Employment Law Compliance UK —
Protect Your Business Before Problems Arise
Comprehensive employment law compliance for UK businesses — employment contracts, staff handbooks, disciplinary and grievance procedures, redundancy, TUPE and employment tribunal support. ACCA qualified. We work with specialist employment solicitors. Fixed fee.
Employment Law — Prevention Is Always Cheaper Than a Tribunal
UK employment law is one of the highest-risk areas for businesses of all sizes. An unfair dismissal award can reach £25,000 or more; discrimination claims have no cap; ACAS early conciliation now precedes most tribunal claims. Getting the basics right — compliant contracts, documented procedures and correct process — prevents the vast majority of employment disputes before they become expensive.
Employment contracts — since April 2020, all employees and workers must receive a written statement of particulars from day one of employment. The statement must cover: names of employer and employee, start date, pay and pay frequency, hours of work, holiday entitlement, notice periods, sickness and absence procedure, disciplinary and grievance procedures, and pension provisions. Non-compliance allows employees to claim tribunal compensation of 2-4 weeks’ pay.
The ACAS Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures sets out the required process for handling workplace disciplinary and grievance matters. Employment tribunals take the Code into account — and can increase any award by up to 25% where an employer has unreasonably failed to follow it. Following the correct procedure (investigation, notification, hearing, right of appeal) is as important as the substantive merits of the case.
Redundancy — genuinely redundant employees with 2+ years’ service are entitled to statutory redundancy pay, a minimum notice period and a right to a consultation process. Collective redundancies (20+ employees within 90 days) require formal collective consultation with elected employee representatives and notification to the Secretary of State. Failing to follow correct redundancy procedure creates unfair dismissal claims and protective award liabilities.
✅ What’s Included
- ✓ Employment contract preparation (all roles)
- ✓ Written statement of particulars
- ✓ Staff handbook — complete policies
- ✓ Disciplinary procedure advisory
- ✓ Grievance procedure support
- ✓ Performance improvement plan (PIP) advice
- ✓ Redundancy process guidance
- ✓ Statutory redundancy calculation
- ✓ Compromise/settlement agreements
- ✓ TUPE advice (business transfers)
- ✓ Employment tribunal ET3 response
- ✓ ACAS early conciliation support
Our Process — Clear, Fast & Complete
Which Businesses Need This Service?
Small Businesses Hiring First Employees
First-time employers need compliant contracts, a staff handbook and a clear understanding of their obligations before the first hire — not after the first dispute.
Growing Businesses Scaling Their Teams
Fast-growing businesses hiring rapidly need scalable HR processes — standard contracts, onboarding documentation and clear policies that work as headcount grows from 5 to 50.
Businesses Going Through Change
Restructuring, acquisition or workforce downsizing — redundancy processes, TUPE transfers and settlement agreements all require specialist advice and correct documentation.
Businesses Facing Existing Disputes
If a disciplinary process has started, a grievance been raised or a tribunal claim received, early professional advice dramatically improves outcomes. Contact us at the first sign of a dispute.
4 Costly Mistakes — And How We Prevent Them
Free contract templates are frequently outdated, non-compliant with post-April 2020 Day 1 requirements and missing clauses essential for enforcement. A non-compliant contract can create rights for employees that were never intended. We prepare tailored contracts for each role and business — typically for a fixed fee that costs far less than one day of an employment solicitor’s time.
The most expensive HR mistake is dismissing an employee — even for justified reasons — without following the ACAS Code process. A procedurally unfair dismissal can cost 25% more than a substantively unfair one. We advise on the correct process for every disciplinary situation before any action is taken.
Dismissing for poor performance without documented performance management — written warnings, improvement plans, review meetings — creates unfair dismissal risk. Documentation must begin early — not when dismissal is already being considered. We advise on performance management documentation from the first formal warning.
Statutory redundancy pay is based on age, weekly pay (capped at £643/week in 2024/25) and years of service. Getting the calculation wrong — in either direction — creates additional claims risk. We calculate statutory redundancy pay precisely for every redundancy situation.
Employment Law Compliance — Your Questions Answered
Since April 2020, a written statement of particulars must be provided from day one and must include: employer and employee names, start date, pay and frequency, hours of work, holiday entitlement (including how it accrues), notice period (from both sides), job title and job description, place of work, any applicable collective agreements, pension arrangements, and the disciplinary, grievance and sickness procedures. Additional particulars (training entitlements, other benefits) can be provided later in supplementary documents.
The ACAS Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures is a statutory code setting out the expected process for dealing with disciplinary matters and grievances. Employment tribunals must take it into account when adjudicating claims. Where an employer unreasonably fails to follow the Code, tribunals can increase compensation by up to 25%. Where an employee fails to follow it, compensation can be reduced by up to 25%. Following the Code correctly is therefore critical in all disciplinary and grievance situations.
Employees need 2 years’ continuous service to bring an unfair dismissal claim — except for automatically unfair dismissal categories (whistleblowing, pregnancy/maternity, trade union activity, asserting a statutory right, making a health and safety complaint) where there is no qualifying period. The qualifying period means employers have more flexibility in the first 2 years — but correct procedure should still be followed to avoid automatically unfair dismissal risk.
The Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE) protect employees’ rights when their employment transfers to a new employer — typically when a business or part of a business is acquired or when a service contract changes hands. Under TUPE, transferring employees retain their existing employment terms (including continuity of service) and the new employer takes on all employment liabilities. TUPE has significant implications for business acquisitions, outsourcing and insourcing — we advise on TUPE implications for all business transfers.
You have 28 days from receipt of the ET1 to file your ET3 response. Failure to respond means the tribunal proceeds on the claimant’s version of events. Before responding, review the claim carefully, identify the relevant facts and any procedural issues, gather documentation (contracts, written warnings, meeting notes, emails) and take professional advice on the merits. Most tribunal claims are resolved through ACAS early conciliation before the hearing — early professional advice maximises your negotiating position.
Fixed Fees — Agreed Upfront
Every fee fixed before we start. Book a free consultation for your exact quote.
Complete Your Business Package
Employment Law — Compliant From Day One
Book a free consultation. We’ll audit your employment documentation, identify risks and ensure your business is protected — before the first dispute arises.