Human Resources Q&A Forum

Post: New staff and holidays

Q) How soon after someone starts their job can they take holiday?

Answered by Carolyn Mumby, Employment Law Essentials,

Accrual: During the first year of work, workers start to accrue their holiday entitlement at the rate of 1/12th of the annual entitlement and may take it on that basis. So if you are entitled to 24 days per annum by statute, you are accruing holiday leave at the rate of two days per month.

At the end of your first calendar month, you would therefore have accrued 2 days holiday. A worker would be entitled to apply for two days holiday leave to occur after that period of accrual.

Employee Notice: The employee is required by statute to provide sufficient notice.  Regulation 15(1) of the Working Time Regulations states that notice must be issued before the relevant date which is the date twice as many days in advance of the earliest day specified in the notice as the number of days to which the notice relates.

Which is a long way round to saying if you want to take two days holidays, you should provide notice at least four full days beforehand.

The Employer’s rights: However, even complying with the letter of the law, still doesn’t mean to say that the employer has to agree to the application. If the business wants to refuse the application it can serve notice on the employee following the application. The period of notice in reply must be at least equivalent to the period of leave requested.

So, for example, one day’s notice of a refusal for two day’s leave is sufficient to comply with the employer’s right under Regulation 15(2). The refusal can only be made on so many occasions of course, because (subject to contractual carry over provisions) the employer must enable the employee to take their annual holiday leave entitlement in the year in which it accrued.


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