Annabelle Cowie
- Solicitor
The Employment Rights Act 2025 (“the ERA 2025”) received Royal Assent on 18 December 2025, fundamentally altering the employment law landscape.
This article summarises the key provisions expected to affect employers in 2026 and highlights practical steps employers should consider.
The ERA 2025 contains provisions affecting trade union rights which will impact both unionised and non-unionised employers.
On 18 December 2025, the ERA 2025 repealed the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act 2023 which enabled the Secretary of State to set minimum service levels for strikes in “relevant services” in the fields of health, transport, education, fire and rescue, border control, and nuclear decommissioning and radioactive waste management services. The repeal means that all associated powers, regulations and defined terms relating to minimum service levels cease to apply.
Before the ERA 2025, the law allowed the Secretary of State to ban the creation of lists that employers or employment agencies (which can include recruitment agencies) might use to discriminate against people when hiring or managing staff.
The ERA 2025 removes the words “By employers or employment agencies” and it will enable the Secretary of State to be able to make laws to prohibit:
Notice of industrial action must be provided to the employer by the trade union after it has secured a ballot mandate before any action is taken. The ERA 2025 will reduce the notice of industrial action from 14 days to 10 days.
The ERA 2025 will also reduce the information a union must include on the ballot notice and sample voting papers to employers, as well as reducing the information the union must provide to a member with ballot results.
Further, union member support for industrial action will automatically expire after 12 months – it was previously 6 months subject to extension. Unions will also no longer be required to supervise picketing.
From October 2026, further reforms regarding trade unions are anticipated, including:
“An employer that permits an employee to take time off as required by this section must, where requested by the employee, provide the employee with such accommodation and other facilities for carrying out the duties or undergoing the training for which the employee takes time off as is reasonable in all the circumstances, having regard to any relevant provisions of a Code of Practice issued by Acas.”
This will however require commencement regulations and an Acas Code of Practice.
Protection against detriment for taking industrial action. This will however require further substantive regulations and the government intends to launch a consultation with a view to bringing measures into force in October 2026.
Practical points:
Under current law, employees must have at least 26 weeks’ continuous service by the 15th week before the expected week of childbirth to qualify for statutory paternity leave. For unpaid parental leave, an employee needs one year’s service at the time the leave begins.
Coming into force on 6 April 2026, unpaid leave will become a day one right for eligible employees for paternity leave. This means new parents can take leave as soon as they start employment.
For eligible employers, paternity leave also becomes a day one right.
However, although paternity leave itself becomes available from day one, the eligibility criteria for statutory paternity pay – a minimum of 26 weeks’ service by the 15th week before the due date – will remain unchanged.
Additionally, paternity leave can be used either before or after shared parental leave, giving much greater flexibility.
Practical points:
While the financial impact may be minimal (because statutory pay rules remain unchanged), operational disruption could increase.
Currently, the Equality Act 2010 requires employers to take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment of their employees during the course of their employment. Expected in October 2026, the ERA 2025 will amend the Equality Act 2010 to require employers to take “all reasonable steps” to prevent sexual harassment.
Additionally, expected in October 2026, employers will be under a duty to take “all reasonable steps” to prevent third-party harassment in relation to all relevant protected characteristics. This means that in addition to an employer being prohibited from harassing their own employees or job applicants, employers must also not permit a third party to harass their employees. A “third party” is a person other than the employer or one of its employees.
Practical points:
Currently, SSP is only payable from the fourth day of illness, and employees must earn at least £125 per week to qualify. The rate is currently £118.75 per week or 80% of the employee’s average weekly earnings, whichever is lower.
From April 2026, SSP becomes payable from day one (rather than day four) and the lower earnings limit (£125 per week) is removed, making many more workers eligible.
Practical points:
The ERA brings structural changes aimed at relieving pressure on Acas and Employment Tribunals.
Currently, employees have three months from the date of the alleged breach to make a claim. Before lodging a claim, employees are required to go through ACAS Early Conciliation, which paused the limitation period for up to six weeks.
Since December 2025, Early Conciliation period was extended to 12 weeks, giving parties more time to resolve disputes before formal proceedings. It is understood that the 12 week period will be reviewed in October 2026 to decide on its effectiveness.
Effective from October 2026, the time limit for lodging most tribunal claims will be extended from three months to six months. This is a significant change giving more flexibility to employees and reduces the pressure to submit the claim quickly.
Practical points:
Managers should be reminded of the importance of robust record keeping and proactive risk management.
The most significant changes won’t come into force until January 2027. They are
This means that anyone being recruited in the second part of 2026 will have these enhanced rights making effective monitoring of performance and efficiency of those staff key at an early stage.
The ERA 2025 introduces some of the most wide‑ranging reforms in recent memory. While not all measures take effect in 2026, the majority of significant changes (particularly in relation to trade union law, family leave, sick pay, and tribunal deadlines) will.
For employers, priorities for 2026 should include:
Keeping ahead of these changes will not only ensure compliance but also place businesses in a stronger position to manage risk and support their employees through a shifting legal landscape.
If you would like to discuss how this issue might impact you or your business, please contact our Employment Law Solicitor, Annabelle Cowie.