
The draft Bereaved Partner’s Paternity Leave Regulations 2026 were quietly published in early January 2026. If enacted, the Regulations will apply from 6th April 2026.
The Regulations introduce a new right to Bereaved Partner’s Paternity Leave (BPPL).
Who is entitled?
Only employees (not workers) qualify. From 6th April 2026, an employee is entitled to BPPL when:
- the child’s primary carer has died
- the employee is the child’s father, or is married to or the civil partner of the child’s mother or adopter
- the employee has main responsibility for the upbringing of the child.
How much leave are partners entitled to?
- A single period of up to 52 weeks’ unpaid leave.
- Leave must usually be taken within 52 weeks of the child’s birth or placement for adoption.
- Where the bereavement occurs within 13 days of the end of that 52-week window, the employee may still take up to 14 days’ leave, regardless.
Notice requirements
The notice regime depends on when leave is due to start:
Leave starting within 8 weeks of bereavement
- Notice may be given orally or in writing
- It must be provided before the employee is due to start work on the first day of leave
It must include
- the bereavement date
- the proposed start date of leave
- the child’s date of birth or adoption placement (or date of entry into Great Britain for overseas adoptions).
Leave starting more than 8 weeks after bereavement
- Notice must be in writing
- It must be given at least one week before the intended start date
It must include
- the intended return date
- the bereavement date
- the proposed start date of leave
- the child’s date of birth or adoption placement (or date of entry into Great Britain for overseas adoptions)
- a declaration that the leave is being taken to care for a child
- confirmation of the employee’s relationship to the child.
Changing or cancelling leave
Employees may vary the start date subject to notice, which depends on whether the new start date falls within or beyond the initial 8 week period. Leave may be cancelled in writing. No notice is required if leave was due to start within eight weeks of bereavement. If it starts after 8 weeks, one week’s notice is required.
Return dates can also be varied in writing. Notice ranges from one week to eight weeks, depending on how far the original return date fell from the bereavement date.
What leave is provided if the partner and child both die?
If an employee would have been entitled to BPPL but the child has also died (or has been returned following adoption), they may still take up to eight weeks’ unpaid BPPL in the 52-week eligibility window, provided they had not already taken BPPL before the child’s death.
Employment protections
During BPPL:
- the contract of employment continues (unpaid)
- employees may take up to 10 Keeping in Touch (KIT) days
- protections relating to return to work, redundancy, detriment and unfair dismissal apply, mirroring other family leave rights.
Next steps for HR and employers
HR policies should be updated (or created) ahead of April 2026 to reflect the new BPPL entitlement. You should also be amending paternity leave policies to reflect the Employment Rights Act 2025 move to a day one right.
Further reading
- The Bereaved Partner’s Paternity Leave Regulations 2026
- Shared parental leave and pay – Gov.uk
- Time off for parents – ACAS
- Employee claims he was fired because he ‘sought’ to take parental leave – Hunter Law
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