It’s a question that arises, especially towards the end of the year and here is the answer
By law, all staff, whether permanent full-time, part-time or shift/casual workers, are entitled to 5.6 weeks holiday a year which works out at 28 days for a full-time employee. This is inclusive of bank holidays or any other fixed closures determined by your company. For example, you might decide to close for a week every Christmas and this would be taken as holiday by employees. If bank holidays are included as part of the statutory minimum rather than additional, then this leaves 20 days a year holiday to be taken at a time convenient to both you and your employees.
As the end of the holiday year draws to a close, you may get some employees who haven’t taken their full entitlement and request payment instead for that unused holiday. On the face of it, it sounds like a win win – the employee gets some extra money and you don’t have to arrange cover while they are on annual leave. If the end of the holiday year coincides with a particularly busy period for your business it can seem doubly attractive because you really don’t want staff off.
However, the statutory provision was designed to give employees paid time away from the work environment and there are sound health and wellbeing reasons for them to have that time. For those reasons you are not allowed to contract out of the minimum holiday entitlement by paying them instead.
The only exception to the rule is when an employee is leaving your organisation. During their period of notice your worker may be able to take whatever is left of their leave entitlement. However, you can offer a payment in lieu for unused holiday instead.
If you give your staff more holiday than the statutory leave, then you can agree separate arrangements for what happens with any unused additional leave. This will normally be laid out in their contract of employment or employee handbook.
When you’re running a business and spinning a dozen plates at a time, it can be hard to keep tabs on who has or hasn’t used up their annual leave. However, it’s important you do because it’s very beneficial to your business. Staff working non-stop get worn out both mentally and physically which can lead to work-related stress, reduced productivity, more work-related errors and higher staff turnover. Having an employee-friendly holiday policy in place isn’t just a good perk, it’s essential to the healthy running of your business.
You could adopt a hard-line approach where if staff don’t take their holiday in a leave year they lose it. However, this doesn’t exactly create a positive company culture, endear you to your staff or do much for morale. It could even encourage them to jump ship to greener pastures where the bosses treat them more sympathetically. And worse still, it could put off other talented individuals from joining your business.
There is no legal duty to allow your staff to carry over a certain number of days’ holiday a year. Staff must take the full EU statutory leave which is four weeks or lose it. But if they have an allowance of 28 days, you can choose to let them carry over the eight extra days (or a pro-rated amount if part-time). The exception to this rule is where an employee is unable to take the full leave entitlement because they are either sick or on maternity leave. They can carry over up to four weeks of leave and it must be taken within 18 months.
It’s up to you whether you have a policy of allowing leave to be carried over but it can encourage staff not to take their full leave each year which can be detrimental to health and wellbeing. It can also become costly if you have a number of employees all carrying leave over and you therefore need a lot of extra cover.
However, letting them carry over annual leave in exceptional circumstances e.g. moving house, a wedding etc. to use later rather than them taking unpaid leave might be preferable. In addition, if you get to the end of the leave year and find you have lots of staff still with odd days owed, allowing them to carry them over might be easier than having them all take it at once and leave you short-staffed.
The best option is to encourage employees to take holiday throughout the year. Let staff know that taking holidays is welcomed. Take time at company meetings to ask them about holidays and what they’ve done – if they know you’re interested they may be more relaxed and feel more comfortable taking them.
By regularly checking in with your employees and monitoring how much holiday they have left you can also ensure they take it at regular intervals. You can keep tabs on holiday requests and entitlement using online HR Software. This can also make booking holiday much easier for your staff too.
Is this all very confusing for you? Well give us a call on 01483 697 076 and we will talk you through it.