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For a successful business, you need a viable business idea, the skills to make it work and the funding. Discover whether your idea has what it takes.

Forming your business correctly is essential to ensure you are protected and you comply with the rules. Learn how to set up your business.

Advice on protecting your wellbeing, self-confidence and mental health from the pressures of starting and running a business.

Learn why business planning is an essential exercise if your business is to start and grow successfully, attract funding or target new markets.

It is likely you will need funding to start your business unless you have your own money. Discover some of the main sources of start up funding.

Businesses and individuals must account for and pay various taxes. Understand your tax obligations and how to file, account and pay any taxes you owe.

Businesses are required to comply with a wide range of business laws. We introduce the main rules and regulations you must comply with.

Marketing matters. It drives sales and helps promote your brand and products. Discover how to market your business and reach your target customers.

Some businesses need a high street location whilst others can be run from home. Understand the key factors from cost to location, size to security.

Your employees can your biggest asset. They can also be your biggest challenge. We explain how to recruitment and manage staff successfully.

It is likely your business could not function without some form of IT. Learn how to specify, buy, maintain and secure your business IT.

Few businesses manage the leap from start up to high-growth business. Learn what it takes to scale up and take your business to the next level.

Essential guide to rights for working parents and carers

Making sure you respect employees' rights is essential to help you minimise disputes and the risk of legal claims. You must know where you stand if an employee becomes pregnant or responsible for a child.

As well as understanding maternity and paternity rights, you need to be aware of the extra leave entitlements that parents and carers have.

Maternity rights

Ordinary maternity leave

Additional maternity leave

Paternity leave

Adoption leave

Parental leave

Shared parental leave

Neonatal leave

Carers leave

Time off for dependants

Employment and dismissal

1. Maternity rights

Pregnant employees and new mothers have a number of rights.

The right not to be dismissed because of pregnancy, maternity leave or childbirth

The right to return to work

  • You must consider any request to return to work flexibly. If it is not possible, you need to explain why, with business reasons.
  • Refusal to offer a part-time option may amount to indirect sex discrimination. It may also fall foul of flexible working regulations. All employees with at least 26 weeks' service have the right to request flexible working.
  • There are few jobs that cannot be done on a part-time or job-share basis.
  • Refusal to allow a woman to return to work after maternity or parental leave will be automatically unfair.

The right to paid time off for ante-natal care and classes

  • You can ask to see an appointment card or similar evidence.

The right to all her normal terms and conditions, except wages or salary, during leave

  • This applies throughout ordinary and additional maternity leave.
  • Keep employees informed of opportunities for promotion and training or they may have a complaint of discrimination.

The right to shared parental leave and statutory shared parental pay

The right to parental bereavement leave and pay

  • All employed parents have the right to one- or two-weeks' leave if they lose a child under the age of 18 or suffer a stillbirth from 24 weeks of pregnancy. Leave must be taken within 56 days of the child's death.
  • It is paid at £184.03 or 90% of average weekly earnings if lower. Eligibility criteria apply.

You must carry out a health and safety risk assessment

  • If it highlights risks which might affect a pregnant woman or her baby, she has the right to be offered suitable alternative work, or to be suspended on normal pay.
  • You must take action to ensure pregnant employees are not exposed to those risks.

2. Ordinary maternity leave

Every pregnant employee is entitled to 26 weeks' ordinary maternity leave

  • Part-time employees have the same rights as full-timers.

The employee must notify you, in writing if requested, that she is pregnant

She must:

  • Tell you her expected week of childbirth (the EWC). You can ask for evidence of the EWC from her GP or midwife.
  • Choose when to start her maternity leave, any time from the 11th week before the EWC, and inform you of the start date by the 15th week before the EWC or at least 28 days before her leave is due to begin. Depending on the circumstances, leave may even start on the day of the birth.
  • Tell you when she has had the baby.
  • Give eight weeks' notice if she wants to return to work before the end of her maternity leave (16 weeks' notice if she has adopted employee-owner or employee-shareholder status).

You must write to her setting out the date on which her leave will end

  • You must do this within 28 days of being told when she intends to start her leave
  • If this is the date on which she intends to return to work, she need do nothing more.

It is illegal for a woman to return to work within two weeks of giving birth

  • This is increased to four weeks for factory workers.

If an employee is ill during her pregnancy, she is still entitled to take sick leave

  • If she is absent from work with a pregnancy-related illness in the four weeks before her EWC, her maternity leave will start automatically.
  • If she is too ill to return to work at the end of her maternity leave, you must treat it as a sickness absence.
  • If the absence persists, you may eventually need to follow your dismissal procedure.
  • You must only consider absence following her return from maternity leave to avoid the risk of an unfair dismissal.

Many pregnant women are entitled to statutory maternity pay (SMP)

  • SMP is paid at 90% of average weekly earnings (AWE) for the first six weeks of ordinary maternity leave followed by £184.03 per week or 90% of AWE (if lower) for the next 33 weeks.

A woman whose baby dies has the same maternity leave and pay entitlements

  • This also applies if her baby is stillborn after the 24th week of pregnancy.
  • Her partner may be entitled to two weeks' paid parental bereavement leave and pay.

3. Additional maternity leave

Every pregnant employee is entitled to 26 weeks' additional maternity leave (AML)

  • AML starts at the end of ordinary maternity leave.
  • Women on AML leave continue to benefit from all their contractual rights (except remuneration). They are also entitled to accrue statutory paid annual leave (5.6 weeks, pro rata for part-timers).
  • Contractual matters may be negotiated and agreed between you and the employee.

After her AML, the employee is entitled to come back to the same kind of job

  • If this is not possible, she is entitled to a suitable alternative. Any alternative must be appropriate and provide equivalent pay and conditions.

If the employee is unfit to return, she will be regarded as off sick

  • She may qualify for sick pay.
  • If the absence continues and you wish to dismiss the employee, you must implement your dismissal procedure.
  • You must ignore the additional maternity leave and only take account of subsequent absences, or the dismissal will probably be seen as unfair and as sex discrimination.

4. Paternity leave

Paternity leave provides paid time off at or around the time of the child's birth

  • Fathers, partners and parents are entitled to two weeks' ordinary paternity leave. The two weeks can be taken separately if the employee wishes.
  • This leave must be taken within 52 weeks of the birth (or the EWC if the birth is early).
  • They are usually entitled to statutory paternity pay of  £184.03 a week or 90% of AWE if lower. The employer can set this off against NI contributions.

There are qualifying conditions

Fathers, partners and parents must:

  • have 26 weeks' continuous service by the end of the 15th week before the EWC;
  • have (or expect to have) responsibility for bringing up the child;
  • give adequate notice (at least 28 days).

Fathers, partners and parents have the right to attend up to two ante-natal appointments

  • The time off work can be unpaid.

5. Adoption leave

An employee who adopts a child may be entitled to adoption leave

  • To qualify, the employee must have 26 weeks' continuous service by the time they are matched with a child and adopt a child from a UK adoption agency.
  • They are entitled to up to 26 weeks' ordinary adoption leave and up to 26 weeks' additional adoption leave.
  • They are also entitled to statutory adoption pay of 90% of AWE for the first six weeks followed by  £184.03 per week or 90% of AWE if lower for up to 33 weeks.
  • Where the child has been adopted by a couple, the other partner may be entitled to paternity leave.

There are conditions to this entitlement

  • There must be an agreement to adopt. You are entitled to ask for evidence.
  • The employee and child must be newly matched by an adoption agency. Adopting within the family, or an existing foster child, does not count.

The employee must give reasonable notice

  • This must be at least 28 days before the date the agency expects to place the child.
  • The start date can be changed but the employee must give you 28 days' notice.

6. Parental leave

Both mothers and fathers are entitled to time off to look after their children

  • They must have one year's continuous service to qualify.

They are entitled to 18 weeks' unpaid parental leave per child

  • This entitlement must normally be taken before the child's 18th birthday.
  • Parents of adopted children have the same entitlement as birth parents.
  • You must agree to the leave. If you cannot reach agreement, the fallback position is that not more than four weeks' leave per child per year may be taken. Leave must be taken in weekly blocks unless you agree otherwise or the child is disabled.
  • Unless immediately following birth or adoption, you can ask to postpone the leave for up to six months if it would seriously disrupt the business. However, you cannot postpone the leave if it will mean the parent is no longer eligible.
  • If the employee disagrees, he or she has the right to go to a tribunal.

They must give you reasonable notice

  • This normally means at least 21 days.

7. Shared parental leave

Shared parental leave (SPL) and statutory shared parental pay (ShPP) is availble for parents of new babies or adopted children

  • The system offers parents more flexibility to arrange time off in the year after the birth or adoption of their child.

Employees can take SPL in up to three separate blocks

  • They can also share the leave with their partner and choose how much time off each of them will take.
  • SPL and ShPP must be taken between the baby's birth and first birthday (or within one year of adoption).

An employee must give at least eight weeks' notice of any leave

  • SPL can be used alongside, or instead of, traditional maternity, adoption and paternity leave.

There are conditions for SPL

  • The child's mother (or adoptive parent) must have worked for you continuously for at least 26 weeks by the end of the 15th week before the EWC and be eligible for either maternity leave or pay; Maternity Allowance; or adoption leave or pay.
  • Your employee must be employed by you whilst on SPL.
  • The mother must take at least two weeks off following the birth of her baby (four weeks if she works in a factory).
  • Eligible employees can then take the remaining leave (up to a maximum of 50 weeks) as SPL and the remaining pay (up to a maximum of 37 weeks) as ShPP.

Your employee may also qualify for ShPP

ShPP is paid at the rate of £184.03 a week or 90% of AWE, whichever is lower. The employee must either:

  • qualify for statutory maternity pay or statutory adoption pay;
  • or qualify for statutory paternity pay and have a partner who qualifies for statutory maternity pay or maternity allowance or statutory adoption pay.

Your employee can work up to 20 days during SPL without bringing it to an end

  • These are called "shared parental leave in touch" (or SPLIT) days.

8. Neonatal leave

From April 2025, parents of children who require specialist neonatal care after their birth will be entitled to additional neonatal leave and pay

  • Neonatal leave will be a 'day-one employment right'.
  • Parents of babies that need neonatal care (prescribed medical or palliative care) will be entitled to leave in addition to other statutory leave for new parents.
  • The neonatal care must start within 28 days of the day after the child's birth.

Eligible parents can claim statutory pay

  • To qualify for neonatal leave and pay, employees will need at least 26 weeks' service by the week before the child's birth.
  • They must earn at least £123 per week in the eight weeks before the child's birth.
  • The length of neonatal leave and pay will depend on how long the child is in hospital. It will last for a minimum of one week up to a maximum of 12 weeks.
  • Parents will need to take the leave within 68 weeks of the child's birth.
  • It is expected that it will be possible for parents to take the leave in non-consecutive weekly periods.
  • The leave is in addition to existing leave and pay for new parents.

9. Carers leave

From April 2024, carers will be entitled to up to one week's unpaid leave in a 12-month period to care for a dependant with a 'long-term care need'

  • The leave is a 'day-one employment right'.
  • Employees can request half or full days on consecutive and non-consecutive days up to a week.
  • Notice of the intention to take leave must be given in writing.
  • The notice must be at least twice the length of leave being requested or three days, whichever is greater.
  • Employers can postpone the request if the business will be unduly disrupted. The employer must notify the employee in writing and allow the leave to be taken within a month.
  • The definition of a dependant 'mirrors' that for time off for dependants (see below).

10. Time off for dependants

In an emergency, employees are entitled to ask for 'reasonable' time off to care for dependents. Time off is unpaid unless your employment contracts state otherwise.

This is for short-term problem solving rather than continuing care

  • The problem must be unforeseen. For example, sudden illness. Where problems are foreseen, other arrangements should be made.
  • You must decide what reasonable time off is.

The problem must involve dependants

  • This normally means employees' children, parents or other close family members.
  • But it might also mean a frail neighbour who is looked after by your employee.

If you think an employee is abusing the system, you can refuse time off

  • You can, if necessary, investigate or institute disciplinary proceedings. But bear in mind that the employee could then have the right to take you to a tribunal.

11. Employment and dismissal

Dismissing somebody for any reason connected with pregnancy is automatically unfair

  • It is also almost certainly discriminatory.
  • An employee who is dismissed during pregnancy or statutory maternity leave has the right to written reasons.
  • If a tribunal finds you have dismissed your employee unfairly, the basic award can be up to £20,000. The tribunal can also award compensation for financial loss up to a maximum of £115,115.
  • If a tribunal finds your action amounted to sex discrimination, it can award unlimited compensation.

You must be able to show that any selection for redundancy is objective and fair

  • If you make someone redundant during pregnancy or maternity leave, you must be able to show that your decision was in no way affected by the pregnancy or maternity leave.
  • This is so hard to prove that you should avoid this situation, unless the reason is very clear.
  • A woman on maternity leave has the right to be offered a suitable job on her return, or the right to a redundancy payment.

It is sex discrimination not to employ or promote a woman because of pregnancy

  • This applies whether it is because she is pregnant or because she may become pregnant.

Signpost

Note

Employment law is complex and is changing rapidly. This factsheet reflects our understanding of the basic legal position as known at the last update. Obtain legal advice on your own specific circumstances and check whether any relevant rules have changed.

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