The safest way to make under 20 redundancies

  • Redundancy
Follow us on Twitter
Peninsula Logo

Peninsula Group, HR and Health & Safety Experts

(Last updated )

Read our article: 'The safest way to make under 20 redundancies'. Contact us today for more information about our Employment Law, Health & Safety, and HR services.

Jump to section:

Big companies based in the UK are shedding staff. Sainsbury’s announced it will cut 2,000 jobs. BAE Systems will do the same. Meanwhile, Vauxhall is losing 400.

When a larger organisation sharpens the axe ahead of making redundancies, it likely has the HR and legal resources to follow a fair and proper process, avoiding employment tribunals.

Smaller companies rarely have those resources. So making small-scale redundancies (under 20 staff) is fraught with the financial danger.

If redundancy is affecting you (or you want to plan for the worst), we have redundancy advice to help.

Here’s what you need to know.

Make sure it’s a redundancy situation

Redundancies happen in three main situations:

Redundancy is about the role, not the person, so identify the roles affected by the redundancy (whether it’s just one role or several performing the same work).

Look at job descriptions, what staff actually do in their roles, the interchangeability of roles and geographical factors. Before making any position redundant, you should always consider other ways to solve the problem such as freezing recruitment, cutting overtime or putting staff on lay off (unpaid leave until there’s work again).

Have meaningful consultations

For under 20 staff redundancies, there is no minimum or maximum consultation period. Instead, the consultation has to be meaningful.

You must go into consultations with no pre-determination about redundancy. Listen to proposals that affected staff or their representatives submit and give them proper consideration.

The consultation should:

Usually, two to three meetings are enough, but the process can lengthen depending on the number of proposals or alternatives put forward to you.

Start the selection process

Apply the agreed selection criteria to the roles at risk via a scoring system. Be as objective as possible; personal opinion should not influence you. Be wary of discrimination; for example, ‘first in, last out’ may be discriminatory on the grounds of age.

It’s best practice to have more than one person applying the selection criteria to ensure there’s no bias or unfair application.

Once you have the final scores, you will identify the lowest-scoring employees and should select them for redundancy as they are less beneficial for your business’s future.

Give notice of the redundancies

The employees you select for redundancy should get proper notice of their dismissal, whether contractual or statutory, to avoid them making a tribunal claim.

But even during this notice period, you must still offer affected staff suitable alternative roles should you find any.

Finally, staff with two years’ service at your business are entitled to a statutory redundancy payment up to a maximum of £14,670. You must also pay any contractual or enhanced redundancy pay.

FAQs

Got a question? Check whether we’ve already answered it for you…

Related articles

  • dismissal

    Blog

    Employee unfairly dismissed for Gross misconduct wins over £5k at tribunal

    The catalyst for this case was an email received from a customer, asking to change an appointment. The claimant felt that the customer had previously been rude on the phone. They intended to forward an email about the change of appointment to a colleague along with the message, “Hi Karl, Can you change this… he’s a t**t so it doesn’t matter if you can’t.” By mistake, this was sent back to the customer instead.

    Peninsula Logo
    Peninsula TeamPeninsula Team
    • Dismissal
  • Sickness leave

    Blog

    Why do workers leave jobs after periods of sickness?

    The Work Foundation at Lancaster University has tracked the employment records of over 9100 workers, aged between 16 and 60 from 2017/18 to 2021/22, focusing on those who became ill within the first two years of the study. 

    Peninsula Logo
    Peninsula TeamPeninsula Team
    • Dismissal
  • Job Application

    Blog

    Over half of employers in the North and Midlands have been ghosted

    According to research carried out by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) and Omni RMS, 61% of employers in the north and 56% of those in the Midlands have had candidates cancel interviews with little or no notice over the past 12 months, with 18% in both regions reporting new starters failing to turn up on their first day at work.

    Peninsula Logo
    Peninsula TeamPeninsula Team
    • Dismissal

Try Brainbox for free today

When AI meets 40 years of Peninsula expertise... you get instant, expert answers to your HR and Health & Safety questions

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the latest news & tips that matter most to your business in our monthly newsletter.