Employment Rights Act 2025: What’s coming in April 2026?

  • Employment Law
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Peninsula Team, Peninsula Team

(Last updated )

The Employment Rights Act 2025 (ERA 2025) finally passed into law on 18 December, after a year of fierce debate and compromise in the Houses of Parliament. The radical changes this new law will bring into force are being phased in, which began in 2025 when the law became an Act and will continue into 2026 and 2027.

The Government’s roadmap sets out the following changes which will come into effect in April 2026.

Statutory Sick Pay

Under the ERA 2025, significant changes to SSP eligibility will be going ahead with an expected implementation date of 6 April 2026.

Those changes will see the requirements to earn the LEL and to serve three waiting days before receiving SSP removed. Instead, all workers will be entitled to either 80% of their usual earnings, or the flat statutory SSP rate, whichever is lower, from the first day of absence.

These rules will mean that those earning just above the LEL, between £129 (the LEL rate from 6 April 2026) and £154.05 per week, would see a reduction in their weekly SSP rate as a result of these changes. This is because 80% of £154.05 (£123.24) will be lower than the statutory rate of SSP from 6 April 2026, £123.25 per week.

The Department for Work and Pensions has released guidance for employers on how to manage the transition period when these changes come into effect for those on sick leave on the implementation date.

With these changes, it will become even more important for employers to take steps to minimise sickness absence by taking charge of things within their control. This could include keeping a close eye on workload and working conditions to avoid burnout, implementing robust measures to prevent employees from feigning sickness and managing long-term absences to ensure a smooth and swift return to work.

Check out our GLU webinar catch up for more information on what the SSP changes mean for you:

What the new Employment Rights Act 2025 means for you

Fair Work Agency

From April 2026, a new Fair Work Agency (FWA) will be established to bring these bodies together.

The FWA will have powers to enforce the payment of statutory payments to employees, enabling them to recover underpayments quicker than through the current tribunal system.

Additionally, it will be able to bring tribunal claims on behalf of individuals who are unwilling or unable to do so themselves. Where an individual has started tribunal proceedings, the agency will be able to provide legal support, assistance, or representation.

The agency will have the power to recover any costs incurred from the business if the claim is successful.

Collective consultation

Collective consultation requirements apply in large redundancy or fire and re-hire situations, where 20 or more people are likely to be dismissed because of the process. Under the ERA 2025, the maximum award will increase from up to 90 days’ pay to up to 180 days’ pay.

Paternity and parental leave

The ERA 2025 will remove the qualifying period so that both types leave become day-one entitlements, aligning with other family leave entitlements such as maternity leave. This will give more employees access to these types of leave from the start of their employment. However, notice requirements have not changed and employees will still be expected to give the notice required under the law to take paternity and parental leave.

Sexual harassment

Disclosures made around sexual harassment, including that it has occurred, is occurring, or is likely to occur, will qualify as a “protected disclosure”.

As with other qualifying disclosures, the disclosure will not need to be substantiated, however the individual must have reasonable belief that it is true, and it must be in the public interest.

As a result, employees making a qualifying disclosure in relation to sexual harassment will be protected from suffering a detriment and any dismissal for this reason would be automatically unfair.

Trade Unions

From April 2026, employers will be prevented from undertaking unfair practices as soon as the Central Arbitration Committee accepts an application for trade union recognition.

Additionally, balloting will be modernised with the introduction of “e-balloting” and making e mail the preferred method of communication to inform employers of a ballot outcome.

Takeaway

The legal changes set to come into force from April 2026 will have a big impact on employers, and will likely require changes to organisation policies, procedures and practices. Now is the time to begin the work of assessing what will need to be changed to ensure there is plenty of time to do so and train managers on the new rules.

For more information, catch up on our GLU webinar:

Employment Rights Act 2025: what's changing in April 2026?

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