Redundancy law in the UK is in the middle of a period of significant change. The April 2026 increase in the protective award, the rise in the unfair dismissal compensatory award cap, and the upcoming changes to collective redundancy rules in 2027 all create a landscape where the financial and legal risk of getting a […]
Redundancy law in the UK is in the middle of a period of significant change. The April 2026 increase in the protective award, the rise in the unfair dismissal compensatory award cap, and the upcoming changes to collective redundancy rules in 2027 all create a landscape where the financial and legal risk of getting a redundancy exercise wrong has never been higher.
This guide covers what employers planning or considering redundancies in the second half of 2026 need to know.
From April 2026, the maximum protective award for failure to comply with collective redundancy consultation obligations increased from 90 to 180 days’ gross pay per affected employee. In large-scale redundancy exercises, this can create significant financial exposure, particularly where consultation requirements have been overlooked or inadequately followed.
The unfair dismissal compensatory award cap has also increased to £123,543. In addition, the statutory cap on a week’s pay has risen to £751, increasing the maximum statutory redundancy payment to £22,530. Together, these increases reinforce the importance of ensuring that redundancy processes are planned and implemented correctly from the outset.
From 2027, the rules on collective redundancy consultation are set to change significantly. Currently, employers are only required to collectively consult where 20 or more redundancies are proposed at a single establishment within a 90-day period. Under the new regime, redundancies will be counted across the business as a whole rather than at individual sites.
For businesses operating from multiple locations, this is a significant development. An employer with ten sites proposing three redundancies at each location, 30 redundancies in total would not currently trigger collective consultation obligations because no single site reaches the threshold of 20 proposed redundancies. Under the new rules, those redundancies would be aggregated across the organisation, triggering the duty to collectively consult.
Employers planning restructures, cost-saving exercises or workforce reductions across multiple sites will therefore need to consider collective consultation obligations much earlier in the process than they do at present.
From January 2027, employees will acquire unfair dismissal rights after just six months’ service. As a result, employees recruited from July 2026 onwards may be able to challenge the fairness of a redundancy dismissal long before they would have qualified to do so under the current two-year regime.
This means that employers will need to pay even closer attention to the redundancy process. Selection pools, consultation procedures and selection criteria must all be capable of withstanding scrutiny. Objective selection criteria, applied consistently and supported by clear evidence, will be more important than ever.
At Davenport Solicitors, we advise employers on redundancy and restructuring processes, from the initial planning stage through to individual dismissals and any resulting tribunal claims. If you are considering a redundancy exercise, take advice before you begin. Call us on 020 7903 6888 or email contact@davenportsolicitors.com
Disclaimer
The material contained on this website contains general information only and does not constitute legal or other professional advice and should not be relied upon as such. While every care has been taken in the preparation of the information on this site, readers are advised to seek specific advice in relation to any decision or course of action.