Employment Rights Act
The Employment Rights Act 2025 (ERA) received Royal Assent and
became law at the end of last year. This capped the end of a long journey, with the
government consulting business and trade unions on the measures to be included in
the legislation. It is vital that businesses now focus on getting the detail right
to ensure they are ready for the changes contained in the Act. Here we look at
what’s in the Act and ask what businesses can do to prepare.
The Employment Rights Act
The Act aims to modernise workplace rights, strengthen worker protections and promote
fair pay and flexibility in working lives. Key reforms include:
- Unfair dismissal protection from six months' service and the
removal of the cap on compensation.
- Ban on zero-hours contracts and new restrictions on dismissal
and re-engagement practices.
- Strengthened protections against harassment and reinstated
protections for third-party harassment.
- Flexible working rights for employees to request flexible
working from day one.
- Enhanced family leave entitlements and new rights to
miscarriage leave.
- Reintroduction of the two-tier code on workforce mattes on
outsourced contracts.
- Availability of paternity leave and unpaid parental leave from the first
day of employment.
- Implementation of a Fair Pay Agreements process in the adult
social care sector in England and social care sectors in Scotland and Wales.
What happens next?
- ERA will be delivered in phases across a two-year period. The government says
this will ensure that employees and employers have time to plan and prepare.
- The majority of the Act’s regulations will commence on 6 April or 1 October this
year.
- The first measures repeal previous legislation and restore workers’ ability to
take industrial action without excessive legal barriers.
- Rights to statutory sick pay and paternity leave, and the launch of the Fair
Work Agency, will begin this April.
- The government has published a roadmap setting out expected implementation plans
for all measures within ERA. It says it remains committed to the timelines in
the roadmap and will provide further updates and support during 2026.
Significant shift
ERA marks a significant shift in employment rights and the rights of trade unions and
it has been a key pillar of the government’s agenda.
It was achieved through the process of consultation and compromise on the key issues
around the early stages of employment.
This approach will continue to be needed on the many details still to be worked
through that will now be part of secondary legislation, according to Peter Cheese,
Chief Executive of the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), the
professional body for HR and people development.
Clarity for employers
Cheese says: ‘It now provides clarity for employers and sets a timeline for
businesses to prepare for the many changes, and in reviewing key people management
practices and policies, some of which must start now.
‘With so much change, it will be crucial for the government to provide clear advance
communication, alongside practical guidance and support for employers. And to
provide this in good time, particularly for smaller organisations that don’t have
in-house HR support.’
Long journey
The UK’s business groups have played a key part in consultations for ERA. They say
that although it has been a long journey, there is still a considerable distance to
go.
Now the Act has become law, businesses, the unions and the government must focus on
getting the detail right, to ensure everyone is ready for the coming changes.
Crucially, this will include consultation on the secondary legislation, which will
govern much of the day-to-day practicalities of employment rights.
Major concerns
Kate Shoesmith, Director of Policy at the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), says:
‘Businesses are clear they still have major concerns about the workability and costs
of several other powers in the Bill.
‘These include issues relating to guaranteed-hours contracts, seasonal and temporary
workers, thresholds for industrial action, and the practical application of union
rules.
‘It is hugely important that workable agreements are found through further
discussions, using the tripartite model that led to the compromise on unfair
dismissal.
‘Businesses, especially smaller ones, will need a lot of support and guidance from
government to make sure they get this right and have the correct policies and
processes in place.’
Billions in benefits
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) has welcomed ERA, claiming it will help to deliver an
estimated £10 billion boost to the UK economy.
An updated government impact assessment suggested that the changes to employees'
rights will prove to be 'significantly positive for society', with 18 million
workers directly benefitting from improved working conditions and enhanced job
security.
The government said that the reforms will help to boost living standards, improve
health and wellbeing and assist more people to stay in work.
Paul Nowak, General Secretary of the TUC, commented: ‘Too often in this debate the
facts are ignored. But stronger rights at work are good for workers and employers –
driving up labour market participation, improving health, raising productivity and
boosting demand.’
How we can help
The Employment Rights Act will impact on all UK employers. We can help you plan
for tax, administrative and cashflow changes. Please contact us for further
advice.