The Employment Rights Bill: Board-level reckoning
The Employment Rights Bill: Board-level reckoning

The Employment Rights Bill has now cleared the House of Lords and awaits imminent Royal Assent to become the Employment Rights Act 2025 (presumably).
This Bill is not just about employment law reform; it is about how decisions are made at the very top of organisations.
Six months’ for unfair dismissal rights changes the landscape
Reducing the qualifying period for unfair dismissal claims from two years to six months fundamentally alters the risk landscape for employers.
For Boards, the question is no longer: “Will this employee qualify after two years?”
It is: “Could this dismissal be tested, and potentially litigated, after six months in post?”
That requires:
- clearer governance on delegation and decision rights;
- stronger evidence-based managerial decision-making;
- much tighter alignment between Board strategy and operational behaviour.
In short, governance becomes evidence. With appropriate governance comes a different focus on culture. People need to be properly managed from the outset.
The missing conversation: culture and capability
The House of Lords’ debate focused heavily on fairness to small businesses and economic certainty in terms of the financial impact of the ERB. Those concerns are real, not just for those businesses, but for the whole UK economy, which relies on small businesses for job creation and wealth generation.
But what is less discussed is the pressure this new legislation will place on leadership capability:
- are managers trained to make defensible decisions from day one?
- are performance concerns addressed early, or allowed to drift?
- is culture genuinely ‘lived’, or only written down?
Without investment here in appropriate and consistent processes (including access to personal development opportunities), legal risk will remain.
Compensation caps were never the real risk
Much has been said about the removal of the £118,000 cap on unfair dismissal compensation.
In practice, most Tribunal exposure is driven by process, not quantum.
Poorly handled exits, misaligned managers, and Boards that are too distant from “people decisions” create far more risk than headline figures ever did.
The Bill simply makes that reality unavoidable.
What smart Boards are doing now
The most effective Boards we advise are not waiting for implementation dates. They are:
- stress-testing dismissal and capability processes;
- asking whether their managers could defend decisions under oath;
- treating employment risk as a standing governance issue — not an HR one.
The Employment Rights Bill doesn’t just raise the bar. It moves the spotlight.
And Boards that understand that now will be far better placed than those who treat this as “just another change in employment law”.
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