Redundancy pay is a statutory payment owed to employees who are dismissed because their employer needs to reduce the workforce. Employees with at least 2 years of continuous service are entitled to statutory redundancy pay based on their age, length of service and weekly pay.

Statutory Redundancy Pay

Eligibility

An employee qualifies for statutory redundancy pay if:

  • They are an employee (not a self-employed contractor)
  • They have 2 or more years of continuous service with the employer
  • They are being dismissed by reason of redundancy (the job no longer exists or there is a reduced need for employees to do work of a particular kind)
  • They have not unreasonably refused a suitable alternative role offered by the employer

Calculation

Statutory redundancy pay is calculated using a formula based on three factors:

FactorDetail
AgeDetermines the multiplier for each year of service
Years of serviceCapped at 20 years
Weekly payCapped at £643 per week (2024/25)

Age-Based Multiplier

Age at Date of RedundancyPayment Per Year of Service
Under 220.5 week’s pay
22 to 401.0 week’s pay
41 and over1.5 weeks’ pay

Example Calculation

An employee aged 45 with 12 years of service earning £700 per week (capped at £643):

Service PeriodYearsRateAmount
Ages 33–40 (22–40 band)8 years1.0 × £643£5,144
Ages 41–45 (41+ band)4 years1.5 × £643£3,858
Total12 years£9,002

The maximum statutory redundancy pay for 2024/25 is £19,290 (20 years × 1.5 × £643).

Enhanced Redundancy Pay

Many employers offer enhanced redundancy pay above the statutory minimum. Common arrangements include:

  • A multiplier of the statutory formula (e.g. double statutory)
  • A flat rate per year of service (e.g. one month’s actual salary per year)
  • A combination of statutory plus a fixed ex-gratia payment

Enhanced redundancy terms may be set out in the employment contract , a company redundancy policy or negotiated individually.

Tax Treatment

Payment TypeTax Treatment
Statutory redundancy payCompletely tax-free
Enhanced redundancy pay (genuine redundancy)Tax-free up to £30,000
Payment above £30,000Taxed through PAYE at the employee’s marginal rate
Pay in lieu of noticeFully taxable — subject to income tax and National Insurance
Holiday payFully taxable

The £30,000 threshold applies to the total of statutory and enhanced redundancy pay combined. Statutory redundancy pay counts towards the £30,000 exemption.

Employer NIC on Excess

Since April 2020, employer NICs at 13.8% are charged on termination payments exceeding £30,000. This is in addition to the income tax charge.

The Redundancy Process

Fair Redundancy

To avoid unfair dismissal claims, employers must follow a fair process:

  1. Establish a genuine redundancy situation — the need for employees to do particular work has diminished
  2. Consult with affected employees — individually and (if 20+ employees) collectively
  3. Apply fair selection criteria — objective and measurable (e.g. skills, performance, attendance)
  4. Consider suitable alternative employment — offer any available roles before dismissing
  5. Allow an appeal — the employee should be able to challenge the decision

Collective Consultation

Number at RiskMinimum Consultation Period
20 to 99 employees30 days before first dismissal
100 or more employees45 days before first dismissal

Collective consultation must involve recognised trade unions or elected employee representatives. The employer must also notify the Redundancy Payments Service using form HR1.

Notice Period

Redundant employees are entitled to their contractual or statutory notice period , whichever is longer. The employee can be asked to work their notice, placed on garden leave or given pay in lieu of notice.

Redundancy Pay and Payroll

Redundancy pay is processed through the final PAYE payroll run. The employer must:

  • Calculate statutory and any enhanced redundancy pay
  • Apply the £30,000 tax-free threshold to the redundancy element
  • Tax and NIC any payment in lieu of notice as normal earnings
  • Pay any accrued but untaken holiday
  • Issue a P45 to the departing employee
  • Report the final pay through RTI

Redundancy Pay and Accounting

Redundancy creates significant entries in the employer’s accounting records :

AccountDebit/CreditDescription
Redundancy expenseDebitStatutory and enhanced payments
Salary expenseDebitPay in lieu of notice, holiday pay
Employer NIC expenseDebitNICs on taxable elements
Cash / bankCreditPayments to employees
PAYE liabilityCreditTax and NICs owed to HMRC

Provision for Redundancy

If the employer has committed to a redundancy programme before the financial year-end but not yet made the payments, a provision should be recognised in the accounts under FRS 102 (or IFRS). The provision includes:

  • Estimated redundancy payments
  • Associated employer NICs on amounts above £30,000
  • Costs of the consultation process (e.g. outplacement services)

Claiming Redundancy Pay from the Government

If an employer is insolvent and cannot pay redundancy, employees can claim from the Redundancy Payments Service (part of the Insolvency Service). The government pays up to the statutory maximum and seeks to recover the cost from the insolvent employer’s assets.

Time Limits

Employees have 6 months from the date of dismissal to make a claim to an employment tribunal if they believe they have not received the correct redundancy pay.