Employment Rights Bill Clears Lords Stage

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Anne Morris

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Key Takeaways

 

  • The Employment Rights Bill has cleared the House of Lords and is expected to receive Royal Assent in December to become the Employment Rights Act 2025.
  • Key elements, including proposals to remove the unfair dismissal compensation cap, are tied to implementation sequencing and further steps such as an impact assessment or review before commencement.
  • Provisions are expected to commence in phases, with the government and ACAS indicating a first wave of changes from April 2026, alongside other measures coming into force later in 2026 and into 2027.

 

The Employment Rights Bill has now passed, following the final stages of parliamentary debate in which the House of Lords did not insist on further amendments. The Bill is expected to receive Royal Assent before Christmas 2025.

Once that happens, the Bill becomes the Employment Rights Act 2025.

For employers, this confirms the direction of reform but does not mean immediate operational change. Most employer facing obligations are expected to be phased in through commencement regulations, secondary legislation and updated codes of practice.

SECTION GUIDE

 

Employment Rights Bill Clears House of Lords

 

With the Lords now allowing the Employment Rights Bill to proceed, the focus shifts away from whether the reforms happen and toward when they take effect, how they are staged and how the government chooses to ‘operationalise’ them.

Employers should assume therefore that 2026 will bring a meaningful tightening of the legal environment around dismissal risk, contract flexibility and certain working patterns, even where the fine detail is not yet final.

The practical employer risk is that organisations treat Royal Assent as the trigger for immediate policy edits, then discover later that the real compliance obligations are in the regulations and codes that come afterwards. A better approach is to treat Royal Assent as confirmation of direction, then use early 2026 to build a preparatory plan covering documentation, decision-making processes, manager capability and governance so that later information and commencement dates do not force rushed changes under time pressure.

 

Expected Timelines

 

The current direction points to a first wave of changes from April 2026, with other provisions staged later in 2026 and into 2027. Exact dates and operational detail are expected to be confirmed through commencement regulations and secondary legislation, and that is why employer monitoring during 2026 matters as much as the Act itself.

 

1. December 2025 to early 2026

 

Royal Assent is expected before the end of 2025. Once the Act is in place, employer attention should turn to government announcements on commencement sequencing, consultation launches and regulatory drafting. This is also the period where internal governance should be set up, including ownership across HR, legal, operations and finance, because tribunal exposure and workforce model changes tend to affect multiple functions.

 

2. Early to mid 2026

 

This is the period in which employers should expect consultations, draft regulations and supporting guidance. The detail will determine how obligations apply in real scenarios, including which workers are in scope, what evidence expectations look like, what exemptions or transitional arrangements exist and what enforcement mechanisms apply. Employers with higher risk profiles, such as those with high turnover, heavy reliance on variable hours, complex performance management or significant organisational change programmes, should take an active interest in the consultation pipeline.

 

3. From April 2026 onwards

 

A first wave of commencement is widely expected from April 2026. Employers should assume that some changes will begin to affect onboarding, early employment decisions and working pattern administration from that point. A second and third wave is likely later in 2026 and into 2027, which means employers should plan for rolling compliance rather than a single project that ends at go live.

 

Headline Changes for Employers

 

The Act covers a broad package of reforms, but employers should prioritise the areas most likely to increase dispute risk, tighten process expectations or reduce flexibility. Even where the legal text is now set, the practical exposure depends on how commencement is staged and how supporting rules are drafted.

 

1. Unfair dismissal, qualifying period and compensation exposure

 

Unfair dismissal reform is one of the most material employer risk shifts because it affects both who can bring a claim and what the claim may be worth.

Employers should prepare for a shorter runway between hire and unfair dismissal exposure, which increases the importance of early performance management and decision documentation.

In parallel, the debate around the unfair dismissal compensation cap signals a move toward higher potential financial exposure, even if the government stages implementation and carries out further impact analysis before commencement. Employers should plan on the basis that dismissal disputes may become more expensive to defend and harder to settle cheaply, particularly where process weaknesses exist.

 

2. Dismissal and re engagement and contract change governance

 

Contract change strategy is likely to come under sharper scrutiny. Where employers have relied on flexibility clauses, restructures or re engagement tactics to impose new terms, the Act and related guidance are expected to raise the standard of consultation and justification. This affects not just formal fire and rehire scenarios but also incremental changes to hours, location, duties and pay arrangements. Employers should assume that poor process, thin paper trails or inconsistent consultation approaches create material litigation risk and reputational exposure, even where the commercial reasons for change are legitimate.

 

3. Variable hours and predictability obligations

 

Employers using variable hours models should expect a regulatory push toward predictability, structured offers of guaranteed hours and tighter rules on scheduling practice. The most acute risk is operational. A workforce model that works commercially can become difficult to administer if systems and managers cannot comply with new notice requirements, offer processes and record keeping. Employers should map where variable hours are used, why they are used and what alternatives exist, then use 2026 to prepare systems and templates so that compliance does not rely on ad hoc manager judgement.

 

DMS Perspective

 

Employers that prepare well tend to do the basics consistently. They set clear rules, document decisions properly and train managers to follow the process. The Act increases the value of that discipline. A structured review in 2026 reduces the risk of rushed policy changes later and helps ensure that operational practice matches what the documents say.

Contracts and templates should be reviewed for provisions that are likely to become higher risk under the new regime. This includes probation clauses, termination provisions, flexibility clauses, hours wording and any terms that are commonly changed after hire. Policies and handbook content should also be checked for alignment with current practice, because a policy that is not followed creates avoidable exposure.

Employers should also review how documents interact, since inconsistencies between contract terms, handbook provisions and manager practice are frequently exploited in disputes.

If unfair dismissal exposure begins earlier, employers should ensure probation reviews are scheduled, evidence-based and consistently documented. The organisation should also review how concerns are escalated, who signs off early dismissal decisions and what record-keeping is retained. The aim is to ensure that early decisions are defensible and consistent, particularly in roles with higher turnover.

Disciplinary and capability frameworks should be stress-tested against increased legal exposure and higher potential compensation risk. Employers should review how investigations are conducted, how outcomes are justified and how procedural fairness is evidenced.

Redundancy planning processes should also be reviewed, particularly selection, consultation and documentation.

On settlement strategy, employers should reassess how disputes are valued, when early settlement is appropriate and whether the organisation has consistent decision-making criteria. Higher potential exposure often changes the economics of early settlement and increases the value of early legal input.

 

Need Assistance?

 

Once it receives Royal Assent and is brought into force, the Employment Rights Act will materially change the risk profile for employers. Organisations that are proactive in preparing across processes, management behaviour and documentation should avoid being forced into reactive changes when commencement dates land.

We are supporting employers through this period of reform through:

 

  • Contract and template audit, including probation, termination and flexibility terms.
  • Probation and early performance management review, including documentation standards and escalation routes.
  • Dismissal and redundancy process review, with an emphasis on fairness, evidence and decision governance.
  • Workforce model assessment for variable hours arrangements, scheduling practice and predictability controls.
  • Dispute risk and settlement strategy review, including tribunal exposure planning and manager training priorities.

 

For specialist guidance and advice for your organisation, contact our employment law experts.

About our Expert

Picture of Anne Morris

Anne Morris

Founder and Managing Director Anne Morris is a fully qualified solicitor and trusted adviser to large corporates through to SMEs, providing strategic immigration and global mobility advice to support employers with UK operations to meet their workforce needs through corporate immigration.She is recognised by Legal 500 and Chambers as a legal expert and delivers Board-level advice on business migration and compliance risk management as well as overseeing the firm’s development of new client propositions and delivery of cost and time efficient processing of applications.Anne is an active public speaker, immigration commentator, and immigration policy contributor and regularly hosts training sessions for employers and HR professionals.
Picture of Anne Morris

Anne Morris

Founder and Managing Director Anne Morris is a fully qualified solicitor and trusted adviser to large corporates through to SMEs, providing strategic immigration and global mobility advice to support employers with UK operations to meet their workforce needs through corporate immigration.She is recognised by Legal 500 and Chambers as a legal expert and delivers Board-level advice on business migration and compliance risk management as well as overseeing the firm’s development of new client propositions and delivery of cost and time efficient processing of applications.Anne is an active public speaker, immigration commentator, and immigration policy contributor and regularly hosts training sessions for employers and HR professionals.

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Legal Disclaimer

The matters contained in this article are intended to be for general information purposes only. This article does not constitute legal advice, nor is it a complete or authoritative statement of the law, and should not be treated as such. Whilst every effort is made to ensure that the information is correct at the time of writing, no warranty, express or implied, is given as to its accuracy and no liability is accepted for any error or omission. Before acting on any of the information contained herein, expert legal advice should be sought.