A Practical Guide for Employers
Incorrect holiday pay calculations are among the most common causes of employment tribunal claims in the hospitality sector. In many cases, errors are unintentional and go unnoticed until a grievance is raised, or until HMRC or an employment tribunal becomes involved.
This risk is largely driven by the nature of hospitality working patterns. Many businesses employ staff who are paid hourly, work variable shifts, or have flexible arrangements across all days of the week and throughout the year. This often includes zero hour, irregular hours, casual, agency, and part-year workers, and is precisely where most holiday pay compliance issues arise.
Adding to this complexity, post Brexit reforms and recent UK legislative changes (2023β2024) have altered the rules around holiday entitlement and holiday pay. While these changes are subtle, they are significant and have been overlooked by many employers and small businesses, increasing the risk of non-compliance.
This guide explains the current legal position, how statutory holiday entitlement should be calculated, and how hospitality employers can remain compliant, particularly when dealing with zero hour, irregular hours, casual, and part-year workers.
Who Is Entitled to Statutory Holiday Pay?
Holiday entitlement in the UK is not limited to employees. Under current UK law, most individuals classed as workers are legally entitled to paid annual leave.
π Key: In practice, employers should assume that all paid staff are entitled to statutory holiday unless there is a very clear legal exemption.
The Legal Minimum: 5.6 Weeksβ Paid Annual Leave
Under UK law, almost all workers are entitled to 5.6 weeks of paid annual leave per year, inclusive of bank holidays, rather than a fixed number of days tied to bank holidays.
This requirement is set by the UK government and applies regardless of:
- Full-time or part-time status
- Which days of the week are worked
- Whether the contract is permanent, fixed-term, or zero hours
π Key: The legal minimum is 5.6 weeks inclusive of bank holidays. Any differing contractual holiday arrangement must still meet or exceed this statutory minimum in practice.
5.6 Weeks: Salaried & Permanently Contracted Employees
For workers on permanent contracts with fixed hours, statutory holiday entitlement is calculated as:
5.6 Γ the number of days or hours normally worked per week.
Where staff are contracted to a fixed number of hours per week but work variable shifts or days, entitlement should be calculated in hours, not days.
Examples (days)
- 5 days per week β 5 Γ 5.6 = 28 days
- 3 days per week β 3 Γ 5.6 = 16.8 days
Example (hours)
- 15 hours per week β 15 Γ 5.6 = 84 hours
π Key: Holiday entitlement should always be recorded in the same unit as the workerβs contract (days or hours).
Bank Holidays In Practice
- If a bank holiday falls on a day the worker normally works and they take the day off, it counts as statutory leave and should be deducted from their entitlement as a day used.
- If a bank holiday falls on a day the worker does not normally work, it cannot be counted as statutory leave and must not reduce their entitlement.
5.6 Weeks: Zero Hour, Irregular Hours, Casual, and Part-Year Workers
For workers with genuinely irregular or variable hours, statutory holiday entitlement should be calculated as 12.07% of actual hours worked. This method ensures pro-rata compliance and avoids both underpayment and over-accrual.
12.07% represents 5.6 weeks of leave across a working year:
- 52 weeks β 5.6 weeks = 46.4 working weeks
- 5.6 Γ· 46.4 = 12.07%
This means:
- Every hour worked accrues 0.1207 hours of holiday
- Every Β£100 earned accrues Β£12.07 of holiday pay
π Key: The 12.07% method should be used to calculate statutory holiday entitlement for zero hour, irregular hour, casual, and part-year workers.
For information on how to implement the 12.07% method, please see our other blog
Statutory Holiday Entitlement – The 12.07% Method
The Statutory Cap on Holiday Entitlement
Statutory holiday entitlement is capped at 28 days per year.
Even if a worker regularly works six or seven days per week, the employer is still only legally required to provide 28 days of statutory leave.
π Key: Employers may choose to offer additional leave above the statutory minimum. Any leave above 28 days is contractual, not statutory, and should be clearly documented and distinguished from statutory entitlement.
A Compliance Rule of Thumb for Employers
π Key principles:
- Fixed hours β use the 5.6 weeks method
- Irregular or zero hours β use the 12.07% method
- Always include bank holidays within the total
- Always itemise holiday pay clearly on payslips
Following these principles significantly reduces payroll risk. Correct holiday calculations protect both workers and employers.
Compliance Disclaimer
This article is provided for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Holiday entitlement and pay calculations may vary depending on individual circumstances.
Further guidance:
https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/
https://www.gov.uk/holiday-entitlement-rights