the order relates have a right to guaranteed remuneration.
You do not have to pay statutory guarantee pay on top of any contractual entitlement.
It is unlawful to dismiss an employee for seeking guarantee pay.
It is also unlawful not to pay guarantee pay to an employee if they are entitled to it.
In both of these cases, the employee can complain to an industrial tribunal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Arbitration Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
You must ensure you pay your workers at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage depending on their eligibility.
Most workers who are above compulsory school age must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage.
The rate you must pay varies depending on the worker's circumstances.
To find out how to calculate a worker's pay for the purpose of comparing it to the appropriate minimum wage rate, see National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - calculating minimum wage pay.
Employees' entitlement to paid annual leave.
A worker is entitled to take at least 5.6 weeks paid annual leave.
This is equivalent to, for example:
The minimum paid annual leave entitlement can include bank and public holidays.
Workers have no statutory right to take a day's leave on any bank or public holiday or to higher rates of pay if they work on such days.
You must set out in an employee's written statement of employment their holiday entitlement, including arrangements for bank and public holidays, and holiday pay.
Workers must take at least four weeks' annual leave. Any additional leave may be carried over to the following leave year where this is agreed by you and your worker.
The only time you can make a payment in lieu of any outstanding holiday is when a worker's employment ends.
The rate of holiday pay is generally the normal rate for the worker. So for those workers who are paid monthly, their annual salary is divided into 12 equal payments and when they take a holiday it has no effect on their pay slip.
Case law has determined that guaranteed and non-guaranteed overtime should be considered when calculating a worker's statutory holiday pay. Further, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland determined that where voluntary overtime constitutes part of an employee's 'normal working week' - this also may need to be taken into account when calculating holiday pay.
You only have to work out a special payment where your workers have varying pay rates, such as piece work. In those cases, the holiday pay will be equal to the average rate over the 12 weeks before the holiday.
Any week in which no pay was due should be replaced by the last previous week in which pay was received to bring the total to twelve.
This only applies to the statutory holiday periods. If you offer extra leave over and above the 5.6 weeks (including bank and public holidays) the rate of pay for these can be whatever is agreed with your employees.
It is unlawful not to pay a worker while they are on holiday and instead include an amount for holiday pay in the hourly rate of pay - something known as 'rolled-up holiday pay'.
You must always pay a worker their normal pay while they are actually taking their leave.
If your workers do casual work with no normal hours, for example, on a zero-hours contract, the holiday pay of each worker will be based on the average pay they got over the previous 12 weeks.
These should be weeks in which they were paid. If they were not paid in one of those 12 weeks, because they did not work, the last paid week before that should be used to calculate their holiday pay.
Recent case law has determined workers employed on a continuous contract throughout the year, and who work for varying hours during certain weeks of the year, such as those who work only term-time, are entitled to 5.6 weeks of leave each year. This entitlement applies regardless of the fact that there are some weeks in the year when they do not work.
In such instances holiday pay is calculated by averaging the pay received during the 12 weeks prior to the commencement of their leave. If there are weeks during the 12-week period where no pay was received, these weeks are disregarded and the employer must count back to include a total of 12 weeks in which pay was received.
Although there may be times when a part-year worker receives a higher payment than a full-time worker - this is compliant with the Part-Time Workers (Prevention of Less favourable Treatment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2000, as the part-time worker is not being treated less favourably. There is no legislative provision to prevent part-time workers from being treated more favourably.
Legally required deductions such as National Insurance and income tax.
You must not make deductions from a worker's pay unless:
You don't always have to meet these conditions, for example, when:
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) of the Department for Communities (DfC) may ask you to make deductions from an employee's pay for child maintenance purposes. They may issue you with a deduction from the earnings order and ask you to establish a regular pattern of payments. See how to make child maintenance deductions from an employee's pay.
You may be asked as an employer to deduct benefit overpayments, including social fund loans, that an employee owes the Department for Communities (DfC) from their pay. Read more on Direct Earnings Attachments: making deductions from an employee's pay.
If your workers do retail work, you may make deductions from wages to recover cash shortages or stock deficiencies only if, in addition to meeting the above conditions, you:
You should ensure that any deductions for shortages or stock deficiencies are not made unless you have conducted a thorough investigation to establish that the employee is liable for these. You should also take care when making any deductions not to breach minimum wage, as deductions must not reduce your employee's pay below the current minimum wage rate.
The Department for Communities will write to you if you need to make DEA deductions for an employee.
Difficulty repaying a benefit or Welfare Supplementary Payment overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support Loan?
If your employee is having difficulty repaying their benefit overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support loan, they should act as soon as possible. Even if they have contacted the Department for Communities (DfC) before, they can get in touch to ask them to consider reducing the amount they repay.
If an employee is struggling financially or knows their repayments are no longer affordable, they can ask for them to be reduced by contacting Debt Management.
Further information is also available on financial support and advice from DfC.
As an employer, you may be asked to make deductions from an employee's pay towards benefit overpayments and Social Fund loans that the employee owes to the Department for Communities (DfC). This method of recovery is known as a Direct Earnings Attachment or DEA.
The DfC Debt Management will write to you with an instruction to set up and maintain a DEA if any of your employees are affected.
Any instruction you receive from the DfC will state the total amount to be recovered from the employee's salary. It is important to note that this is the total amount owed to the DfC and not a deduction amount which must be calculated as a percentage of net earnings. To operate the DEA, you will need to take the following steps:
You must keep a record of deductions and tell the DfC when an employee leaves your company.
You could be fined up to £1,000 if you don't make DEA deductions when requested to.
Download Direct Earnings Attachment employer guidance (PDF, 1.0MB).
You can also call the employer helpline if you have questions about how to run a DEA or pay the DfC:
0800 587 1322 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 4pm)
There are two deduction percentage rates which may be used for calculation - Standard Rate and Higher Rate.
The instruction from DfC Debt Management will let you know which of these rates to apply. The rate may change throughout the life of the DEA, from Standard to Higher and vice versa, and you will be notified of this by letter.
To calculate the deductions from your employee's salary, for each salary cycle you'll have to:
Note: if you are calculating a DEA based on a daily rate, you must also multiply the daily rate figure by the number of days in the pay period.
If payments are made every two or four weeks, calculate weekly pay and deduct the percentage in the table.
If the total of all deductions is more than 40% of the employee's net earnings, the DEA must be adjusted.
AMOUNT OF NET EARNINGS (Net earnings are gross pay, less income tax, Class 1 National Insurance, and superannuation contributions) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Standard) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Higher) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Daily Earnings |
Weekly Earnings |
Monthly Earnings |
||
Up to £15 |
Up to £100 |
Up to £430 |
Nil |
5% |
Between £15.01 and £23 |
Between £100.01 and £160 |
Between £430.01 and £690 |
3% |
6% |
Between £23.01 and £32 |
Between £160.01 and £220 |
Between £690.01 and £950 |
5% |
10% |
Between £32.01 and £39 |
Between £220.01 and £270 |
Between £950.01 and £1,160 |
7% |
14% |
Between £39.01 and £54 |
Between £270.01 and £375 |
Between £1,160.01 and £1,615 |
11% |
22% |
Between £54.01 and £75 |
Between £375.01 and £520 |
Between £1,615.01 and £2,240 |
15% |
30% |
£75.01 or more |
£520.01 or more |
£2,240.01 or more |
20% |
40% |
When calculating DEA payments, you should include as earnings:
Don't count:
The supporting payment schedule for a DEA that must be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account.
The Department for Communities (DfC) requires that a supporting payment schedule for Direct Earnings Attachment (DEA) be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account. This schedule is only required if you are making one overall payment in respect of several employees. However, if you are making a single DEA payment by cheque, you must send a payment schedule.
For a single DEA payment, please ensure that you include your employee's National Insurance number and not their name.
DfC Debt Management has introduced an email route to receive payment schedules from employers, this is the preferred way for payment schedules to be sent.
Download the payment schedule template for DEA (XLSX, 82K).
For data security reasons the data required for the email payment schedule is slightly different to that on the paper schedule. By restricting the data recorded on the email payment schedule DfC Debt Management will still have enough information to correctly allocate payments to our customer records, whilst minimising the risk of personal data being fraudulently used should the email fall into the hands of a third party. Schedules do not need to be encrypted before emailing.
The postal route for sending payment schedules remains in place and a schedule template for use when forwarding schedules is available in appendix 2 of the DEA: a guide for employers (PDF, 1.0MB).
Deductions to make from outstanding pay owed when an employee leaves the business.
When a worker leaves your employment, you must give them:
If the worker leaves before or during their statutory maternity or adoption pay period, you must also start paying - or continue to pay - them statutory maternity or adoption pay.
You could also give them:
You must deduct the following items from what you owe the worker:
You might also need to consider deductions in respect of matters such as:
Understand what counts as pay and what doesn't when paying a worker.
The following counts as pay:
Pay does not include:
Obligations for employers to issue itemised pay statements and penalties for not giving notice of variations in fixed deductions in staff pay.
As an employer, you are legally obliged to give each employee a written itemised pay statement, usually known as a payslip or wage slip. You must issue it at, or before, the time you pay your employee.
This right to receive an itemised pay statement does not apply to:
An itemised pay statement or pay slip must show:
A pay statement does not have to include the amount and purpose of every separate fixed deduction every time.
However, if you don't issue a payslip that does this, you must give the employee a standing written statement of fixed deductions at least once every 12 months.
This must state for each item deducted:
You must give the employee this statement at, or before, the time of issuing the first pay statement that quotes the total figure of fixed deductions.
If there is any change to an employee's fixed deductions, you must give them:
If a dispute occurs in the workplace between you and your employee, you may wish to seek advice and assistance from the Labour Relations Agency (LRA). The LRA may be able to help with resolving disputes before they escalate into a tribunal claim.
An employee may complain to an industrial tribunal where you have:
Employees must make their complaint while employed by you or within three months of leaving your employment.
An industrial tribunal cannot deal with a question that is only about the accuracy of an amount in a statement.
A tribunal may award an employee compensation at its discretion if it finds that you made un-notified deductions of pay, ie deductions that did not appear on a pay statement or a standing statement.
The discretionary amount awarded will not exceed the total of the un-notified deductions during the 13 weeks immediately before the date the employee made their application to the tribunal.
All un-notified deductions enter into this calculation, whether or not they were made in breach of a contract of employment.
The LRA provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
Employee entitlement to statutory payments.
An individual may be entitled to a statutory payment if they:
To qualify for statutory payments, the individual must be an employed earner, ie someone working for an employer who is liable to pay secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions on their wages or salary.
To be eligible for statutory maternity, statutory paternity, statutory adoption, statutory parental bereavement, or shared parental leave and pay, the individual must:
Under certain conditions, you may have to pay statutory sick pay to an employee.
This is the minimum level of payment you must make to someone who is off work through illness. Their contract with you may also entitle them to more than this.
The passing into law of the Domestic Abuse (Safe Leave) Act (Northern Ireland 2022 will mean that employers in Northern Ireland will have the duty to offer at least 10 days of paid leave for victims of domestic abuse each leave year for the purposes of dealing with issues related to domestic abuse.
Although the commencement date of the legislation is yet to be confirmed, employers can take steps within their businesses to prepare for it by creating an environment where employees feel safe to disclose that they are experiencing domestic abuse. See workplace policy on domestic and sexual abuse.
Find out more about qualifying for:
You can also call the HMRC Employer Helpline on Tel 0300 200 3200.
What guarantee pay is and who is eligible for it.
You may have to pay your employees a guarantee payment if you cannot provide them with employment on a day when they would normally work for you under their contract of employment.
This is to compensate for the loss, through no fault of their own, of what they would have earned in normal circumstances.
Individuals are entitled to guarantee pay if they meet the following conditions:
You do not have to pay guarantee pay to excluded employees. These are:
How to work out the amount of guarantee pay you must pay your staff and what the exceptions are.
To calculate guarantee pay, multiply the number of hours your employee would normally have worked on the day in question (as stated in their terms and conditions of employment) by their hourly rate.
Statutory guarantee pay is subject to an upper limit of £39 per day. This amount changes every year. Statutory entitlement is limited to five days in any three-month period. This entitlement is reduced pro rata for employees who work fewer than five days a week.
You do not have to pay guarantee pay for voluntary overtime.
The Department for the Economy can grant an exemption from the statutory provisions if you have your own collective agreement. For this agreement to be valid, all parties to the agreement must be making the application for exemption, ie you and your employee, and the guarantee payment must be as favourable overall to your employees as the statutory provisions.
The agreement must also provide a complaints procedure that either includes a right to independent arbitration in the event of a deadlock or specifies that your employee may complain to an industrial tribunal - in which case the tribunal would have jurisdiction over the agreement.
The Employment Rights (NI Order) 1996 also provides for an exemption being granted by the Department of Agriculture, Environment & Rural Affairs (DAERA) where there is an Agricultural wages order under which employees to whom the order relates have a right to guaranteed remuneration.
You do not have to pay statutory guarantee pay on top of any contractual entitlement.
It is unlawful to dismiss an employee for seeking guarantee pay.
It is also unlawful not to pay guarantee pay to an employee if they are entitled to it.
In both of these cases, the employee can complain to an industrial tribunal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Arbitration Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
You must ensure you pay your workers at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage depending on their eligibility.
Most workers who are above compulsory school age must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage.
The rate you must pay varies depending on the worker's circumstances.
To find out how to calculate a worker's pay for the purpose of comparing it to the appropriate minimum wage rate, see National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - calculating minimum wage pay.
Employees' entitlement to paid annual leave.
A worker is entitled to take at least 5.6 weeks paid annual leave.
This is equivalent to, for example:
The minimum paid annual leave entitlement can include bank and public holidays.
Workers have no statutory right to take a day's leave on any bank or public holiday or to higher rates of pay if they work on such days.
You must set out in an employee's written statement of employment their holiday entitlement, including arrangements for bank and public holidays, and holiday pay.
Workers must take at least four weeks' annual leave. Any additional leave may be carried over to the following leave year where this is agreed by you and your worker.
The only time you can make a payment in lieu of any outstanding holiday is when a worker's employment ends.
The rate of holiday pay is generally the normal rate for the worker. So for those workers who are paid monthly, their annual salary is divided into 12 equal payments and when they take a holiday it has no effect on their pay slip.
Case law has determined that guaranteed and non-guaranteed overtime should be considered when calculating a worker's statutory holiday pay. Further, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland determined that where voluntary overtime constitutes part of an employee's 'normal working week' - this also may need to be taken into account when calculating holiday pay.
You only have to work out a special payment where your workers have varying pay rates, such as piece work. In those cases, the holiday pay will be equal to the average rate over the 12 weeks before the holiday.
Any week in which no pay was due should be replaced by the last previous week in which pay was received to bring the total to twelve.
This only applies to the statutory holiday periods. If you offer extra leave over and above the 5.6 weeks (including bank and public holidays) the rate of pay for these can be whatever is agreed with your employees.
It is unlawful not to pay a worker while they are on holiday and instead include an amount for holiday pay in the hourly rate of pay - something known as 'rolled-up holiday pay'.
You must always pay a worker their normal pay while they are actually taking their leave.
If your workers do casual work with no normal hours, for example, on a zero-hours contract, the holiday pay of each worker will be based on the average pay they got over the previous 12 weeks.
These should be weeks in which they were paid. If they were not paid in one of those 12 weeks, because they did not work, the last paid week before that should be used to calculate their holiday pay.
Recent case law has determined workers employed on a continuous contract throughout the year, and who work for varying hours during certain weeks of the year, such as those who work only term-time, are entitled to 5.6 weeks of leave each year. This entitlement applies regardless of the fact that there are some weeks in the year when they do not work.
In such instances holiday pay is calculated by averaging the pay received during the 12 weeks prior to the commencement of their leave. If there are weeks during the 12-week period where no pay was received, these weeks are disregarded and the employer must count back to include a total of 12 weeks in which pay was received.
Although there may be times when a part-year worker receives a higher payment than a full-time worker - this is compliant with the Part-Time Workers (Prevention of Less favourable Treatment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2000, as the part-time worker is not being treated less favourably. There is no legislative provision to prevent part-time workers from being treated more favourably.
Legally required deductions such as National Insurance and income tax.
You must not make deductions from a worker's pay unless:
You don't always have to meet these conditions, for example, when:
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) of the Department for Communities (DfC) may ask you to make deductions from an employee's pay for child maintenance purposes. They may issue you with a deduction from the earnings order and ask you to establish a regular pattern of payments. See how to make child maintenance deductions from an employee's pay.
You may be asked as an employer to deduct benefit overpayments, including social fund loans, that an employee owes the Department for Communities (DfC) from their pay. Read more on Direct Earnings Attachments: making deductions from an employee's pay.
If your workers do retail work, you may make deductions from wages to recover cash shortages or stock deficiencies only if, in addition to meeting the above conditions, you:
You should ensure that any deductions for shortages or stock deficiencies are not made unless you have conducted a thorough investigation to establish that the employee is liable for these. You should also take care when making any deductions not to breach minimum wage, as deductions must not reduce your employee's pay below the current minimum wage rate.
The Department for Communities will write to you if you need to make DEA deductions for an employee.
Difficulty repaying a benefit or Welfare Supplementary Payment overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support Loan?
If your employee is having difficulty repaying their benefit overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support loan, they should act as soon as possible. Even if they have contacted the Department for Communities (DfC) before, they can get in touch to ask them to consider reducing the amount they repay.
If an employee is struggling financially or knows their repayments are no longer affordable, they can ask for them to be reduced by contacting Debt Management.
Further information is also available on financial support and advice from DfC.
As an employer, you may be asked to make deductions from an employee's pay towards benefit overpayments and Social Fund loans that the employee owes to the Department for Communities (DfC). This method of recovery is known as a Direct Earnings Attachment or DEA.
The DfC Debt Management will write to you with an instruction to set up and maintain a DEA if any of your employees are affected.
Any instruction you receive from the DfC will state the total amount to be recovered from the employee's salary. It is important to note that this is the total amount owed to the DfC and not a deduction amount which must be calculated as a percentage of net earnings. To operate the DEA, you will need to take the following steps:
You must keep a record of deductions and tell the DfC when an employee leaves your company.
You could be fined up to £1,000 if you don't make DEA deductions when requested to.
Download Direct Earnings Attachment employer guidance (PDF, 1.0MB).
You can also call the employer helpline if you have questions about how to run a DEA or pay the DfC:
0800 587 1322 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 4pm)
There are two deduction percentage rates which may be used for calculation - Standard Rate and Higher Rate.
The instruction from DfC Debt Management will let you know which of these rates to apply. The rate may change throughout the life of the DEA, from Standard to Higher and vice versa, and you will be notified of this by letter.
To calculate the deductions from your employee's salary, for each salary cycle you'll have to:
Note: if you are calculating a DEA based on a daily rate, you must also multiply the daily rate figure by the number of days in the pay period.
If payments are made every two or four weeks, calculate weekly pay and deduct the percentage in the table.
If the total of all deductions is more than 40% of the employee's net earnings, the DEA must be adjusted.
AMOUNT OF NET EARNINGS (Net earnings are gross pay, less income tax, Class 1 National Insurance, and superannuation contributions) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Standard) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Higher) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Daily Earnings |
Weekly Earnings |
Monthly Earnings |
||
Up to £15 |
Up to £100 |
Up to £430 |
Nil |
5% |
Between £15.01 and £23 |
Between £100.01 and £160 |
Between £430.01 and £690 |
3% |
6% |
Between £23.01 and £32 |
Between £160.01 and £220 |
Between £690.01 and £950 |
5% |
10% |
Between £32.01 and £39 |
Between £220.01 and £270 |
Between £950.01 and £1,160 |
7% |
14% |
Between £39.01 and £54 |
Between £270.01 and £375 |
Between £1,160.01 and £1,615 |
11% |
22% |
Between £54.01 and £75 |
Between £375.01 and £520 |
Between £1,615.01 and £2,240 |
15% |
30% |
£75.01 or more |
£520.01 or more |
£2,240.01 or more |
20% |
40% |
When calculating DEA payments, you should include as earnings:
Don't count:
The supporting payment schedule for a DEA that must be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account.
The Department for Communities (DfC) requires that a supporting payment schedule for Direct Earnings Attachment (DEA) be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account. This schedule is only required if you are making one overall payment in respect of several employees. However, if you are making a single DEA payment by cheque, you must send a payment schedule.
For a single DEA payment, please ensure that you include your employee's National Insurance number and not their name.
DfC Debt Management has introduced an email route to receive payment schedules from employers, this is the preferred way for payment schedules to be sent.
Download the payment schedule template for DEA (XLSX, 82K).
For data security reasons the data required for the email payment schedule is slightly different to that on the paper schedule. By restricting the data recorded on the email payment schedule DfC Debt Management will still have enough information to correctly allocate payments to our customer records, whilst minimising the risk of personal data being fraudulently used should the email fall into the hands of a third party. Schedules do not need to be encrypted before emailing.
The postal route for sending payment schedules remains in place and a schedule template for use when forwarding schedules is available in appendix 2 of the DEA: a guide for employers (PDF, 1.0MB).
Deductions to make from outstanding pay owed when an employee leaves the business.
When a worker leaves your employment, you must give them:
If the worker leaves before or during their statutory maternity or adoption pay period, you must also start paying - or continue to pay - them statutory maternity or adoption pay.
You could also give them:
You must deduct the following items from what you owe the worker:
You might also need to consider deductions in respect of matters such as:
Understand what counts as pay and what doesn't when paying a worker.
The following counts as pay:
Pay does not include:
Obligations for employers to issue itemised pay statements and penalties for not giving notice of variations in fixed deductions in staff pay.
As an employer, you are legally obliged to give each employee a written itemised pay statement, usually known as a payslip or wage slip. You must issue it at, or before, the time you pay your employee.
This right to receive an itemised pay statement does not apply to:
An itemised pay statement or pay slip must show:
A pay statement does not have to include the amount and purpose of every separate fixed deduction every time.
However, if you don't issue a payslip that does this, you must give the employee a standing written statement of fixed deductions at least once every 12 months.
This must state for each item deducted:
You must give the employee this statement at, or before, the time of issuing the first pay statement that quotes the total figure of fixed deductions.
If there is any change to an employee's fixed deductions, you must give them:
If a dispute occurs in the workplace between you and your employee, you may wish to seek advice and assistance from the Labour Relations Agency (LRA). The LRA may be able to help with resolving disputes before they escalate into a tribunal claim.
An employee may complain to an industrial tribunal where you have:
Employees must make their complaint while employed by you or within three months of leaving your employment.
An industrial tribunal cannot deal with a question that is only about the accuracy of an amount in a statement.
A tribunal may award an employee compensation at its discretion if it finds that you made un-notified deductions of pay, ie deductions that did not appear on a pay statement or a standing statement.
The discretionary amount awarded will not exceed the total of the un-notified deductions during the 13 weeks immediately before the date the employee made their application to the tribunal.
All un-notified deductions enter into this calculation, whether or not they were made in breach of a contract of employment.
The LRA provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
Employee entitlement to statutory payments.
An individual may be entitled to a statutory payment if they:
To qualify for statutory payments, the individual must be an employed earner, ie someone working for an employer who is liable to pay secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions on their wages or salary.
To be eligible for statutory maternity, statutory paternity, statutory adoption, statutory parental bereavement, or shared parental leave and pay, the individual must:
Under certain conditions, you may have to pay statutory sick pay to an employee.
This is the minimum level of payment you must make to someone who is off work through illness. Their contract with you may also entitle them to more than this.
The passing into law of the Domestic Abuse (Safe Leave) Act (Northern Ireland 2022 will mean that employers in Northern Ireland will have the duty to offer at least 10 days of paid leave for victims of domestic abuse each leave year for the purposes of dealing with issues related to domestic abuse.
Although the commencement date of the legislation is yet to be confirmed, employers can take steps within their businesses to prepare for it by creating an environment where employees feel safe to disclose that they are experiencing domestic abuse. See workplace policy on domestic and sexual abuse.
Find out more about qualifying for:
You can also call the HMRC Employer Helpline on Tel 0300 200 3200.
What guarantee pay is and who is eligible for it.
You may have to pay your employees a guarantee payment if you cannot provide them with employment on a day when they would normally work for you under their contract of employment.
This is to compensate for the loss, through no fault of their own, of what they would have earned in normal circumstances.
Individuals are entitled to guarantee pay if they meet the following conditions:
You do not have to pay guarantee pay to excluded employees. These are:
How to work out the amount of guarantee pay you must pay your staff and what the exceptions are.
To calculate guarantee pay, multiply the number of hours your employee would normally have worked on the day in question (as stated in their terms and conditions of employment) by their hourly rate.
Statutory guarantee pay is subject to an upper limit of £39 per day. This amount changes every year. Statutory entitlement is limited to five days in any three-month period. This entitlement is reduced pro rata for employees who work fewer than five days a week.
You do not have to pay guarantee pay for voluntary overtime.
The Department for the Economy can grant an exemption from the statutory provisions if you have your own collective agreement. For this agreement to be valid, all parties to the agreement must be making the application for exemption, ie you and your employee, and the guarantee payment must be as favourable overall to your employees as the statutory provisions.
The agreement must also provide a complaints procedure that either includes a right to independent arbitration in the event of a deadlock or specifies that your employee may complain to an industrial tribunal - in which case the tribunal would have jurisdiction over the agreement.
The Employment Rights (NI Order) 1996 also provides for an exemption being granted by the Department of Agriculture, Environment & Rural Affairs (DAERA) where there is an Agricultural wages order under which employees to whom the order relates have a right to guaranteed remuneration.
You do not have to pay statutory guarantee pay on top of any contractual entitlement.
It is unlawful to dismiss an employee for seeking guarantee pay.
It is also unlawful not to pay guarantee pay to an employee if they are entitled to it.
In both of these cases, the employee can complain to an industrial tribunal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Arbitration Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
You must ensure you pay your workers at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage depending on their eligibility.
Most workers who are above compulsory school age must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage.
The rate you must pay varies depending on the worker's circumstances.
To find out how to calculate a worker's pay for the purpose of comparing it to the appropriate minimum wage rate, see National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - calculating minimum wage pay.
Employees' entitlement to paid annual leave.
A worker is entitled to take at least 5.6 weeks paid annual leave.
This is equivalent to, for example:
The minimum paid annual leave entitlement can include bank and public holidays.
Workers have no statutory right to take a day's leave on any bank or public holiday or to higher rates of pay if they work on such days.
You must set out in an employee's written statement of employment their holiday entitlement, including arrangements for bank and public holidays, and holiday pay.
Workers must take at least four weeks' annual leave. Any additional leave may be carried over to the following leave year where this is agreed by you and your worker.
The only time you can make a payment in lieu of any outstanding holiday is when a worker's employment ends.
The rate of holiday pay is generally the normal rate for the worker. So for those workers who are paid monthly, their annual salary is divided into 12 equal payments and when they take a holiday it has no effect on their pay slip.
Case law has determined that guaranteed and non-guaranteed overtime should be considered when calculating a worker's statutory holiday pay. Further, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland determined that where voluntary overtime constitutes part of an employee's 'normal working week' - this also may need to be taken into account when calculating holiday pay.
You only have to work out a special payment where your workers have varying pay rates, such as piece work. In those cases, the holiday pay will be equal to the average rate over the 12 weeks before the holiday.
Any week in which no pay was due should be replaced by the last previous week in which pay was received to bring the total to twelve.
This only applies to the statutory holiday periods. If you offer extra leave over and above the 5.6 weeks (including bank and public holidays) the rate of pay for these can be whatever is agreed with your employees.
It is unlawful not to pay a worker while they are on holiday and instead include an amount for holiday pay in the hourly rate of pay - something known as 'rolled-up holiday pay'.
You must always pay a worker their normal pay while they are actually taking their leave.
If your workers do casual work with no normal hours, for example, on a zero-hours contract, the holiday pay of each worker will be based on the average pay they got over the previous 12 weeks.
These should be weeks in which they were paid. If they were not paid in one of those 12 weeks, because they did not work, the last paid week before that should be used to calculate their holiday pay.
Recent case law has determined workers employed on a continuous contract throughout the year, and who work for varying hours during certain weeks of the year, such as those who work only term-time, are entitled to 5.6 weeks of leave each year. This entitlement applies regardless of the fact that there are some weeks in the year when they do not work.
In such instances holiday pay is calculated by averaging the pay received during the 12 weeks prior to the commencement of their leave. If there are weeks during the 12-week period where no pay was received, these weeks are disregarded and the employer must count back to include a total of 12 weeks in which pay was received.
Although there may be times when a part-year worker receives a higher payment than a full-time worker - this is compliant with the Part-Time Workers (Prevention of Less favourable Treatment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2000, as the part-time worker is not being treated less favourably. There is no legislative provision to prevent part-time workers from being treated more favourably.
Legally required deductions such as National Insurance and income tax.
You must not make deductions from a worker's pay unless:
You don't always have to meet these conditions, for example, when:
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) of the Department for Communities (DfC) may ask you to make deductions from an employee's pay for child maintenance purposes. They may issue you with a deduction from the earnings order and ask you to establish a regular pattern of payments. See how to make child maintenance deductions from an employee's pay.
You may be asked as an employer to deduct benefit overpayments, including social fund loans, that an employee owes the Department for Communities (DfC) from their pay. Read more on Direct Earnings Attachments: making deductions from an employee's pay.
If your workers do retail work, you may make deductions from wages to recover cash shortages or stock deficiencies only if, in addition to meeting the above conditions, you:
You should ensure that any deductions for shortages or stock deficiencies are not made unless you have conducted a thorough investigation to establish that the employee is liable for these. You should also take care when making any deductions not to breach minimum wage, as deductions must not reduce your employee's pay below the current minimum wage rate.
The Department for Communities will write to you if you need to make DEA deductions for an employee.
Difficulty repaying a benefit or Welfare Supplementary Payment overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support Loan?
If your employee is having difficulty repaying their benefit overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support loan, they should act as soon as possible. Even if they have contacted the Department for Communities (DfC) before, they can get in touch to ask them to consider reducing the amount they repay.
If an employee is struggling financially or knows their repayments are no longer affordable, they can ask for them to be reduced by contacting Debt Management.
Further information is also available on financial support and advice from DfC.
As an employer, you may be asked to make deductions from an employee's pay towards benefit overpayments and Social Fund loans that the employee owes to the Department for Communities (DfC). This method of recovery is known as a Direct Earnings Attachment or DEA.
The DfC Debt Management will write to you with an instruction to set up and maintain a DEA if any of your employees are affected.
Any instruction you receive from the DfC will state the total amount to be recovered from the employee's salary. It is important to note that this is the total amount owed to the DfC and not a deduction amount which must be calculated as a percentage of net earnings. To operate the DEA, you will need to take the following steps:
You must keep a record of deductions and tell the DfC when an employee leaves your company.
You could be fined up to £1,000 if you don't make DEA deductions when requested to.
Download Direct Earnings Attachment employer guidance (PDF, 1.0MB).
You can also call the employer helpline if you have questions about how to run a DEA or pay the DfC:
0800 587 1322 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 4pm)
There are two deduction percentage rates which may be used for calculation - Standard Rate and Higher Rate.
The instruction from DfC Debt Management will let you know which of these rates to apply. The rate may change throughout the life of the DEA, from Standard to Higher and vice versa, and you will be notified of this by letter.
To calculate the deductions from your employee's salary, for each salary cycle you'll have to:
Note: if you are calculating a DEA based on a daily rate, you must also multiply the daily rate figure by the number of days in the pay period.
If payments are made every two or four weeks, calculate weekly pay and deduct the percentage in the table.
If the total of all deductions is more than 40% of the employee's net earnings, the DEA must be adjusted.
AMOUNT OF NET EARNINGS (Net earnings are gross pay, less income tax, Class 1 National Insurance, and superannuation contributions) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Standard) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Higher) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Daily Earnings |
Weekly Earnings |
Monthly Earnings |
||
Up to £15 |
Up to £100 |
Up to £430 |
Nil |
5% |
Between £15.01 and £23 |
Between £100.01 and £160 |
Between £430.01 and £690 |
3% |
6% |
Between £23.01 and £32 |
Between £160.01 and £220 |
Between £690.01 and £950 |
5% |
10% |
Between £32.01 and £39 |
Between £220.01 and £270 |
Between £950.01 and £1,160 |
7% |
14% |
Between £39.01 and £54 |
Between £270.01 and £375 |
Between £1,160.01 and £1,615 |
11% |
22% |
Between £54.01 and £75 |
Between £375.01 and £520 |
Between £1,615.01 and £2,240 |
15% |
30% |
£75.01 or more |
£520.01 or more |
£2,240.01 or more |
20% |
40% |
When calculating DEA payments, you should include as earnings:
Don't count:
The supporting payment schedule for a DEA that must be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account.
The Department for Communities (DfC) requires that a supporting payment schedule for Direct Earnings Attachment (DEA) be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account. This schedule is only required if you are making one overall payment in respect of several employees. However, if you are making a single DEA payment by cheque, you must send a payment schedule.
For a single DEA payment, please ensure that you include your employee's National Insurance number and not their name.
DfC Debt Management has introduced an email route to receive payment schedules from employers, this is the preferred way for payment schedules to be sent.
Download the payment schedule template for DEA (XLSX, 82K).
For data security reasons the data required for the email payment schedule is slightly different to that on the paper schedule. By restricting the data recorded on the email payment schedule DfC Debt Management will still have enough information to correctly allocate payments to our customer records, whilst minimising the risk of personal data being fraudulently used should the email fall into the hands of a third party. Schedules do not need to be encrypted before emailing.
The postal route for sending payment schedules remains in place and a schedule template for use when forwarding schedules is available in appendix 2 of the DEA: a guide for employers (PDF, 1.0MB).
Deductions to make from outstanding pay owed when an employee leaves the business.
When a worker leaves your employment, you must give them:
If the worker leaves before or during their statutory maternity or adoption pay period, you must also start paying - or continue to pay - them statutory maternity or adoption pay.
You could also give them:
You must deduct the following items from what you owe the worker:
You might also need to consider deductions in respect of matters such as:
Understand what counts as pay and what doesn't when paying a worker.
The following counts as pay:
Pay does not include:
Obligations for employers to issue itemised pay statements and penalties for not giving notice of variations in fixed deductions in staff pay.
As an employer, you are legally obliged to give each employee a written itemised pay statement, usually known as a payslip or wage slip. You must issue it at, or before, the time you pay your employee.
This right to receive an itemised pay statement does not apply to:
An itemised pay statement or pay slip must show:
A pay statement does not have to include the amount and purpose of every separate fixed deduction every time.
However, if you don't issue a payslip that does this, you must give the employee a standing written statement of fixed deductions at least once every 12 months.
This must state for each item deducted:
You must give the employee this statement at, or before, the time of issuing the first pay statement that quotes the total figure of fixed deductions.
If there is any change to an employee's fixed deductions, you must give them:
If a dispute occurs in the workplace between you and your employee, you may wish to seek advice and assistance from the Labour Relations Agency (LRA). The LRA may be able to help with resolving disputes before they escalate into a tribunal claim.
An employee may complain to an industrial tribunal where you have:
Employees must make their complaint while employed by you or within three months of leaving your employment.
An industrial tribunal cannot deal with a question that is only about the accuracy of an amount in a statement.
A tribunal may award an employee compensation at its discretion if it finds that you made un-notified deductions of pay, ie deductions that did not appear on a pay statement or a standing statement.
The discretionary amount awarded will not exceed the total of the un-notified deductions during the 13 weeks immediately before the date the employee made their application to the tribunal.
All un-notified deductions enter into this calculation, whether or not they were made in breach of a contract of employment.
The LRA provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
Employee entitlement to statutory payments.
An individual may be entitled to a statutory payment if they:
To qualify for statutory payments, the individual must be an employed earner, ie someone working for an employer who is liable to pay secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions on their wages or salary.
To be eligible for statutory maternity, statutory paternity, statutory adoption, statutory parental bereavement, or shared parental leave and pay, the individual must:
Under certain conditions, you may have to pay statutory sick pay to an employee.
This is the minimum level of payment you must make to someone who is off work through illness. Their contract with you may also entitle them to more than this.
The passing into law of the Domestic Abuse (Safe Leave) Act (Northern Ireland 2022 will mean that employers in Northern Ireland will have the duty to offer at least 10 days of paid leave for victims of domestic abuse each leave year for the purposes of dealing with issues related to domestic abuse.
Although the commencement date of the legislation is yet to be confirmed, employers can take steps within their businesses to prepare for it by creating an environment where employees feel safe to disclose that they are experiencing domestic abuse. See workplace policy on domestic and sexual abuse.
Find out more about qualifying for:
You can also call the HMRC Employer Helpline on Tel 0300 200 3200.
What guarantee pay is and who is eligible for it.
You may have to pay your employees a guarantee payment if you cannot provide them with employment on a day when they would normally work for you under their contract of employment.
This is to compensate for the loss, through no fault of their own, of what they would have earned in normal circumstances.
Individuals are entitled to guarantee pay if they meet the following conditions:
You do not have to pay guarantee pay to excluded employees. These are:
How to work out the amount of guarantee pay you must pay your staff and what the exceptions are.
To calculate guarantee pay, multiply the number of hours your employee would normally have worked on the day in question (as stated in their terms and conditions of employment) by their hourly rate.
Statutory guarantee pay is subject to an upper limit of £39 per day. This amount changes every year. Statutory entitlement is limited to five days in any three-month period. This entitlement is reduced pro rata for employees who work fewer than five days a week.
You do not have to pay guarantee pay for voluntary overtime.
The Department for the Economy can grant an exemption from the statutory provisions if you have your own collective agreement. For this agreement to be valid, all parties to the agreement must be making the application for exemption, ie you and your employee, and the guarantee payment must be as favourable overall to your employees as the statutory provisions.
The agreement must also provide a complaints procedure that either includes a right to independent arbitration in the event of a deadlock or specifies that your employee may complain to an industrial tribunal - in which case the tribunal would have jurisdiction over the agreement.
The Employment Rights (NI Order) 1996 also provides for an exemption being granted by the Department of Agriculture, Environment & Rural Affairs (DAERA) where there is an Agricultural wages order under which employees to whom the order relates have a right to guaranteed remuneration.
You do not have to pay statutory guarantee pay on top of any contractual entitlement.
It is unlawful to dismiss an employee for seeking guarantee pay.
It is also unlawful not to pay guarantee pay to an employee if they are entitled to it.
In both of these cases, the employee can complain to an industrial tribunal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) provides an alternative to the Industrial Tribunal under the Labour Relations Agency Arbitration Scheme. Under the Arbitration Scheme claimants and respondents can choose to refer a claim to an arbitrator to decide instead of going to a tribunal. The arbitrator's decision is binding as a matter of law and has the same effect as a tribunal.
You must ensure you pay your workers at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage depending on their eligibility.
Most workers who are above compulsory school age must be paid at least the National Minimum Wage or National Living Wage.
The rate you must pay varies depending on the worker's circumstances.
To find out how to calculate a worker's pay for the purpose of comparing it to the appropriate minimum wage rate, see National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage - calculating minimum wage pay.
Employees' entitlement to paid annual leave.
A worker is entitled to take at least 5.6 weeks paid annual leave.
This is equivalent to, for example:
The minimum paid annual leave entitlement can include bank and public holidays.
Workers have no statutory right to take a day's leave on any bank or public holiday or to higher rates of pay if they work on such days.
You must set out in an employee's written statement of employment their holiday entitlement, including arrangements for bank and public holidays, and holiday pay.
Workers must take at least four weeks' annual leave. Any additional leave may be carried over to the following leave year where this is agreed by you and your worker.
The only time you can make a payment in lieu of any outstanding holiday is when a worker's employment ends.
The rate of holiday pay is generally the normal rate for the worker. So for those workers who are paid monthly, their annual salary is divided into 12 equal payments and when they take a holiday it has no effect on their pay slip.
Case law has determined that guaranteed and non-guaranteed overtime should be considered when calculating a worker's statutory holiday pay. Further, the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland determined that where voluntary overtime constitutes part of an employee's 'normal working week' - this also may need to be taken into account when calculating holiday pay.
You only have to work out a special payment where your workers have varying pay rates, such as piece work. In those cases, the holiday pay will be equal to the average rate over the 12 weeks before the holiday.
Any week in which no pay was due should be replaced by the last previous week in which pay was received to bring the total to twelve.
This only applies to the statutory holiday periods. If you offer extra leave over and above the 5.6 weeks (including bank and public holidays) the rate of pay for these can be whatever is agreed with your employees.
It is unlawful not to pay a worker while they are on holiday and instead include an amount for holiday pay in the hourly rate of pay - something known as 'rolled-up holiday pay'.
You must always pay a worker their normal pay while they are actually taking their leave.
If your workers do casual work with no normal hours, for example, on a zero-hours contract, the holiday pay of each worker will be based on the average pay they got over the previous 12 weeks.
These should be weeks in which they were paid. If they were not paid in one of those 12 weeks, because they did not work, the last paid week before that should be used to calculate their holiday pay.
Recent case law has determined workers employed on a continuous contract throughout the year, and who work for varying hours during certain weeks of the year, such as those who work only term-time, are entitled to 5.6 weeks of leave each year. This entitlement applies regardless of the fact that there are some weeks in the year when they do not work.
In such instances holiday pay is calculated by averaging the pay received during the 12 weeks prior to the commencement of their leave. If there are weeks during the 12-week period where no pay was received, these weeks are disregarded and the employer must count back to include a total of 12 weeks in which pay was received.
Although there may be times when a part-year worker receives a higher payment than a full-time worker - this is compliant with the Part-Time Workers (Prevention of Less favourable Treatment) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2000, as the part-time worker is not being treated less favourably. There is no legislative provision to prevent part-time workers from being treated more favourably.
Legally required deductions such as National Insurance and income tax.
You must not make deductions from a worker's pay unless:
You don't always have to meet these conditions, for example, when:
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) of the Department for Communities (DfC) may ask you to make deductions from an employee's pay for child maintenance purposes. They may issue you with a deduction from the earnings order and ask you to establish a regular pattern of payments. See how to make child maintenance deductions from an employee's pay.
You may be asked as an employer to deduct benefit overpayments, including social fund loans, that an employee owes the Department for Communities (DfC) from their pay. Read more on Direct Earnings Attachments: making deductions from an employee's pay.
If your workers do retail work, you may make deductions from wages to recover cash shortages or stock deficiencies only if, in addition to meeting the above conditions, you:
You should ensure that any deductions for shortages or stock deficiencies are not made unless you have conducted a thorough investigation to establish that the employee is liable for these. You should also take care when making any deductions not to breach minimum wage, as deductions must not reduce your employee's pay below the current minimum wage rate.
The Department for Communities will write to you if you need to make DEA deductions for an employee.
Difficulty repaying a benefit or Welfare Supplementary Payment overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support Loan?
If your employee is having difficulty repaying their benefit overpayment, Social Fund, or Discretionary Support loan, they should act as soon as possible. Even if they have contacted the Department for Communities (DfC) before, they can get in touch to ask them to consider reducing the amount they repay.
If an employee is struggling financially or knows their repayments are no longer affordable, they can ask for them to be reduced by contacting Debt Management.
Further information is also available on financial support and advice from DfC.
As an employer, you may be asked to make deductions from an employee's pay towards benefit overpayments and Social Fund loans that the employee owes to the Department for Communities (DfC). This method of recovery is known as a Direct Earnings Attachment or DEA.
The DfC Debt Management will write to you with an instruction to set up and maintain a DEA if any of your employees are affected.
Any instruction you receive from the DfC will state the total amount to be recovered from the employee's salary. It is important to note that this is the total amount owed to the DfC and not a deduction amount which must be calculated as a percentage of net earnings. To operate the DEA, you will need to take the following steps:
You must keep a record of deductions and tell the DfC when an employee leaves your company.
You could be fined up to £1,000 if you don't make DEA deductions when requested to.
Download Direct Earnings Attachment employer guidance (PDF, 1.0MB).
You can also call the employer helpline if you have questions about how to run a DEA or pay the DfC:
0800 587 1322 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 4pm)
There are two deduction percentage rates which may be used for calculation - Standard Rate and Higher Rate.
The instruction from DfC Debt Management will let you know which of these rates to apply. The rate may change throughout the life of the DEA, from Standard to Higher and vice versa, and you will be notified of this by letter.
To calculate the deductions from your employee's salary, for each salary cycle you'll have to:
Note: if you are calculating a DEA based on a daily rate, you must also multiply the daily rate figure by the number of days in the pay period.
If payments are made every two or four weeks, calculate weekly pay and deduct the percentage in the table.
If the total of all deductions is more than 40% of the employee's net earnings, the DEA must be adjusted.
AMOUNT OF NET EARNINGS (Net earnings are gross pay, less income tax, Class 1 National Insurance, and superannuation contributions) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Standard) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
Deduction from Earnings Rate (Higher) Rate to apply (% of net earnings) |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Daily Earnings |
Weekly Earnings |
Monthly Earnings |
||
Up to £15 |
Up to £100 |
Up to £430 |
Nil |
5% |
Between £15.01 and £23 |
Between £100.01 and £160 |
Between £430.01 and £690 |
3% |
6% |
Between £23.01 and £32 |
Between £160.01 and £220 |
Between £690.01 and £950 |
5% |
10% |
Between £32.01 and £39 |
Between £220.01 and £270 |
Between £950.01 and £1,160 |
7% |
14% |
Between £39.01 and £54 |
Between £270.01 and £375 |
Between £1,160.01 and £1,615 |
11% |
22% |
Between £54.01 and £75 |
Between £375.01 and £520 |
Between £1,615.01 and £2,240 |
15% |
30% |
£75.01 or more |
£520.01 or more |
£2,240.01 or more |
20% |
40% |
When calculating DEA payments, you should include as earnings:
Don't count:
The supporting payment schedule for a DEA that must be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account.
The Department for Communities (DfC) requires that a supporting payment schedule for Direct Earnings Attachment (DEA) be completed and issued in order to ensure that the correct payment is allocated to the correct debtor account. This schedule is only required if you are making one overall payment in respect of several employees. However, if you are making a single DEA payment by cheque, you must send a payment schedule.
For a single DEA payment, please ensure that you include your employee's National Insurance number and not their name.
DfC Debt Management has introduced an email route to receive payment schedules from employers, this is the preferred way for payment schedules to be sent.
Download the payment schedule template for DEA (XLSX, 82K).
For data security reasons the data required for the email payment schedule is slightly different to that on the paper schedule. By restricting the data recorded on the email payment schedule DfC Debt Management will still have enough information to correctly allocate payments to our customer records, whilst minimising the risk of personal data being fraudulently used should the email fall into the hands of a third party. Schedules do not need to be encrypted before emailing.
The postal route for sending payment schedules remains in place and a schedule template for use when forwarding schedules is available in appendix 2 of the DEA: a guide for employers (PDF, 1.0MB).
Deductions to make from outstanding pay owed when an employee leaves the business.
When a worker leaves your employment, you must give them:
If the worker leaves before or during their statutory maternity or adoption pay period, you must also start paying - or continue to pay - them statutory maternity or adoption pay.
You could also give them:
You must deduct the following items from what you owe the worker:
You might also need to consider deductions in respect of matters such as:
Minimum legal notice periods for employers and employees and the written statement of particulars of the employment contract.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must receive notice of dismissal/redundancy.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must give notice of their intention to leave.
These notice periods must be included in a written statement of employment particulars which must be issued to your employee within two months of them starting work.
Read Labour Relations Agency (LRA) guidance on preparing a written statement of the main terms and conditions of employment.
The minimum legal notice period to be given by an employer is:
An employer can include longer periods of notice in the employment contract.
Note that if you plan to make 20 or more employees redundant special conditions apply. See redundancy: the options.
The minimum statutory notice period which must be given by an employee is at least one week's notice if employed continuously for one month or more by that employer. This minimum is unaffected by longer service.
The minimum notice does not apply to casual workers, independent contractors, or freelance agents - see employment status.
Unless a contract states otherwise, notice can be given on any day. The notice period runs from the start of the day after the day on which the notice was given. So, if a week's notice is given on a Monday, the period of notice will begin on Tuesday and expire at the end of the following Monday.
Some contracts of employment contain special terms about notice, eg in contracts of employees who have access to information that you wish to protect from a competitor. See when workers leave your employment.
Rights, responsibilities and notice periods for employees and employers.
An employee intending to take maternity or paternity leave must give notice before the end of the 15th week before the expected date of birth and state the expected week of childbirth and the date of the start of the leave - they can change this date with 28 days' notice. An employee taking paternity leave should also state how much leave is being taken.
An employee taking shared parental leave must give their employer eight weeks' notice (before the leave starts) of their intention to take shared parental leave.
For adoption leave employees must notify the employer within seven days of being notified that they have been matched for adoption, the date the child is expected, and the date the leave is to start.
Unless there is a collective agreement in force with a different period, then employees must give 21 days' notice to the employer to take any period of parental leave.
An employee must also give notice before taking Parental Bereavement Leave. How much notice depends on when they're taking leave. They should tell you the date of the child's death or stillbirth when they want their Parental Bereavement Leave to begin and how much leave they are taking. See notice periods for Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
Employees returning from maternity or adoption leave don't have to give any notice if returning at the end of their entitled leave. The employer is responsible for telling the employee when leave expires.
If an employee wants to return early, eight weeks' notice must be given to the employer. If not, the employer can postpone the return until the full eight weeks' notice has been given or until the date when the maternity/adoption leave would have ended, whichever is earlier. However, the employer may not postpone an employee's return to a date later than the end of the maternity/adoption leave period.
If the employee does not want to return to work at the end of a period of leave, they must give their normal contractual period of notice. An employee is not required to say in advance whether they intend to return after maternity or adoption leave.
A dismissal on grounds of, or connected with maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave will be regarded by an industrial tribunal as automatically unfair and risks amounting to unlawful sex discrimination.
It is not unlawful to dismiss an employee on maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave providing it is not for reasons connected with the leave.
If there is a redundancy situation while an employee is off on maternity, adoption, or shared parental leave, the employee is entitled to be offered a suitable alternative vacancy, where there is one before it is offered to any other employees. It would be unlawful to make an employee redundant without first complying with this requirement. The employee is entitled to the statutory notice period, or the notice specified in the employment contract, whichever is longer, or payment in lieu of notice (if the contract provides for it or, in the absence of any contractual provision, the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice).
How to terminate a contract without notice, agree to shorter notice periods or offer pay instead of notice.
The statutory or contractual notice period can be varied in a number of circumstances.
This occurs when an employee is dismissed without notice - summary dismissal - for gross misconduct. However, subject to statutory procedures, unless there is a proper investigation and an appeal hearing, an industrial tribunal/arbitrator might find that the dismissal was unfair.
The employee can also terminate the contract of employment without notice if the employer has fundamentally breached the contract by their conduct.
Employers and employees can both waive their right to notice, ie the employer and employee can agree to a shorter notice period. This must be by mutual agreement, and neither an employer nor employee can opt out of the minimum legal periods when forming a contract of employment.
This will be a breach of contract unless the contract expressly provides for it or the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice.
The employment contract can be varied by agreement between the parties, but the statutory minimum notice periods will still apply.
An employee who has been given notice of dismissal can give counter-notice to leave on an earlier date than the one on which the employer's notice period ends. The minimum statutory notice that an employee must give is one week, but usually, their contractual notice period will be longer than this. For the purposes of unfair dismissal legislation, the employee will still be treated as having been dismissed.
If an employee who has been given a redundancy notice wants to leave before their notice expires, eg to start a new job, they can ask the employer to agree to an earlier termination date. If the employer agrees, they will still get their redundancy payment.
However, if the employer objects they may withdraw the original redundancy notice and refuse to give the employee a redundancy payment. The employee could apply to an industrial tribunal, which will decide whether the employee should get all, part of, or none of the redundancy payment.
Payment rights during notice periods and in lieu of notice and compromise agreements.
An employee who continues to work during the period of notice is entitled to receive normal pay and benefits - including pay rises - for that period in line with their employment contract.
Employees whose contract specifies normal working hours and whose employment is terminated with notice are entitled to receive a minimum average hourly rate for any normal working hours during the notice period that they are:
Employees whose contract does not specify normal working hours are entitled to receive at least a week's pay during the notice period for each week that they are:
These minimum payment rights apply whether it is the employer or the employee who gives notice. If the employee gives notice, the employer can delay making the payments until the employee leaves at the end of the notice period - and does not have to make the payments at all if the employee goes on strike during the notice period.
The minimum average hourly rate of pay is a week's pay divided by the number of normal weekly hours. There are legal rules for calculating a week's pay for this purpose. To find out how to calculate pay, see our guide on pay: employer obligations.
Where the employee is not working during the notice period the employee will lose the statutory right to full pay during the notice period where the contract requires the employer to give at least one week more than the minimum statutory notice. The employee in such a case will be paid in accordance with the contract of employment, which may be statutory sick pay, full pay, half pay, or whatever other contractual rights apply during lay-off, sickness, etc. It is important to seek legal advice before withholding notice pay from employees on family-related leave.
Payment instead of working notice and setting out financial and other terms in an agreement.
An employee may simply work out a period of notice. They can also take payment in lieu, or have a compromise agreement with their employer.
Employers who don't need employees to work out all or part of the notice period can make a payment in lieu of notice, if the contract allows for it or the employee is willing to accept it. This should cover all the benefits the employee would otherwise have enjoyed during the notice period, including pay, bonuses, accrued holiday, etc.
It is important to take legal advice when deciding whether or not to include a payment in lieu provision in the contract, as its inclusion can have a knock-on effect on your ability to enforce restrictive covenants against the employee. Restrictive covenants are designed to prevent employees from disclosing or using confidential information, trade secrets, etc, and/or soliciting or dealing with customers during a specified period after leaving the business. Restrictive covenant law is challenging, and it is recommended that you take legal advice prior to drawing any up. There are also important tax provisions.
A compromise agreement (also called a settlement agreement) is a single agreement setting out the financial and all other terms on which the employment relationship will end. The compromise agreement must meet certain requirements to be viewed as legally binding including; being in writing, signed by both parties and the employee must have had the benefit of independent legal advice. The employee is then unable subsequently to make a claim in the courts or an industrial tribunal.
A conciliated agreement is a legally binding agreement, facilitated through the Conciliation Service of the Labour Relations Agency (LRA), between an employer and employee to settle an existing or potential claim to the Industrial or Fair Employment Tribunal. As with a compromise agreement, the employee agrees to 'settle out of court' by accepting the financial or other compensation that the employer is offering in return for signing away their right to pursue their claim. This service is provided free of charge by the LRA.
Compromise or conciliated agreements can be useful in circumstances where the employer wishes to avoid the publicity, costs, or uncertain outcome of a tribunal or court case.
Withdrawal of notice issues and further guidance on the subject.
Once an employer or employee gives notice, it cannot be withdrawn unless both parties agree.
Thus, if an employer gives notice to an employee and later changes their mind, the employee can still consider themselves as dismissed from the date of termination specified by the notice.
See our guides on dismissing employees and when an employee resigns.
Minimum legal notice periods for employers and employees and the written statement of particulars of the employment contract.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must receive notice of dismissal/redundancy.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must give notice of their intention to leave.
These notice periods must be included in a written statement of employment particulars which must be issued to your employee within two months of them starting work.
Read Labour Relations Agency (LRA) guidance on preparing a written statement of the main terms and conditions of employment.
The minimum legal notice period to be given by an employer is:
An employer can include longer periods of notice in the employment contract.
Note that if you plan to make 20 or more employees redundant special conditions apply. See redundancy: the options.
The minimum statutory notice period which must be given by an employee is at least one week's notice if employed continuously for one month or more by that employer. This minimum is unaffected by longer service.
The minimum notice does not apply to casual workers, independent contractors, or freelance agents - see employment status.
Unless a contract states otherwise, notice can be given on any day. The notice period runs from the start of the day after the day on which the notice was given. So, if a week's notice is given on a Monday, the period of notice will begin on Tuesday and expire at the end of the following Monday.
Some contracts of employment contain special terms about notice, eg in contracts of employees who have access to information that you wish to protect from a competitor. See when workers leave your employment.
Rights, responsibilities and notice periods for employees and employers.
An employee intending to take maternity or paternity leave must give notice before the end of the 15th week before the expected date of birth and state the expected week of childbirth and the date of the start of the leave - they can change this date with 28 days' notice. An employee taking paternity leave should also state how much leave is being taken.
An employee taking shared parental leave must give their employer eight weeks' notice (before the leave starts) of their intention to take shared parental leave.
For adoption leave employees must notify the employer within seven days of being notified that they have been matched for adoption, the date the child is expected, and the date the leave is to start.
Unless there is a collective agreement in force with a different period, then employees must give 21 days' notice to the employer to take any period of parental leave.
An employee must also give notice before taking Parental Bereavement Leave. How much notice depends on when they're taking leave. They should tell you the date of the child's death or stillbirth when they want their Parental Bereavement Leave to begin and how much leave they are taking. See notice periods for Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
Employees returning from maternity or adoption leave don't have to give any notice if returning at the end of their entitled leave. The employer is responsible for telling the employee when leave expires.
If an employee wants to return early, eight weeks' notice must be given to the employer. If not, the employer can postpone the return until the full eight weeks' notice has been given or until the date when the maternity/adoption leave would have ended, whichever is earlier. However, the employer may not postpone an employee's return to a date later than the end of the maternity/adoption leave period.
If the employee does not want to return to work at the end of a period of leave, they must give their normal contractual period of notice. An employee is not required to say in advance whether they intend to return after maternity or adoption leave.
A dismissal on grounds of, or connected with maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave will be regarded by an industrial tribunal as automatically unfair and risks amounting to unlawful sex discrimination.
It is not unlawful to dismiss an employee on maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave providing it is not for reasons connected with the leave.
If there is a redundancy situation while an employee is off on maternity, adoption, or shared parental leave, the employee is entitled to be offered a suitable alternative vacancy, where there is one before it is offered to any other employees. It would be unlawful to make an employee redundant without first complying with this requirement. The employee is entitled to the statutory notice period, or the notice specified in the employment contract, whichever is longer, or payment in lieu of notice (if the contract provides for it or, in the absence of any contractual provision, the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice).
How to terminate a contract without notice, agree to shorter notice periods or offer pay instead of notice.
The statutory or contractual notice period can be varied in a number of circumstances.
This occurs when an employee is dismissed without notice - summary dismissal - for gross misconduct. However, subject to statutory procedures, unless there is a proper investigation and an appeal hearing, an industrial tribunal/arbitrator might find that the dismissal was unfair.
The employee can also terminate the contract of employment without notice if the employer has fundamentally breached the contract by their conduct.
Employers and employees can both waive their right to notice, ie the employer and employee can agree to a shorter notice period. This must be by mutual agreement, and neither an employer nor employee can opt out of the minimum legal periods when forming a contract of employment.
This will be a breach of contract unless the contract expressly provides for it or the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice.
The employment contract can be varied by agreement between the parties, but the statutory minimum notice periods will still apply.
An employee who has been given notice of dismissal can give counter-notice to leave on an earlier date than the one on which the employer's notice period ends. The minimum statutory notice that an employee must give is one week, but usually, their contractual notice period will be longer than this. For the purposes of unfair dismissal legislation, the employee will still be treated as having been dismissed.
If an employee who has been given a redundancy notice wants to leave before their notice expires, eg to start a new job, they can ask the employer to agree to an earlier termination date. If the employer agrees, they will still get their redundancy payment.
However, if the employer objects they may withdraw the original redundancy notice and refuse to give the employee a redundancy payment. The employee could apply to an industrial tribunal, which will decide whether the employee should get all, part of, or none of the redundancy payment.
Payment rights during notice periods and in lieu of notice and compromise agreements.
An employee who continues to work during the period of notice is entitled to receive normal pay and benefits - including pay rises - for that period in line with their employment contract.
Employees whose contract specifies normal working hours and whose employment is terminated with notice are entitled to receive a minimum average hourly rate for any normal working hours during the notice period that they are:
Employees whose contract does not specify normal working hours are entitled to receive at least a week's pay during the notice period for each week that they are:
These minimum payment rights apply whether it is the employer or the employee who gives notice. If the employee gives notice, the employer can delay making the payments until the employee leaves at the end of the notice period - and does not have to make the payments at all if the employee goes on strike during the notice period.
The minimum average hourly rate of pay is a week's pay divided by the number of normal weekly hours. There are legal rules for calculating a week's pay for this purpose. To find out how to calculate pay, see our guide on pay: employer obligations.
Where the employee is not working during the notice period the employee will lose the statutory right to full pay during the notice period where the contract requires the employer to give at least one week more than the minimum statutory notice. The employee in such a case will be paid in accordance with the contract of employment, which may be statutory sick pay, full pay, half pay, or whatever other contractual rights apply during lay-off, sickness, etc. It is important to seek legal advice before withholding notice pay from employees on family-related leave.
Payment instead of working notice and setting out financial and other terms in an agreement.
An employee may simply work out a period of notice. They can also take payment in lieu, or have a compromise agreement with their employer.
Employers who don't need employees to work out all or part of the notice period can make a payment in lieu of notice, if the contract allows for it or the employee is willing to accept it. This should cover all the benefits the employee would otherwise have enjoyed during the notice period, including pay, bonuses, accrued holiday, etc.
It is important to take legal advice when deciding whether or not to include a payment in lieu provision in the contract, as its inclusion can have a knock-on effect on your ability to enforce restrictive covenants against the employee. Restrictive covenants are designed to prevent employees from disclosing or using confidential information, trade secrets, etc, and/or soliciting or dealing with customers during a specified period after leaving the business. Restrictive covenant law is challenging, and it is recommended that you take legal advice prior to drawing any up. There are also important tax provisions.
A compromise agreement (also called a settlement agreement) is a single agreement setting out the financial and all other terms on which the employment relationship will end. The compromise agreement must meet certain requirements to be viewed as legally binding including; being in writing, signed by both parties and the employee must have had the benefit of independent legal advice. The employee is then unable subsequently to make a claim in the courts or an industrial tribunal.
A conciliated agreement is a legally binding agreement, facilitated through the Conciliation Service of the Labour Relations Agency (LRA), between an employer and employee to settle an existing or potential claim to the Industrial or Fair Employment Tribunal. As with a compromise agreement, the employee agrees to 'settle out of court' by accepting the financial or other compensation that the employer is offering in return for signing away their right to pursue their claim. This service is provided free of charge by the LRA.
Compromise or conciliated agreements can be useful in circumstances where the employer wishes to avoid the publicity, costs, or uncertain outcome of a tribunal or court case.
Withdrawal of notice issues and further guidance on the subject.
Once an employer or employee gives notice, it cannot be withdrawn unless both parties agree.
Thus, if an employer gives notice to an employee and later changes their mind, the employee can still consider themselves as dismissed from the date of termination specified by the notice.
See our guides on dismissing employees and when an employee resigns.
Minimum legal notice periods for employers and employees and the written statement of particulars of the employment contract.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must receive notice of dismissal/redundancy.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must give notice of their intention to leave.
These notice periods must be included in a written statement of employment particulars which must be issued to your employee within two months of them starting work.
Read Labour Relations Agency (LRA) guidance on preparing a written statement of the main terms and conditions of employment.
The minimum legal notice period to be given by an employer is:
An employer can include longer periods of notice in the employment contract.
Note that if you plan to make 20 or more employees redundant special conditions apply. See redundancy: the options.
The minimum statutory notice period which must be given by an employee is at least one week's notice if employed continuously for one month or more by that employer. This minimum is unaffected by longer service.
The minimum notice does not apply to casual workers, independent contractors, or freelance agents - see employment status.
Unless a contract states otherwise, notice can be given on any day. The notice period runs from the start of the day after the day on which the notice was given. So, if a week's notice is given on a Monday, the period of notice will begin on Tuesday and expire at the end of the following Monday.
Some contracts of employment contain special terms about notice, eg in contracts of employees who have access to information that you wish to protect from a competitor. See when workers leave your employment.
Rights, responsibilities and notice periods for employees and employers.
An employee intending to take maternity or paternity leave must give notice before the end of the 15th week before the expected date of birth and state the expected week of childbirth and the date of the start of the leave - they can change this date with 28 days' notice. An employee taking paternity leave should also state how much leave is being taken.
An employee taking shared parental leave must give their employer eight weeks' notice (before the leave starts) of their intention to take shared parental leave.
For adoption leave employees must notify the employer within seven days of being notified that they have been matched for adoption, the date the child is expected, and the date the leave is to start.
Unless there is a collective agreement in force with a different period, then employees must give 21 days' notice to the employer to take any period of parental leave.
An employee must also give notice before taking Parental Bereavement Leave. How much notice depends on when they're taking leave. They should tell you the date of the child's death or stillbirth when they want their Parental Bereavement Leave to begin and how much leave they are taking. See notice periods for Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
Employees returning from maternity or adoption leave don't have to give any notice if returning at the end of their entitled leave. The employer is responsible for telling the employee when leave expires.
If an employee wants to return early, eight weeks' notice must be given to the employer. If not, the employer can postpone the return until the full eight weeks' notice has been given or until the date when the maternity/adoption leave would have ended, whichever is earlier. However, the employer may not postpone an employee's return to a date later than the end of the maternity/adoption leave period.
If the employee does not want to return to work at the end of a period of leave, they must give their normal contractual period of notice. An employee is not required to say in advance whether they intend to return after maternity or adoption leave.
A dismissal on grounds of, or connected with maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave will be regarded by an industrial tribunal as automatically unfair and risks amounting to unlawful sex discrimination.
It is not unlawful to dismiss an employee on maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave providing it is not for reasons connected with the leave.
If there is a redundancy situation while an employee is off on maternity, adoption, or shared parental leave, the employee is entitled to be offered a suitable alternative vacancy, where there is one before it is offered to any other employees. It would be unlawful to make an employee redundant without first complying with this requirement. The employee is entitled to the statutory notice period, or the notice specified in the employment contract, whichever is longer, or payment in lieu of notice (if the contract provides for it or, in the absence of any contractual provision, the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice).
How to terminate a contract without notice, agree to shorter notice periods or offer pay instead of notice.
The statutory or contractual notice period can be varied in a number of circumstances.
This occurs when an employee is dismissed without notice - summary dismissal - for gross misconduct. However, subject to statutory procedures, unless there is a proper investigation and an appeal hearing, an industrial tribunal/arbitrator might find that the dismissal was unfair.
The employee can also terminate the contract of employment without notice if the employer has fundamentally breached the contract by their conduct.
Employers and employees can both waive their right to notice, ie the employer and employee can agree to a shorter notice period. This must be by mutual agreement, and neither an employer nor employee can opt out of the minimum legal periods when forming a contract of employment.
This will be a breach of contract unless the contract expressly provides for it or the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice.
The employment contract can be varied by agreement between the parties, but the statutory minimum notice periods will still apply.
An employee who has been given notice of dismissal can give counter-notice to leave on an earlier date than the one on which the employer's notice period ends. The minimum statutory notice that an employee must give is one week, but usually, their contractual notice period will be longer than this. For the purposes of unfair dismissal legislation, the employee will still be treated as having been dismissed.
If an employee who has been given a redundancy notice wants to leave before their notice expires, eg to start a new job, they can ask the employer to agree to an earlier termination date. If the employer agrees, they will still get their redundancy payment.
However, if the employer objects they may withdraw the original redundancy notice and refuse to give the employee a redundancy payment. The employee could apply to an industrial tribunal, which will decide whether the employee should get all, part of, or none of the redundancy payment.
Payment rights during notice periods and in lieu of notice and compromise agreements.
An employee who continues to work during the period of notice is entitled to receive normal pay and benefits - including pay rises - for that period in line with their employment contract.
Employees whose contract specifies normal working hours and whose employment is terminated with notice are entitled to receive a minimum average hourly rate for any normal working hours during the notice period that they are:
Employees whose contract does not specify normal working hours are entitled to receive at least a week's pay during the notice period for each week that they are:
These minimum payment rights apply whether it is the employer or the employee who gives notice. If the employee gives notice, the employer can delay making the payments until the employee leaves at the end of the notice period - and does not have to make the payments at all if the employee goes on strike during the notice period.
The minimum average hourly rate of pay is a week's pay divided by the number of normal weekly hours. There are legal rules for calculating a week's pay for this purpose. To find out how to calculate pay, see our guide on pay: employer obligations.
Where the employee is not working during the notice period the employee will lose the statutory right to full pay during the notice period where the contract requires the employer to give at least one week more than the minimum statutory notice. The employee in such a case will be paid in accordance with the contract of employment, which may be statutory sick pay, full pay, half pay, or whatever other contractual rights apply during lay-off, sickness, etc. It is important to seek legal advice before withholding notice pay from employees on family-related leave.
Payment instead of working notice and setting out financial and other terms in an agreement.
An employee may simply work out a period of notice. They can also take payment in lieu, or have a compromise agreement with their employer.
Employers who don't need employees to work out all or part of the notice period can make a payment in lieu of notice, if the contract allows for it or the employee is willing to accept it. This should cover all the benefits the employee would otherwise have enjoyed during the notice period, including pay, bonuses, accrued holiday, etc.
It is important to take legal advice when deciding whether or not to include a payment in lieu provision in the contract, as its inclusion can have a knock-on effect on your ability to enforce restrictive covenants against the employee. Restrictive covenants are designed to prevent employees from disclosing or using confidential information, trade secrets, etc, and/or soliciting or dealing with customers during a specified period after leaving the business. Restrictive covenant law is challenging, and it is recommended that you take legal advice prior to drawing any up. There are also important tax provisions.
A compromise agreement (also called a settlement agreement) is a single agreement setting out the financial and all other terms on which the employment relationship will end. The compromise agreement must meet certain requirements to be viewed as legally binding including; being in writing, signed by both parties and the employee must have had the benefit of independent legal advice. The employee is then unable subsequently to make a claim in the courts or an industrial tribunal.
A conciliated agreement is a legally binding agreement, facilitated through the Conciliation Service of the Labour Relations Agency (LRA), between an employer and employee to settle an existing or potential claim to the Industrial or Fair Employment Tribunal. As with a compromise agreement, the employee agrees to 'settle out of court' by accepting the financial or other compensation that the employer is offering in return for signing away their right to pursue their claim. This service is provided free of charge by the LRA.
Compromise or conciliated agreements can be useful in circumstances where the employer wishes to avoid the publicity, costs, or uncertain outcome of a tribunal or court case.
Withdrawal of notice issues and further guidance on the subject.
Once an employer or employee gives notice, it cannot be withdrawn unless both parties agree.
Thus, if an employer gives notice to an employee and later changes their mind, the employee can still consider themselves as dismissed from the date of termination specified by the notice.
See our guides on dismissing employees and when an employee resigns.
Minimum legal notice periods for employers and employees and the written statement of particulars of the employment contract.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must receive notice of dismissal/redundancy.
An employee who has worked for a company continuously for one month or more must give notice of their intention to leave.
These notice periods must be included in a written statement of employment particulars which must be issued to your employee within two months of them starting work.
Read Labour Relations Agency (LRA) guidance on preparing a written statement of the main terms and conditions of employment.
The minimum legal notice period to be given by an employer is:
An employer can include longer periods of notice in the employment contract.
Note that if you plan to make 20 or more employees redundant special conditions apply. See redundancy: the options.
The minimum statutory notice period which must be given by an employee is at least one week's notice if employed continuously for one month or more by that employer. This minimum is unaffected by longer service.
The minimum notice does not apply to casual workers, independent contractors, or freelance agents - see employment status.
Unless a contract states otherwise, notice can be given on any day. The notice period runs from the start of the day after the day on which the notice was given. So, if a week's notice is given on a Monday, the period of notice will begin on Tuesday and expire at the end of the following Monday.
Some contracts of employment contain special terms about notice, eg in contracts of employees who have access to information that you wish to protect from a competitor. See when workers leave your employment.
Rights, responsibilities and notice periods for employees and employers.
An employee intending to take maternity or paternity leave must give notice before the end of the 15th week before the expected date of birth and state the expected week of childbirth and the date of the start of the leave - they can change this date with 28 days' notice. An employee taking paternity leave should also state how much leave is being taken.
An employee taking shared parental leave must give their employer eight weeks' notice (before the leave starts) of their intention to take shared parental leave.
For adoption leave employees must notify the employer within seven days of being notified that they have been matched for adoption, the date the child is expected, and the date the leave is to start.
Unless there is a collective agreement in force with a different period, then employees must give 21 days' notice to the employer to take any period of parental leave.
An employee must also give notice before taking Parental Bereavement Leave. How much notice depends on when they're taking leave. They should tell you the date of the child's death or stillbirth when they want their Parental Bereavement Leave to begin and how much leave they are taking. See notice periods for Parental Bereavement Leave and Pay.
Employees returning from maternity or adoption leave don't have to give any notice if returning at the end of their entitled leave. The employer is responsible for telling the employee when leave expires.
If an employee wants to return early, eight weeks' notice must be given to the employer. If not, the employer can postpone the return until the full eight weeks' notice has been given or until the date when the maternity/adoption leave would have ended, whichever is earlier. However, the employer may not postpone an employee's return to a date later than the end of the maternity/adoption leave period.
If the employee does not want to return to work at the end of a period of leave, they must give their normal contractual period of notice. An employee is not required to say in advance whether they intend to return after maternity or adoption leave.
A dismissal on grounds of, or connected with maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave will be regarded by an industrial tribunal as automatically unfair and risks amounting to unlawful sex discrimination.
It is not unlawful to dismiss an employee on maternity, paternity, adoption, parental bereavement, shared parental or parental leave providing it is not for reasons connected with the leave.
If there is a redundancy situation while an employee is off on maternity, adoption, or shared parental leave, the employee is entitled to be offered a suitable alternative vacancy, where there is one before it is offered to any other employees. It would be unlawful to make an employee redundant without first complying with this requirement. The employee is entitled to the statutory notice period, or the notice specified in the employment contract, whichever is longer, or payment in lieu of notice (if the contract provides for it or, in the absence of any contractual provision, the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice).
How to terminate a contract without notice, agree to shorter notice periods or offer pay instead of notice.
The statutory or contractual notice period can be varied in a number of circumstances.
This occurs when an employee is dismissed without notice - summary dismissal - for gross misconduct. However, subject to statutory procedures, unless there is a proper investigation and an appeal hearing, an industrial tribunal/arbitrator might find that the dismissal was unfair.
The employee can also terminate the contract of employment without notice if the employer has fundamentally breached the contract by their conduct.
Employers and employees can both waive their right to notice, ie the employer and employee can agree to a shorter notice period. This must be by mutual agreement, and neither an employer nor employee can opt out of the minimum legal periods when forming a contract of employment.
This will be a breach of contract unless the contract expressly provides for it or the employee is willing to accept pay in lieu of notice.
The employment contract can be varied by agreement between the parties, but the statutory minimum notice periods will still apply.
An employee who has been given notice of dismissal can give counter-notice to leave on an earlier date than the one on which the employer's notice period ends. The minimum statutory notice that an employee must give is one week, but usually, their contractual notice period will be longer than this. For the purposes of unfair dismissal legislation, the employee will still be treated as having been dismissed.
If an employee who has been given a redundancy notice wants to leave before their notice expires, eg to start a new job, they can ask the employer to agree to an earlier termination date. If the employer agrees, they will still get their redundancy payment.
However, if the employer objects they may withdraw the original redundancy notice and refuse to give the employee a redundancy payment. The employee could apply to an industrial tribunal, which will decide whether the employee should get all, part of, or none of the redundancy payment.
Payment rights during notice periods and in lieu of notice and compromise agreements.
An employee who continues to work during the period of notice is entitled to receive normal pay and benefits - including pay rises - for that period in line with their employment contract.
Employees whose contract specifies normal working hours and whose employment is terminated with notice are entitled to receive a minimum average hourly rate for any normal working hours during the notice period that they are:
Employees whose contract does not specify normal working hours are entitled to receive at least a week's pay during the notice period for each week that they are:
These minimum payment rights apply whether it is the employer or the employee who gives notice. If the employee gives notice, the employer can delay making the payments until the employee leaves at the end of the notice period - and does not have to make the payments at all if the employee goes on strike during the notice period.
The minimum average hourly rate of pay is a week's pay divided by the number of normal weekly hours. There are legal rules for calculating a week's pay for this purpose. To find out how to calculate pay, see our guide on pay: employer obligations.
Where the employee is not working during the notice period the employee will lose the statutory right to full pay during the notice period where the contract requires the employer to give at least one week more than the minimum statutory notice. The employee in such a case will be paid in accordance with the contract of employment, which may be statutory sick pay, full pay, half pay, or whatever other contractual rights apply during lay-off, sickness, etc. It is important to seek legal advice before withholding notice pay from employees on family-related leave.
Payment instead of working notice and setting out financial and other terms in an agreement.
An employee may simply work out a period of notice. They can also take payment in lieu, or have a compromise agreement with their employer.
Employers who don't need employees to work out all or part of the notice period can make a payment in lieu of notice, if the contract allows for it or the employee is willing to accept it. This should cover all the benefits the employee would otherwise have enjoyed during the notice period, including pay, bonuses, accrued holiday, etc.
It is important to take legal advice when deciding whether or not to include a payment in lieu provision in the contract, as its inclusion can have a knock-on effect on your ability to enforce restrictive covenants against the employee. Restrictive covenants are designed to prevent employees from disclosing or using confidential information, trade secrets, etc, and/or soliciting or dealing with customers during a specified period after leaving the business. Restrictive covenant law is challenging, and it is recommended that you take legal advice prior to drawing any up. There are also important tax provisions.
A compromise agreement (also called a settlement agreement) is a single agreement setting out the financial and all other terms on which the employment relationship will end. The compromise agreement must meet certain requirements to be viewed as legally binding including; being in writing, signed by both parties and the employee must have had the benefit of independent legal advice. The employee is then unable subsequently to make a claim in the courts or an industrial tribunal.
A conciliated agreement is a legally binding agreement, facilitated through the Conciliation Service of the Labour Relations Agency (LRA), between an employer and employee to settle an existing or potential claim to the Industrial or Fair Employment Tribunal. As with a compromise agreement, the employee agrees to 'settle out of court' by accepting the financial or other compensation that the employer is offering in return for signing away their right to pursue their claim. This service is provided free of charge by the LRA.
Compromise or conciliated agreements can be useful in circumstances where the employer wishes to avoid the publicity, costs, or uncertain outcome of a tribunal or court case.
Withdrawal of notice issues and further guidance on the subject.
Once an employer or employee gives notice, it cannot be withdrawn unless both parties agree.
Thus, if an employer gives notice to an employee and later changes their mind, the employee can still consider themselves as dismissed from the date of termination specified by the notice.
See our guides on dismissing employees and when an employee resigns.
Explanation of redundancy and the reasons for dismissing staff on the grounds of redundancy.
Redundancy is when you dismiss an employee because you no longer:
For a redundancy to be genuine, you must demonstrate that the employee's job will no longer exist.
In this situation, eligible employees would be entitled to receive a statutory redundancy payment (SRP) - read more on rights of redundant employees.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Alternatives to compulsory redundancy.
You should take reasonable steps to avoid compulsory redundancies by considering alternatives, such as:
Before considering redundancies you should look at your business by assessing current performance and seeing whether there are other things you can do to improve its output and performance.
Are there areas of your business where you can save money? See:
Can your business do more to sell more products or services? See:
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Contractual and statutory issues for laying off employees, including statutory guarantee and redundancy payments.
You can lay-off an employee when you temporarily cannot give them paid work.
You must expressly agree it with them. This could be set out in:
National and collective agreements can only be enforced if they are incorporated into the employee's contract of employment.
You may also be able to lay-off an employee:
Where there is no formal agreement in place and the employee refuses to agree to be laid off, you may have to consider other options which could include terminating the employee's original contract and offering them a new, revised one.
Terminating the contract would be just one of the options that the employer should consider.
This involves dismissing the employee and could lead to a claim of unfair dismissal.
You will be in breach of contract if you lay off an employee without pay if there is no contractual agreement or the employee has not agreed to it.
The employee may:
Eligible employees are entitled to a statutory guarantee payment if you don't provide them with a full day's work during the time they would normally be required to work. The maximum payment is five days in any three months.
For more information, see guarantee pay: employee entitlement, calculation and exemptions.
Employees can claim a statutory redundancy payment if the lay-off runs for:
The employee must give you written notice in advance that they intend to make a claim for an SRP. The claim may be contested by the employer if normal working is likely to be resumed within four weeks and there is a reasonable prospect of work for not less than 13 weeks, during which the employee would not be laid off.
There is a strict timetable of requirements, one of which is the resignation of the employee, whereby the employee may ultimately complain to an Industrial Tribunal if they consider that they are entitled to a redundancy payment and it remains unpaid.
See temporary lay-off and short-time working.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Contract and statutory issues relating to short-time working, including statutory guarantee and redundancy payments.
Short-time working is where there is a reduction in the work provided for an employee in a week to the extent that their pay for that week is less than half a week's pay.
You can only put an employee on short-time working where you have expressly agreed it with them. Such an agreement may be set out in:
National and collective agreements can only be enforced if they are incorporated into the employee's employment contract.
You may also be able to put an employee on short-time working:
Where there is no contractual agreement already in place and the employee refuses to agree to short-time working, you may have to consider other options which would include terminating the employee's original contract and offering them a new, revised one.
Terminating the contract would only be one of the options that the employer should consider.
However, this involves dismissing the employee and could lead to a claim of unfair dismissal.
See temporary lay-offs and short-time working.
You will be in breach of contract if you put an employee on short-time work without a contractual agreement or if the employee has not agreed to it.
As a result, the employee may:
Eligible employees are entitled to statutory guarantee payment if you don't provide them with work on a day which they would normally be required to work. The maximum payment is five days in any three months.
See guarantee pay: employee entitlement.
Employees can claim a statutory redundancy payment if the short-time working runs for:
Under the short-time working provisions of the legislation, employees who are put on short-time working and receive less than half a week's pay for four consecutive weeks, or any six weeks (no more than three of the weeks being consecutive eg the six weeks cannot be made up of a four week and a two week period) in a thirteen week period, may also claim a redundancy payment from their employer. The claim must be in writing and may be contested by the employer if normal working is likely to be resumed within four weeks and there is a reasonable prospect of work for not less than 13 weeks, during which the employee would not be put on short-time.
There is a strict timetable of requirements, one of which is the resignation of the employee, whereby the employee may ultimately complain to an Industrial Tribunal if they consider that they are entitled to a redundancy payment and it remains unpaid.
The employee must give you written notice in advance that they intend to make a claim for an SRP.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Pros and cons of voluntary redundancy and early retirement options.
Non-compulsory redundancy covers voluntary redundancy.
You could ask employees if they would like to volunteer for redundancy and then select those to be made redundant.
See redundancy letters, forms, and templates.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
The LRA also has a free employment document toolkit. Once employers are registered they can unlock free employment guides to them build documents, policies, and procedures for their own organisation. Find out about the LRA's employment document toolkit.
How employers can fairly select employees for compulsory redundancy.
If you decide to make compulsory redundancies you will need to:
The criteria that can be used to select employees for redundancy can include:
Criteria used should be verifiable, ie you should have supporting, objective evidence of it. It should be precisely defined, non-discriminatory, and applied consistently, to avoid the possibility of unlawful discrimination.
Download redundancy procedure (PDF, 319K) and sample redundancy selection matrix template (DOC, 17K).
Some criteria will make any subsequent redundancy dismissal automatically unfair.
You should not select an employee for redundancy because of issues related to:
For a complete list, see unfair dismissal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Redundancy consultation and other legal obligations during the redundancy process.
If you fail to consult employees in a redundancy situation, any redundancies made will almost certainly be unfair.
A collective redundancy is when you plan to make 20 or more employees redundant at one establishment within a 90-day period.
Steps you must take:
Fill in advance notification of redundancies form HR1. You must provide advance notification of redundancies to the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency by completing the online form. This information is collated and passed onto the Department for the Economy (DfE) and Department for Communities (DfC) for information.
Employers must send a copy of form HR1 to the representatives of the employees being consulted on redundancy.
These may be either trade union representatives and/or elected employee representatives for those employees not represented by a union. If your employees choose not to elect employee representatives, you must give the relevant information directly to each individual.
Consultation must start when you are developing redundancy proposals and at least:
An employer who has already begun consultations about one group of proposed redundancy dismissals and later finds it necessary to make a further group redundant does not have to add the numbers of employees together to calculate the minimum period for either group.
It is not necessary that consultation should last for all of that time. Further, where consultation has not been completed by the end of the 30 or 90-day period, employers should continue the consultation beyond the 30 or 90-day period.
In other words, the consultation has either resulted in an agreement with employee representatives or has otherwise reached its conclusion. If consultation has been completed within the 30 or 90-day period, the employer may issue the notices of dismissal at that point. As referred to above, employers should consult beyond the 30 or 90-day minimum where the consultations are not yet complete but in some cases, it could be longer where the combination of the consultation and the notice exceeds the period. This timetable can be shortened when an employee decides to leave early or take voluntary redundancy.
The obligations may apply even when an employer intends to offer alternative employment on different terms and conditions to some or all of the employees, with the result that the number actually dismissed is less than twenty or in fact where no dismissals occur; this will be the case if employees are to be re-deployed on such radically different terms and conditions that accepting the new posts amounts to dismissal and re-engagement.
The obligations apply to compulsory redundancies, but in some circumstances may also apply to 'voluntary' redundancies if an employee has no real choice whether to stay or to leave.
If you fail to carry out collective redundancy consultation, affected employees may claim a protective award from an Industrial Tribunal - see potential problems following redundancy.
It is good practice to consult employee or trade union representatives even if fewer than 20 redundancies are planned.
In addition, where there are no representatives present or when there are no representatives elected to conduct consultation, it is good practice to meet with all individuals who are at risk of redundancy, regardless of whether it affects more or less than 20 employees.
DfE must receive the advanced notification of redundancies on form HR1 at least:
Late notification, or failure to notify, is an offence and you may be liable to a fine of up to £5,000.
If you have an I&C agreement in place, you have a duty to inform and consult employees or their representatives on changes to the workforce. This means that you may have to inform and consult on any proposed redundancies.
You do not have to inform and consult at the same time under both the redundancy and the I&C legislation - you can choose instead to 'opt out' of your I&C agreement and consult under the redundancy legislation only.
At the start of the consultation, you must provide written details of:
Consultation does not have to end in agreement, but it must be properly carried out with a view to reaching an agreement, including ways of avoiding redundancies or reducing their effect.
You should consult employees individually regardless of the number you plan to make redundant. While there are no fixed timescales within which this consultation must take place it should be of a sufficient timescale to be meaningful in the individual circumstances.
If you fail to do so, any subsequent dismissals may be unfair - see unfair dismissal.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
The employee's right to statutory redundancy payments, other redundancy-related rights, and how employers can calculate payments.
Redundant employees have a number of rights and may be entitled to receive a statutory redundancy payment (SRP).
To receive an SRP, an individual must:
Temporary lay-off and short-time working - Labour Relations Agency (LRA) guidance.
A redundant employee also has the right to receive a written statement setting out the amount of any redundancy payment and how you worked it out.
You must make the payment when or soon after you dismiss the employee.
An SRP is based on an employee's age and length of employment and is counted back from the date of dismissal. Employees receive:
Their length of service is capped at 20 years. Weekly pay is subject to the statutory limit which is £749 (since 6 April 2025). The maximum SRP payable is £22,470 (since 6 April 2025). These figures are normally reviewed each financial year.
Calculate the statutory redundancy pay due to your employee.
SRP is not taxable, as it's not more than £30,000. Any redundancy payment you make in addition to SRP is subject to tax and National Insurance (NI).
Other termination payments made to the employee at the same time - like payment in lieu of holiday - must have tax and NI deducted.
If an employee disagrees with the amount, or you fail to pay SRP, the employee has six months from the date their employment ended to make a claim for payment to an Industrial Tribunal.
All other complaints in relation to payments received on termination of employment due to redundancy for eg notice pay or holiday pay must be made to an Industrial Tribunal within three months from the date the employment ended.
If they fail to make the claim for redundancy payment in time, a tribunal still has the power for a further six months to decide whether or not the employee should receive an SRP.
Employees under a notice of redundancy also have the right to:
Even if you have selected an employee for redundancy, you could still avoid dismissals by offering them alternative work.
For an offer to be valid:
Employees who accept an offer of alternative work are allowed a four-week trial period to see if the work is suitable. The four-week trial period can be extended by agreement for training purposes only.
An agreement for an extended trial period must be in writing and be made before the employee starts work under the new contract. It must state the date on which the period of retraining will end and specify the terms and conditions of employment that will apply after the end of the retraining period.
They may still claim a statutory redundancy payment (SRP) if you both agree that the work is not suitable. If you think the job is suitable but the employee unreasonably refuses to take it, they may lose any entitlement to an SRP.
Alternatives to redundancy (PDF, 33K).
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Practical advice and support for employees facing redundancy.
Try to find ways of helping employees come to terms with their situation.
You could:
If you require further information or advice with an ongoing redundancy claim, you can call the Department for the Economy's Redundancy Payments Service on Tel 028 9025 7562 or email: rpsquery@economy-ni.gov.uk.
For general advice on redundancies, you can get help from the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Helpline on Tel 03300 555 300.
The Department for Communities (DfC) offers a Redundancy Service to help employers and employees through the process of redundancy. A redundancy clinic webinar is also available to help employers and employees affected by redundancy.
For further help you can also email: dfcemployerservices@communities-ni.gov.uk.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
Avoid claims of unfair dismissal and help with redundancy payments.
An eligible employee can claim unfair dismissal if they feel employers:
Employees may also be able to claim a protective award if employers fail to properly consult with employee representatives, ie trade union or elected employee representatives in collective redundancy situations. See rights of redundant employees.
An employee will have been automatically unfairly dismissed if you select them for redundancy for certain reasons eg involving discrimination or whistleblowing. If you select the employee for redundancy for any of these reasons, they will be able to make an unfair dismissal claim regardless of how long they have been in your employment.
If you fail to properly carry out collective redundancy consultation, a complaint may be made to an Industrial Tribunal by:
The tribunal may award up to 90 days' pay to each affected employee.
See the redundancy consultation process.
The Department for the Economy (DfE) may also prosecute you for failure to notify the proposed redundancies in advance.
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) redundancy webinar recording provides useful information on the topic of redundancy and how to ensure the redundancy process is managed fairly and in line with employment legislation.
If you require further information or advice with an ongoing redundancy claim, you can call DfE's Redundancy Payments Service on Tel 028 9025 7562 or email rpsquery@economy-ni.gov.uk.
For general information on redundancies, you can contact the Labour Relations Agency (LRA) Helpline on Tel 03300 555 300.