

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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Understand the rules for employing people to work on Sundays.
The rules about Sunday working depend on the wording of each worker's employment contract, but special rules apply to shop and betting workers.
Shop workers in Northern Ireland have the right to refuse to work on Sundays and are protected against dismissal, selection for redundancy, or other detrimental treatment, eg refusal of promotion or training, or exclusion from a general pay rise or bonus.
The rules covering Sunday work apply only to employees and not other workers.
Prior to 2022 betting shops in Northern Ireland were prohibited from opening on a Sunday.
The Betting, Gaming, Lotteries, and Amusements (Northern Ireland) Order 1985 was amended by the introduction of the Betting, Gaming, Lotteries, and Amusements (Amendment) Act (Northern Ireland) 2022 to include Sunday opening, effective from 1 May 2022.
Some shop workers are automatically protected from having to work on Sundays. In Northern Ireland, these are:
Employees who are automatically protected can give up this right only by giving a written, signed, and dated opting-in notice to their employer and then agreeing expressly on what Sunday work they are willing to do.
All other shop workers can opt out of Sunday working if they want, giving three months' written notice without reason, known as an opting-out notice. During this notice period, the worker will still be obliged to do the Sunday work as per their contract of employment, obtaining the right not to work on Sunday from the end of the three-month period.
You may not dismiss or subject your worker to any other detriment during the opt-out notice period.
If you have any shop workers who are or may be, required to work on Sundays (but not only on Sundays) you must give them a written statement of statutory rights in relation to opting out of Sunday shop work (DOC, 28K). Statement of statutory rights in relation to opting out of Sunday betting work (DOC,12K), which you must issue to your workers if you require or ask them to work on a Sunday. This explains their opt-out right. If you fail to do this within two months of the start of their employment as a shop or betting worker, they only need to give one month's notice for opting out.
Shop workers who opt into Sunday working have the right to change their minds and opt-out.
The Sunday working rules apply irrespective of age, hours of work, or service length, but they don't apply to anyone employed to work on Sundays only - see seasonal and Sunday trading.
You should note that a shop worker is anyone who is required under their contract of employment to do shop work, which means work in or about a shop ie not necessarily serving customers on a day when the shop is open for the serving of customers.
Ensuring your employees stay within the night working regulations.
If any of your workers do night work - even casual, freelance, and agency workers - there are special regulations you must comply with.
The regulations define night time as the period between 11pm and 6am, though this can be slightly varied by agreement between you and your workers. A night worker is someone who regularly works for at least three hours during this period.
In general, night workers:
When devising your health questionnaire, make sure you ask a qualified health professional for advice. Download our sample health questionnaire to assess if you are fit to work to work night (DOC, 105K).
For workers dealing with special hazards or heavy mental and physical strain - there can be no averaging at all - the eight-hour daily limit is absolute.
Note that there are separate rules for mobile workers in air, sea, and road transport.
In general workers under 18 years old are not permitted to work at night. However, there are quite a few exceptions. For more information, see employing children and young people.
It is your responsibility to comply with the night work rules. You should keep records to ensure workers don't exceed their night working limit.
You should also retain records of your night workers' health assessments for two years from the date on which they were made or, if they didn't accept the offer of a free health assessment, record when the offer was made.
Understand shift systems that can be used to plan Sunday and/or night work and how to design one for your employees.
If your staff work Sunday or evening hours, you'll need an appropriate shift pattern for them.
There are a variety of ways of paying shift workers, including:
For more information on paying shift workers, see terms and conditions for Sunday and night workers.
Although it is not required by law, taking workers' preferences into account when arranging shift patterns can help with staff recruitment and retention and increase business productivity.
Consider the type of shift system to be used, including the hours it covers, and the average weekly hours to be worked by each person.
Also consider whether the shift will be a fixed or rotating system. If shifts rotate, decide whether the direction should be 'backwards' (nights, afternoons, mornings) or 'forwards' (mornings, afternoons, nights).
Once this is established, decide the frequency of shift changes, the length of shifts, and the number of crews required. You can then plan rest periods and work out the type of shift.
Some common shift patterns are:
Two crews to cover any daily period between 16 and 24 hours.
Two crews alternate day and night shifts, weekly or fortnightly.
Three shift crews provide 24-hour cover for five days.
One week of mornings, afternoons, or nights.
Workers spend their whole working time on nights.
Four crews switch between morning, afternoon, and night shifts over a four-week cycle.
Three, four, or five crews do 12-hour shifts and get more rest days in return.
Best practice to help set terms and conditions for your night and Sunday workers.
You need to comply with the rules for working hours. This means giving at least 11 hours of rest per day, at least one day off per week (or two days off per fortnight), and a rest break of at least 20 minutes (this can be paid or unpaid) if the working day is longer than six hours.
Young workers are entitled to longer and more frequent breaks. See hours, rest breaks, and the working week and employing children and young people.
Assess the health and safety implications of night working - for instance, your fire-evacuation procedure may need to be changed at night. Also, you may need to tighten your security arrangements.
Download our sample health questionnaire to assess if you are fit to work nights (DOC, 105K).
If you employ people outside normal working hours it is a good idea to reward them for working antisocial hours. You're not required by law to do this, but it can help with staff recruitment and retention and can improve business productivity.
Common ways to reward night and Sunday workers include paying them time-and-a-half or double time, paying a premium for working shifts, or giving them extra leave.
Other matters of good practice when dealing with night and Sunday working include:
Take your employees' preferences into account as far as possible when organising shift work. Workers will be happier if they can have some say in how their schedule is arranged. See employee engagement.
For information on non-standard work patterns, see flexible working: the law and best practice.
Understand the rules for employing people to work on Sundays.
The rules about Sunday working depend on the wording of each worker's employment contract, but special rules apply to shop and betting workers.
Shop workers in Northern Ireland have the right to refuse to work on Sundays and are protected against dismissal, selection for redundancy, or other detrimental treatment, eg refusal of promotion or training, or exclusion from a general pay rise or bonus.
The rules covering Sunday work apply only to employees and not other workers.
Prior to 2022 betting shops in Northern Ireland were prohibited from opening on a Sunday.
The Betting, Gaming, Lotteries, and Amusements (Northern Ireland) Order 1985 was amended by the introduction of the Betting, Gaming, Lotteries, and Amusements (Amendment) Act (Northern Ireland) 2022 to include Sunday opening, effective from 1 May 2022.
Some shop workers are automatically protected from having to work on Sundays. In Northern Ireland, these are:
Employees who are automatically protected can give up this right only by giving a written, signed, and dated opting-in notice to their employer and then agreeing expressly on what Sunday work they are willing to do.
All other shop workers can opt out of Sunday working if they want, giving three months' written notice without reason, known as an opting-out notice. During this notice period, the worker will still be obliged to do the Sunday work as per their contract of employment, obtaining the right not to work on Sunday from the end of the three-month period.
You may not dismiss or subject your worker to any other detriment during the opt-out notice period.
If you have any shop workers who are or may be, required to work on Sundays (but not only on Sundays) you must give them a written statement of statutory rights in relation to opting out of Sunday shop work (DOC, 28K). Statement of statutory rights in relation to opting out of Sunday betting work (DOC,12K), which you must issue to your workers if you require or ask them to work on a Sunday. This explains their opt-out right. If you fail to do this within two months of the start of their employment as a shop or betting worker, they only need to give one month's notice for opting out.
Shop workers who opt into Sunday working have the right to change their minds and opt-out.
The Sunday working rules apply irrespective of age, hours of work, or service length, but they don't apply to anyone employed to work on Sundays only - see seasonal and Sunday trading.
You should note that a shop worker is anyone who is required under their contract of employment to do shop work, which means work in or about a shop ie not necessarily serving customers on a day when the shop is open for the serving of customers.
Ensuring your employees stay within the night working regulations.
If any of your workers do night work - even casual, freelance, and agency workers - there are special regulations you must comply with.
The regulations define night time as the period between 11pm and 6am, though this can be slightly varied by agreement between you and your workers. A night worker is someone who regularly works for at least three hours during this period.
In general, night workers:
When devising your health questionnaire, make sure you ask a qualified health professional for advice. Download our sample health questionnaire to assess if you are fit to work to work night (DOC, 105K).
For workers dealing with special hazards or heavy mental and physical strain - there can be no averaging at all - the eight-hour daily limit is absolute.
Note that there are separate rules for mobile workers in air, sea, and road transport.
In general workers under 18 years old are not permitted to work at night. However, there are quite a few exceptions. For more information, see employing children and young people.
It is your responsibility to comply with the night work rules. You should keep records to ensure workers don't exceed their night working limit.
You should also retain records of your night workers' health assessments for two years from the date on which they were made or, if they didn't accept the offer of a free health assessment, record when the offer was made.
Understand shift systems that can be used to plan Sunday and/or night work and how to design one for your employees.
If your staff work Sunday or evening hours, you'll need an appropriate shift pattern for them.
There are a variety of ways of paying shift workers, including:
For more information on paying shift workers, see terms and conditions for Sunday and night workers.
Although it is not required by law, taking workers' preferences into account when arranging shift patterns can help with staff recruitment and retention and increase business productivity.
Consider the type of shift system to be used, including the hours it covers, and the average weekly hours to be worked by each person.
Also consider whether the shift will be a fixed or rotating system. If shifts rotate, decide whether the direction should be 'backwards' (nights, afternoons, mornings) or 'forwards' (mornings, afternoons, nights).
Once this is established, decide the frequency of shift changes, the length of shifts, and the number of crews required. You can then plan rest periods and work out the type of shift.
Some common shift patterns are:
Two crews to cover any daily period between 16 and 24 hours.
Two crews alternate day and night shifts, weekly or fortnightly.
Three shift crews provide 24-hour cover for five days.
One week of mornings, afternoons, or nights.
Workers spend their whole working time on nights.
Four crews switch between morning, afternoon, and night shifts over a four-week cycle.
Three, four, or five crews do 12-hour shifts and get more rest days in return.
Best practice to help set terms and conditions for your night and Sunday workers.
You need to comply with the rules for working hours. This means giving at least 11 hours of rest per day, at least one day off per week (or two days off per fortnight), and a rest break of at least 20 minutes (this can be paid or unpaid) if the working day is longer than six hours.
Young workers are entitled to longer and more frequent breaks. See hours, rest breaks, and the working week and employing children and young people.
Assess the health and safety implications of night working - for instance, your fire-evacuation procedure may need to be changed at night. Also, you may need to tighten your security arrangements.
Download our sample health questionnaire to assess if you are fit to work nights (DOC, 105K).
If you employ people outside normal working hours it is a good idea to reward them for working antisocial hours. You're not required by law to do this, but it can help with staff recruitment and retention and can improve business productivity.
Common ways to reward night and Sunday workers include paying them time-and-a-half or double time, paying a premium for working shifts, or giving them extra leave.
Other matters of good practice when dealing with night and Sunday working include:
Take your employees' preferences into account as far as possible when organising shift work. Workers will be happier if they can have some say in how their schedule is arranged. See employee engagement.
For information on non-standard work patterns, see flexible working: the law and best practice.
Understand the rules for employing people to work on Sundays.
The rules about Sunday working depend on the wording of each worker's employment contract, but special rules apply to shop and betting workers.
Shop workers in Northern Ireland have the right to refuse to work on Sundays and are protected against dismissal, selection for redundancy, or other detrimental treatment, eg refusal of promotion or training, or exclusion from a general pay rise or bonus.
The rules covering Sunday work apply only to employees and not other workers.
Prior to 2022 betting shops in Northern Ireland were prohibited from opening on a Sunday.
The Betting, Gaming, Lotteries, and Amusements (Northern Ireland) Order 1985 was amended by the introduction of the Betting, Gaming, Lotteries, and Amusements (Amendment) Act (Northern Ireland) 2022 to include Sunday opening, effective from 1 May 2022.
Some shop workers are automatically protected from having to work on Sundays. In Northern Ireland, these are:
Employees who are automatically protected can give up this right only by giving a written, signed, and dated opting-in notice to their employer and then agreeing expressly on what Sunday work they are willing to do.
All other shop workers can opt out of Sunday working if they want, giving three months' written notice without reason, known as an opting-out notice. During this notice period, the worker will still be obliged to do the Sunday work as per their contract of employment, obtaining the right not to work on Sunday from the end of the three-month period.
You may not dismiss or subject your worker to any other detriment during the opt-out notice period.
If you have any shop workers who are or may be, required to work on Sundays (but not only on Sundays) you must give them a written statement of statutory rights in relation to opting out of Sunday shop work (DOC, 28K). Statement of statutory rights in relation to opting out of Sunday betting work (DOC,12K), which you must issue to your workers if you require or ask them to work on a Sunday. This explains their opt-out right. If you fail to do this within two months of the start of their employment as a shop or betting worker, they only need to give one month's notice for opting out.
Shop workers who opt into Sunday working have the right to change their minds and opt-out.
The Sunday working rules apply irrespective of age, hours of work, or service length, but they don't apply to anyone employed to work on Sundays only - see seasonal and Sunday trading.
You should note that a shop worker is anyone who is required under their contract of employment to do shop work, which means work in or about a shop ie not necessarily serving customers on a day when the shop is open for the serving of customers.
Ensuring your employees stay within the night working regulations.
If any of your workers do night work - even casual, freelance, and agency workers - there are special regulations you must comply with.
The regulations define night time as the period between 11pm and 6am, though this can be slightly varied by agreement between you and your workers. A night worker is someone who regularly works for at least three hours during this period.
In general, night workers:
When devising your health questionnaire, make sure you ask a qualified health professional for advice. Download our sample health questionnaire to assess if you are fit to work to work night (DOC, 105K).
For workers dealing with special hazards or heavy mental and physical strain - there can be no averaging at all - the eight-hour daily limit is absolute.
Note that there are separate rules for mobile workers in air, sea, and road transport.
In general workers under 18 years old are not permitted to work at night. However, there are quite a few exceptions. For more information, see employing children and young people.
It is your responsibility to comply with the night work rules. You should keep records to ensure workers don't exceed their night working limit.
You should also retain records of your night workers' health assessments for two years from the date on which they were made or, if they didn't accept the offer of a free health assessment, record when the offer was made.
Understand shift systems that can be used to plan Sunday and/or night work and how to design one for your employees.
If your staff work Sunday or evening hours, you'll need an appropriate shift pattern for them.
There are a variety of ways of paying shift workers, including:
For more information on paying shift workers, see terms and conditions for Sunday and night workers.
Although it is not required by law, taking workers' preferences into account when arranging shift patterns can help with staff recruitment and retention and increase business productivity.
Consider the type of shift system to be used, including the hours it covers, and the average weekly hours to be worked by each person.
Also consider whether the shift will be a fixed or rotating system. If shifts rotate, decide whether the direction should be 'backwards' (nights, afternoons, mornings) or 'forwards' (mornings, afternoons, nights).
Once this is established, decide the frequency of shift changes, the length of shifts, and the number of crews required. You can then plan rest periods and work out the type of shift.
Some common shift patterns are:
Two crews to cover any daily period between 16 and 24 hours.
Two crews alternate day and night shifts, weekly or fortnightly.
Three shift crews provide 24-hour cover for five days.
One week of mornings, afternoons, or nights.
Workers spend their whole working time on nights.
Four crews switch between morning, afternoon, and night shifts over a four-week cycle.
Three, four, or five crews do 12-hour shifts and get more rest days in return.
Best practice to help set terms and conditions for your night and Sunday workers.
You need to comply with the rules for working hours. This means giving at least 11 hours of rest per day, at least one day off per week (or two days off per fortnight), and a rest break of at least 20 minutes (this can be paid or unpaid) if the working day is longer than six hours.
Young workers are entitled to longer and more frequent breaks. See hours, rest breaks, and the working week and employing children and young people.
Assess the health and safety implications of night working - for instance, your fire-evacuation procedure may need to be changed at night. Also, you may need to tighten your security arrangements.
Download our sample health questionnaire to assess if you are fit to work nights (DOC, 105K).
If you employ people outside normal working hours it is a good idea to reward them for working antisocial hours. You're not required by law to do this, but it can help with staff recruitment and retention and can improve business productivity.
Common ways to reward night and Sunday workers include paying them time-and-a-half or double time, paying a premium for working shifts, or giving them extra leave.
Other matters of good practice when dealing with night and Sunday working include:
Take your employees' preferences into account as far as possible when organising shift work. Workers will be happier if they can have some say in how their schedule is arranged. See employee engagement.
For information on non-standard work patterns, see flexible working: the law and best practice.