Trade Union Right of Access Code of Practice
Trade Union Right of Access Code of Practice

What the Government published
On 8 April 2026, UK Department for Business and Trade published an open consultation and a draft statutory Code of Practice on trade unions’ right of access into workplaces, and invited views to ensure the Code is “clear, practical and balanced.” The consultation closes at 11:59pm on 20 May 2026.
The draft Code is intended to be the main practical guidance for a new statutory access regime, covering how access requests are made, how access agreements are negotiated and operated across different workplace types, and how disagreements are escalated.
What is expected to take effect by October 2026
The consultation document states that (subject to Parliamentary approval) the new law and its associated Code are scheduled to come into effect by October 2026, alongside the legislative clause establishing the overarching access framework.
The policy is intended is to create a predictable framework for physical and digital access to workplaces by independent trade unions for specified purposes, while building in safeguards so legitimate operational, safety, security, safeguarding and data protection considerations are taken into account.
What the draft Code says in practice
The draft Code sets out a structured model:
Access is meant to be agreed voluntarily where possible, with conciliation encouraged via ACAS, where there are issues.
If agreement cannot be reached, the Central Arbitration Committee (CAC) can determine whether access should take place and, if so, on what terms. The Code goes on to explain principles and factors relevant to those decisions.
The Code also addresses enforcement where a statutory access agreement is allegedly breached, including the CAC’s powers in certain circumstances to impose financial penalties. The Code provides standard templates (for request, response, notification, and variation/revocation).
Notable operational parameters in the draft Code include that: (i) the CAC will refuse access requests where the employer has 20 workers or fewer; and (ii) unions cannot access private dwellings (though hybrid workplaces may be in scope, subject to listed considerations).
Why Boards should care
This is not simply an HR policy update. For company Boards and executive teams, “right of access” is a governance interface between workforce relations and operational control:
- it affects who can communicate with your workforce, where, when, and through which physical and digital channels, and therefore touches IT/security, data protection, facilities, health and safety, safeguarding, and brand/reputation;
- it changes the “cost of delay.” If an organisation waits until it receives a request, it may find itself negotiating under time pressure, without a consistent site-by-site framework, and with avoidable escalation risk.
From a Boardside Law perspective, the best preparation is not to be adversarial; rather, the better approach will be structured, will assign ownership, map workplaces (physical + digital), set “rules of engagement,” and ensure managers have a consistent playbook.
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