ChatterBank4 mins ago
How long a lunch hour am I entitled to if I work for 9 hours?
24 Answers
and are there any guides to if I should be paid for this lunch time?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you have only just started the job, you are entitled to 2 30 minute inpaid breaks during a 9 hour day, you will only be paid 8 hours a day, in the 40 years i have been working, 32 of them full time, I have never known of anyone being paid or thier lunch breaks.
If you have worked for the same company for several years, you may get an unpaid lunch hour and 2 paid 15 - 20 minute breaks but the breaks would be at the discretion of the company and can be denied for the needs of the business
If you have worked for the same company for several years, you may get an unpaid lunch hour and 2 paid 15 - 20 minute breaks but the breaks would be at the discretion of the company and can be denied for the needs of the business
It probably varies for different industries, but drivers cannot go for more than 6 hours duty without a fifteen minute break. (European Working Time Directive)
For a duty between 6 and 9 hours, minimum total breaks of 30 minutes are required.
Whether the breaks are paid or not depends on the wording of the employment contract.
For a duty between 6 and 9 hours, minimum total breaks of 30 minutes are required.
Whether the breaks are paid or not depends on the wording of the employment contract.
http://www.direct.gov...ndTimeOff/DG_10029451
As I said - 20 minutes after 6 hours.
So you are entitled to a minimum 20 minute break in your working day. Unlikely to be paid
As I said - 20 minutes after 6 hours.
So you are entitled to a minimum 20 minute break in your working day. Unlikely to be paid
Yes, 20 minutes is the minimum break. It will almost certainly be unpaid. I'm not aware of anything in law that supports dotty's contention that you are entitled to two 30 minute breaks, but I recall dotty (maybe under another name) has meantioned this point in previous threads and believes it to be true
Well my employer allows me 2 x 30 minute unpaid breaks and I work 8 - 5-30 5 days a week, in my last job, because I had started it before the legislation changed, I worked 9-6 5 days a week and had 2 paid 20 minute breaks a day and an hour unpaid, but it changed about 18 months ago the legislation i understand,
Not for the first time Dotty is basing her answers, in relation to working hours, upon the practices of her own employer, rather than on statute law.
As others have indicated, if your shift EXCEEDS 6 hours, you're entitled to a single (unpaid) 20 minute break, which can't be at the start or end of your shift. (If your shift is EXACTLY 6 hours you have no entitlement to any breaks). Your entitlement is neither 'pro rata' nor 'cumulative'. i.e. if you work a 12, 18 or 24 hour shift you're still only entitled to a single break of 20 minutes.
Your length of service has no bearing whatsoever upon your statutory entitlement. However a worker who is under 18 is entitled to a single (unpaid) break of 30 minutes if their shift exceeds 4½ hours.
There are some occupations where there is no automatic right to any rest break (e.g. running a railway station - I write from experience!) but you should get 'compensatory rest' instead.
It's all in Bednobs' link.
Chris
As others have indicated, if your shift EXCEEDS 6 hours, you're entitled to a single (unpaid) 20 minute break, which can't be at the start or end of your shift. (If your shift is EXACTLY 6 hours you have no entitlement to any breaks). Your entitlement is neither 'pro rata' nor 'cumulative'. i.e. if you work a 12, 18 or 24 hour shift you're still only entitled to a single break of 20 minutes.
Your length of service has no bearing whatsoever upon your statutory entitlement. However a worker who is under 18 is entitled to a single (unpaid) break of 30 minutes if their shift exceeds 4½ hours.
There are some occupations where there is no automatic right to any rest break (e.g. running a railway station - I write from experience!) but you should get 'compensatory rest' instead.
It's all in Bednobs' link.
Chris
Yes Chris, but if someone has to work 5 days a week from 8 til 5.30, but is only contracted to 39 hours, there are hours that they have to take as breaks, it's not always about statutary entitlement, it;s about the shifts you have to do over the days you have to be there, so once again using real experience rather than hyperthetical situations gives a clearer answer in my opinion.
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