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Employment Rights Act 2025: The legal framework

Be Aware UK
Unfair dismissal: Earlier access to rights, significantly higher risk and financial exposure

What changes (with effect from 1 January 2027)? 

  • The qualifying period for ordinary unfair dismissal will reduce from two years to six months.
  • The statutory caps on compensatory awards for unfair dismissal will be removed entirely.

Impact:

  • A substantial expansion of the protected workforce (estimated at over 6 million additional employees).
  • Much greater financial exposure in dismissal claims, particularly for higher earners and those with poor re-employment prospects.
  • Increased pressure on probation management, documentation and early-stage performance handling.
  • Expected increase in tribunal activity, with knock-on effects for dispute resolution strategy.
 
Day-one and expanded family & sickness rights

What changes (from April 2026)?

  • Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) payable from day one, with the Lower Earnings Limit removed.
  • Day-one rights to paternity leave and unpaid parental leave.
  • New and extended bereavement leave, including for early pregnancy loss.

Impact:

  • Increased cost and administrative burden, particularly for lower-paid and short-service workforces.
  • Need to update contracts, policies and payroll systems.
  • Greater risk of discrimination and detriment claims linked to absence and leave handling.
 
Zero- and low-hours work: Reduced flexibility for employers

What changes (largely from 2027, subject to regulations)?

  • New rights for qualifying workers to:
    • Guaranteed hours contracts reflecting actual working patterns.
    • Advance notice of shifts.
    • Compensation for cancelled or curtailed shifts.

Impact:

  • A fundamental shift away from ‘one-sided flexibility’.
  • Increased cost certainty for workers, but reduced operational agility for employers particularly in sectors such as hospitality, retail and social care.
  • Likely need for workforce model redesign and closer monitoring of working patterns.
 
Collective redundancies: Higher stakes and wider triggers

What changes?

  • The maximum protective award for failure to consult will double from 90 to 180 days’ pay (April 2026).
  • A new organisation-wide redundancy trigger is proposed (details subject to consultation and regulations).

Impact:

  • Significantly increased financial exposure in collective redundancy consultation failures.
  • Greater complexity for large or multi-site employers, particularly during restructures.
  • Heightened importance of early legal input and consultation planning.
 
Fire and rehire: Stronger statutory restrictions

What changes?

  • ERA introduces statutory limits on ‘fire and rehire’ practices, with dismissals potentially becoming automatically unfair where statutory conditions are not met (expected Jan 2027).

Impact:

  • Employers will face narrower scope to impose contractual change through dismissal.
  • Greater reliance on collective consultation, incentives and negotiated variation.
  • Increased litigation risk where business change is poorly evidenced.
 
Harassment, non-disclosure agreements and whistleblowing

What changes?

  • Employers must take ‘all reasonable steps’ to prevent sexual harassment, including by third parties.
  • NDAs preventing disclosure of harassment or discrimination will be void (with limited exceptions).
  • Complaints of sexual harassment become qualifying disclosures for whistleblowing protection.

Impact:

  • Higher expectations around training, culture and preventative measures.
  • Reduced utility of NDAs in resolving disputes.
  • Increased risk of uncapped whistleblowing detriment claims.
 
Trade unions and industrial action

What changes?

  • Repeal of much of the Trade Union Act 2016.
  • Simplified balloting, longer mandates and enhanced protections against dismissal for industrial action.

Impact:

  • Lower barriers to lawful industrial action.
  • Stronger union leverage in negotiations, particularly in unionised or public-facing sectors.
 
Enforcement: A shift towards proactive regulation

What changes?

  • Creation of a new Fair Work Agency, consolidating enforcement of rights such as minimum wage, SSP and holiday pay.

Impact:

  • Greater likelihood of proactive enforcement, not just individual claims.
  • Increased importance of compliance audits and governance.