The timeline below highlights when key changes take effect, including reforms to trade union and industrial action rules, expanded worker protections, new enforcement bodies, and additional workplace rights.
As implementation is phased, different measures - such as day-one employment rights, changes to industrial action rules and enhanced protections against unfair dismissal - will come into force at different points over the next two years.
Use the sections below to explore what changes happen when and what they mean as a worker or employer.
Simplified rules for taking industrial action
Simpler ballot rules
Changes affecting public sector unions
Unfair picketing rules scrapped
Stronger protection for workers
Parental leave
The new Fair Work Agency is established to oversee employment rights enforcement.
Electronic and workplace balloting for statutory trade union ballots begins.
Key employment protections roll out:
Mandatory Seafarers’ Charter comes into effect.
A suite of measures continues to be introduced during 2027 (timing subject to regulation and consultation):
The bill is set to benefit over 10 million workers – including many on low incomes. The plan to make work pay covers:
Currently, employers can keep workers on exploitative zero hours contracts. The Bill will give workers the right to a contract that reflects their regular hours of work, eliminating the worst zero hours practices.
The Bill ends the practice of "fire and rehire" – where workers are dismissed and then re-employed on worse terms and conditions.
The Bill strengthens sick pay provisions and ensure that every worker has access to sick pay from the first day of illness. At present, statutory sick pay is not paid until the fourth day of absence and is not available to workers earning below a certain threshold.
The Bill provides workers with protection from unfair dismissal after six months of employment. Currently, workers can be dismissed without reason during their first two years of employment.
The Bill grants workers the right to parental leave from their first day at work. In addition, there will be a full review of the parental leave system in the future.
There is currently no statutory right to bereavement leave following a death. The Bill introduces a right to bereavement leave, including for pregnancy loss before 24 weeks, such as miscarriage.
The Bill makes flexible working the default. While employees currently have the right to request flexible working from their first day, employers often deny these requests without valid reasons. The Bill ensures that any refusal must be reasonable, and employers will be required to provide a written explanation.
The Bill gives trade unions the right to access workplaces to meet, support, recruit, and organise workers. At present, employers often block unions from entering the workplace to engage with staff.
The Bill increases employers’ responsibilities to protect workers from harassment by third parties (e.g. patients, customers, or members of the public encountered through work).
The Bill requires large employers (those with over 250 employees) to develop action plans to address gender pay gaps. Separate legislation is planned to require reporting on ethnicity and disability pay gaps.
The Bill will strengthen protections for pregnant workers, ensuring they are protected from redundancy from the moment they inform their employer of their pregnancy until six months after returning to work. Currently, these protections only last until the end of maternity leave.
Some of these new rights come into affect immediately, whereas others will be phased in gradually. You can all of the details in the Government’s implementation timetable.
The TUC will be announcing training and guidance on the new rights as they come into effect. Sign up for updates from TUC Education here to ensure you hear about these courses first.
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