Hunter Law

  • Home
  • About
    • Support Team
  • Blog
  • Testimonials
  • Contact
  • Newsletter Sign Up
You are here: Home / Blog / Employment Rights Act 2025: Road map

March 2026

Employment Rights Act 2025: Road map

The Government has released a new policy paper confirming that it’s largely sticking to the timetable for the Employment Rights Act 2025. This roadmap was first published last July and, while a few timings have shifted slightly, the overall reform programme remains on track.

April 2026

  • Paternity leave and parental leave becoming day-one rights
  • Statutory Sick Pay payable from the first day of absence, with the lower earnings limit removed
  • The maximum protective award in collective redundancy cases doubling from 90 to 180 days
  • Sexual harassment added as a qualifying whistleblowing disclosure
  • Easier trade union recognition due to relaxed thresholds
  • The formal launch of the Fair Work Agency

August 2026

  • Wider use of electronic voting for most statutory union ballots (except recognition and derecognition)

October 2026

  • A requirement to inform workers of their right to join a trade union
  • Creation of a new Adult Social Care Negotiating Body
  • A strengthened duty on employers to take “all reasonable steps” to prevent sexual harassment
  • New employer liability for harassment by third parties
  • Tribunal time limits extended from three to six months (now stated as “not earlier than” October 2026)
  • New consultation duties on tipping policies
  • Expanded access and facilities for trade union officials, including digital access
  • Protection from detriment for workers taking industrial action – the government has recently launched a consultation on this change which can be accessed here.
  • Measures aimed at stopping “two-tier” workforces after outsourcing

January 2027

  • The qualifying period for unfair dismissal reducing to six months
  • Removal of the cap on compensation for unfair dismissal
  • New limits on fire and rehire practices (delayed from October 2026)

Later in 2027

  • A new right to unpaid bereavement leave
  • Restrictions on zero-hours contracts
  • A requirement that refusals of flexible working requests must be reasonable
  • Changes to collective redundancy thresholds – the government has recently launched a consultation on this which can be accessed here.
  • Stronger dismissal protection for pregnant employees and those returning from family leave

Although a few deadlines have moved, the direction is clear: major workplace reform is coming. Over the next 18 to 24 months, employers will see significant changes across sickness absence, trade union rights, harassment protections, dismissal rules and flexible working. Early planning and policy updates will be essential to stay compliant and manage risk effectively.

Further reading

  • Employment Rights Act 2025 – Prep for April
  • Employment Rights Act 2025: key trade union changes
  • Employment Rights Act 2025: Imminent employment law changes
  • Employee claims he was fired because he ‘sought’ to take parental leave – Hunter Law

If you enjoyed this blog then perhaps you’d like to sign up to our monthly newsletter. We’ll keep you updated on what’s new in employment law.

The team at Hunter Law is here for you. We can handle your HR issues, finesse your policies, and keep you up-to-date on evolving legislation. Please get in touch with our legal team, we’d love to help.

Newsletter Sign Up

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Newsletter March 2026

Hunter Law

The Old Barn
Oasts Business Village
Red Hill
Wateringbury
Kent
ME18 5NN

Tel: 01622 663355
Email: info@hunterlaw.uk

Discrimination Law Association logo

Discrimination Law Association Member

Solicitors Regulation Authority logo

Solicitors Regulation Authority

SRA Verification

Pricing information and complaints procedure

Defending employment tribunals – pricing and service information

Our Complaints Procedure

Privacy Notice

Privacy Notice

Copyright © 2026 Hunter Law

Hunter Law Limited is registered in England and Wales with registered company number 10336680.
Registered office: 2nd Floor, Medway Bridge House, 1-8 Fairmeadow, Maidstone, Kent, ME14 1JP.
We are also an authorised body regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (authorisation number 634003).
Our professional rules may be accessed at Code of Conduct.