Food & Drink9 mins ago
Holiday Pay To Staff With No Contract
i kept bar staff from previous landlord,as I was told they had a contract only to find they didn,t.They were here for four weeks and have now left but are saying we owe them holiday pay.Is this right?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by cspooner. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you work as an employee for someone, a contract automatically comes into effect between the two of you, even if no written document ever exists. (An employer has a legal obligation to provide an employee with a 'written statement of employment particulars' within two months of them
commencing work. Even if the employee leaves almost immediately that legal obligation still exists, but failure to comply with that obligation does not negate the contractual arrangement which automatically came into place at the start of the employment).
If you work just a single hour for someone (as an employee, rather than as self-employed) you're still entitled to holiday pay.
If your staff had worked for you for a full year they would have been entitled to 5.6 x 16 hours holiday pay. Since they worked 1/13 of a year, they're actually entitled to 5.6 x 16/13 hours pay = 6.892 hours.
If you want to check my figures, start here:
https:/ /www.go v.uk/ca lculate -your-h oliday- entitle ment
The accrued holiday pay should have been added to your staff's final week's pay, with PAYE and National Insurance (if relevant) being calculated upon the aggregate payment:
http:// www.hmr c.gov.u k/manua ls/nimm anual/n im09170 .htm
commencing work. Even if the employee leaves almost immediately that legal obligation still exists, but failure to comply with that obligation does not negate the contractual arrangement which automatically came into place at the start of the employment).
If you work just a single hour for someone (as an employee, rather than as self-employed) you're still entitled to holiday pay.
If your staff had worked for you for a full year they would have been entitled to 5.6 x 16 hours holiday pay. Since they worked 1/13 of a year, they're actually entitled to 5.6 x 16/13 hours pay = 6.892 hours.
If you want to check my figures, start here:
https:/
The accrued holiday pay should have been added to your staff's final week's pay, with PAYE and National Insurance (if relevant) being calculated upon the aggregate payment:
http://
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.