Country Overview
England is a dynamic and historic country that offers a high quality of life, world-class cities, and a robust economy. As the largest country in the United Kingdom, England is home to the global city of London — a major financial and cultural hub — alongside vibrant centres like Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, and Edinburgh.
The UK offers a highly skilled workforce with deep expertise across Financial Services, Technology, Life Sciences, and Professional Services. With approximately 16% of the population born abroad, international teams integrate naturally. Post-Brexit, the UK operates a points-based immigration system requiring work authorisation for non-British nationals.
2026 Key Legislative Updates
Employer NIC rises to 15% (from 13.8%) from April 2026. Secondary threshold drops to £5,000/year. Statutory Sick Pay applies from day one. Day-one paternity rights extended. Employment Rights Act 2025 cuts unfair dismissal qualifying period to 6 months from January 2027.
Contracts
UK employment contracts define the terms of engagement — type, duration, notice, pay, and benefits. All employees are entitled to a written statement of particulars from day one.
Contract Types
| Contract Type | Duration | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Permanent | Indefinite | Open-ended; continues until terminated by either party with notice |
| Fixed-Term | Specified end date | Ends on a date or project completion; same rights as permanent employees |
| Zero-Hours | Ongoing | No guaranteed hours; worker can refuse work; common in hospitality/retail |
| Part-Time | Indefinite or fixed | Pro-rata rights equal to full-time; no less favourable treatment permitted |
Fixed-Term to Permanent — 4-Year Rule
If you are on fixed-term contracts for 4 or more years continuously, you automatically become a permanent employee — unless the employer can demonstrate a genuine business reason to keep the arrangement temporary. Many companies convert contractors to permanent status earlier to retain talent.
What Your Contract Must Include
Mandatory from Day One
- Job title and description
- Start date and contract duration (if fixed-term)
- Salary or pay rate and pay frequency
- Working hours and location
- Holiday entitlement
- Notice period (both sides)
- Sick leave and sick pay entitlement
- Pension scheme details
Common Additional Clauses
- Confidentiality / NDA provisions
- Intellectual property assignment
- Restrictive covenants (non-compete, non-solicit)
- WTR 48-hour opt-out (common in professional roles)
- Bonus and commission structure
- Garden leave provisions
- Disciplinary and grievance procedure reference
Working Hours & Overtime
Standard full-time hours in the UK are 37.5 to 40 hours per week (typically 9am–5:30pm, Monday to Friday). The Working Time Regulations cap average weekly hours at 48 hours over a 17-week reference period. However, UK law allows individuals to voluntarily sign a written opt-out — this is common in finance, IT consulting, and professional services.
| Parameter | Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard hours | 37.5 – 40 hrs/week | Stated in contract; varies by company and role |
| Maximum (WTR) | 48 hrs/week avg | Calculated over 17-week rolling reference period |
| WTR opt-out | Allowed | Must be voluntary and in writing; revocable with notice |
| Daily rest | 11 consecutive hrs | Per 24-hour period — mandatory |
| Rest break | 20 min per 6 hrs | Uninterrupted; required for shifts over 6 hours |
| Overtime pay | No statutory rate | Subject to contract; must not breach National Minimum Wage |
Access Financial drafts compliant UK employment contracts and manages onboarding for EOR and AOR engagements.
Working Hours & Overtime
Working Time Regulations set maximum hours, rest breaks, and entitlements. Workers can voluntarily opt out of the 48-hour limit.
| Parameter | Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum weekly hours | 48 hrs avg | 17-week reference period (extendable to 52 weeks) |
| WTR opt-out | Allowed | Must be in writing; voluntary; revocable with 7 days notice |
| Standard full-time hours | 37.5 – 40 hrs | No statutory standard; set by contract |
| Rest break (>6 hrs) | 20 min | Uninterrupted |
| Daily rest | 11 consecutive hrs | Per 24-hour period |
| Weekly rest | 24 hrs | Per 7-day period |
| Overtime rate | No statutory rate | Subject to contract; must not breach NMW on average |
Employment Rights Act 2025
Unfair dismissal qualifying period reduces from 2 years to 6 months from January 2027. Review and update probation processes now.
Probation Period
No statutory probation period in UK law — it is contractual, typically 3 to 6 months.
| Parameter | Standard practice | Legal notes |
|---|---|---|
| Typical duration | 3–6 months | No statutory maximum; 6 months most common |
| Notice during probation | 1 week (contractual) | Statutory minimum after 1 month service |
| Extension | Allowed | Must be agreed in writing; typically up to 3 months extension |
| Day-one statutory rights | Full from day one | Min wage, holiday pay, SSP (from day 1 April 2026), discrimination protection |
Immigration & Work Visas
UK operates a points-based immigration system post-Brexit. Non-British / non-Irish nationals require work authorisation.
eVisa System — February 2026
Physical BRP cards phased out. From February 2026, all immigration status is digital via UKVI online account. Employers must use the online right-to-work checking service.
eVisa System — February 2026
Physical BRP cards phased out. From February 2026, all immigration status is digital via UKVI online account. Employers must use the online right-to-work checking service.
| Visa Route | Min. Salary | Sponsor? | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skilled Worker Visa | £41,700/yr | Yes | Up to 5 years; renewable |
| Global Talent Visa | No minimum | Endorsing body | 2 or 5 years |
| Intra-Company Transfer | £45,800/yr | UK entity required | Up to 5 years |
| Graduate Visa | No minimum | No | 2 years (3 for PhD) |
| High Potential Individual | No minimum | No | 2 years |
| Fee | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Skilled Worker application (3 yr) | ~£769 | Varies by route and duration |
| IHS (Immigration Health Surcharge) | £1,035/yr | £3,105 for 3 years; grants NHS access |
| Certificate of Sponsorship | £239–£525 | Per worker; paid by sponsor |
| Sponsor Licence (new) | £536 / £1,476 | Small / large employer; 4-year licence |
AF’s immigration team has relocated 5,000+ contractors and professionals to the UK. We handle visa support, sponsor licences, and right-to-work checks.
Leave Entitlements
UK statutory leave entitlements are comprehensive. Most professional employers offer enhanced benefits above the statutory floor.
Annual Leave
| Parameter | Entitlement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory minimum | 28 days/yr | 5.6 weeks; can include 8 bank holidays |
| Market standard (professional) | 25–30 days | Plus bank holidays (total 33–38 days) |
| Holiday pay rate | Normal remuneration | Must include regular overtime, commission, allowances |
Parental Leave
| Leave type | Duration | Pay | From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternity | Up to 52 wks | 90% earnings (6 wks) then £194.32/wk (33 wks) | Day one |
| Paternity | 1–2 wks | £194.32/week | Day one (April 2026) |
| Shared Parental | Up to 50 wks | £194.32/wk (up to 37 weeks) | Day one (April 2026) |
| Unpaid Parental | 18 wks per child | Unpaid | Day one (April 2026) |
| Neonatal Care | Up to 12 wks | Statutory rate | From April 2025 |
Sick Leave (SSP)
| Parameter | Rule |
|---|---|
| Weekly rate | £123.25/week |
| Maximum duration | 28 weeks |
| Waiting days | None |
| Medical certificate | After 7 days (self-cert for first 7) |
Public Holidays 2026
England and Wales have 8 bank holidays in 2026. Scotland and Northern Ireland have different calendars.
| Date | Day | Holiday | Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 January | Thursday | New Year’s Day | All UK |
| 3 April | Friday | Good Friday | All UK |
| 6 April | Monday | Easter Monday | England, Wales, NI |
| 4 May | Monday | Early May Bank Holiday | All UK |
| 25 May | Monday | Spring Bank Holiday | All UK |
| 31 August | Monday | Summer Bank Holiday | England, Wales, NI |
| 25 December | Friday | Christmas Day | All UK |
| 28 December | Monday | Boxing Day (substitute) | All UK |
Notice Periods
UK sets statutory minimum notice by length of service. Most professional contracts specify longer notice periods.
| Length of service | Employer notice (statutory) | Employee notice |
|---|---|---|
| Under 1 month | None | None |
| 1 month – 2 years | 1 week | 1 week |
| 2 – 12 years | 1 week per year | 1 week |
| 12+ years | 12 weeks (max) | 1 week |
Termination & Redundancy
UK employment law provides significant employee protections. Dismissals must follow fair processes to avoid unfair dismissal claims.
| Age group | Redundancy pay | Weekly pay cap (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Under 22 | ½ week per year of service | £751 |
| 22 – 40 | 1 week per year of service | £751 |
| 41 and over | 1.5 weeks per year of service | £751 |
| Maximum total | £22,530 (20 yrs × £751 × 1.5) | |
Employment Rights Act 2025 — Day-One Rights from January 2027
Unfair dismissal qualifying period reduces to 6 months. Employers need documented fair processes from month 6. Review your UK HR procedures now — AF can advise.
Income Tax
UK tax year runs 6 April to 5 April. All employees taxed via PAYE — employers deduct at source through payroll (RTI).
Income Tax Bands 2026/27
| Band | Annual Income | Rate 2026/27 | Rate 2025/26 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | Up to £12,570 | 0% | 0% |
| Basic Rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% | 20% |
| Higher Rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% | 40% |
| Additional Rate | Above £125,140 | 45% | 45% |
Personal Allowance Taper — 60% effective rate
For incomes between £100,000–£125,140, the Personal Allowance reduces by £1 per £2 earned, creating an effective 60% marginal tax rate in this band.
VAT
| Rate | % | Applies to |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 20% | Most goods and services |
| Reduced | 5% | Domestic energy, children’s car seats, renovations |
| Zero | 0% | Basic food, books, children’s clothing, transport |
| Registration threshold | £90,000 | Annual turnover above which VAT registration is mandatory |
Let Access Financial handle your UK payroll — seamlessly and compliantly, with local specialists on call.
Benefits
UK statutory benefits are comprehensive. Competitive employers layer supplemental benefits to attract and retain professional talent.
Mandatory Statutory Benefits
| Benefit | Rate / Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Auto-enrolment Pension | 8% total | 3% employer + 5% employee minimum |
| Statutory Sick Pay | £123.25/wk | Up to 28 weeks; from day one (April 2026) |
| Statutory Maternity Pay | £194.32/wk | 39 weeks; 90% of earnings first 6 weeks |
| Annual Leave | 28 days/yr | Including bank holidays; pro-rata for part-time |
| Redundancy Pay | Up to £22,530 | After 2+ years service |
| NHS Healthcare | Free | At point of use for all UK residents |
Market-Standard Supplemental Benefits
| Benefit | Prevalence | Typical provision |
|---|---|---|
| Private Medical Insurance | 90%+ professional employers | BUPA / AXA / Vitality |
| Life Assurance | Very common | 3–4× annual salary (Death in Service) |
| Income Protection | Common (large employers) | 50–75% of salary if long-term illness |
| Dental & Optical | Common | Cash plan £300–£1,000/year |
| Cycle to Work / Season Ticket | Very common | Salary sacrifice; tax-efficient |
| Remote / Flexible Working | Standard post-2021 | Hybrid 2–3 days; day-one right to request |
Pension System
Two-tier system: State Pension (NI contributions) and workplace/private pensions.
| Parameter | 2026/27 | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New State Pension (full) | £241.30/wk | £12,547/year; triple lock protected |
| Qualifying years | 35 years NIC | Min. 10 years to receive any State Pension |
| State Pension age | 66 | Rising to 67 by 2028 |
| Employer pension min. | 3% | On qualifying earnings £6,240–£50,270/yr |
| Employee pension min. | 5% | Total = 8% minimum |
| Annual allowance | £60,000 | Or 100% of earnings, whichever lower |
| Tax-free lump sum (lifetime cap) | 25% / £268,275 | At minimum pension age (55; rising to 57 in 2028) |
Insurances
Mandatory and recommended insurances for employers, employees, and contractors in the UK.
| Insurance | Min. Cover | Required by |
|---|---|---|
| Employer’s Liability Insurance | £5M | Employers’ Liability Act 1969; £2,500/day fine |
| Motor Insurance | Third party | Road Traffic Act 1988 |
Professional Indemnity Insurance — Contractors
Often contractually required by end-clients. Covers negligence claims. Minimum £1M standard; financial services and technology roles typically require £2M+. AF can advise on appropriate cover for your sector.
Private Health Insurance
| Provider | Typical monthly cost | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Bupa | £80–£200 (individual) | Comprehensive |
| AXA Health | £70–£180 (individual) | Comprehensive |
| Vitality | £60–£160 (individual) | Incentive-based |
AF Solutions
Access Financial has operated in the UK for over 22 years, supporting end-clients, recruitment agencies, and contractors.
For End-Clients
Managing a contingent workforce can be complex. Our solutions streamline workforce management, making it simple, compliant, and cost-effective.
For Recruiters
We offer a complete suite of services, allowing you to simply, compliantly, and efficiently place your candidates internationally, with minimum fuss.
For Contractors
Focus on what you do best and let us take care of your payroll, tax compliance, social security, and immigration needs.

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FAQ
Find answers to our most frequently asked questions below.
Can I employ international workers without an EOR?
Global workforce solutions refer to services that help companies hire, manage, pay, and support employees or contractors across multiple countries. These solutions usually combine payroll, compliance, onboarding, contract administration, and local employment support. For international businesses, they reduce operational complexity, improve consistency across markets, and make it easier to scale teams without building separate internal processes in every country.
How does global workforce management work?
Global workforce management depends on coordinating payroll, contracts, compliance, onboarding, and local employment rules across countries through one structured system. Companies use internal teams, external providers, or both to standardize operations while staying compliant in each jurisdiction. This approach helps businesses manage international employees and contractors more efficiently, reduce legal risk, and maintain visibility over a distributed global workforce.
What does managing international employees remotely involve?
Managing international employees remotely involves coordinating compliant onboarding, payroll, contracts, benefits, communication, and performance processes across different jurisdictions. Companies must also account for local labor laws, tax obligations, time zones, and data handling requirements. A structured remote workforce model helps employers support international staff consistently while reducing administrative gaps and ensuring employees remain properly engaged, documented, and paid wherever they are based.
Why is workforce management important for multinational companies?
Workforce management for multinational companies is important because cross-border teams create added complexity around employment law, payroll, benefits, and compliance. A clear workforce structure helps businesses standardize operations while adapting to local country requirements. For multinational employers, this improves oversight, reduces legal and payroll errors, and supports faster expansion by making it easier to manage employees, contractors, and recruitment partners across several markets.
What is a global workforce strategy?
A global workforce strategy is a business plan for how a company hires, manages, pays, and supports talent across multiple countries. It usually covers employment models, contractor engagement, payroll processes, compliance priorities, and expansion goals. A strong strategy helps international companies decide where to hire, how to structure teams, and which operational model will best support growth while maintaining consistency, efficiency, and local legal compliance.
What workforce solutions do international companies need?
Workforce solutions for international companies usually include employer of record support, contractor management, payroll services, compliance guidance, onboarding, and cross-border workforce administration. These services help businesses enter new markets and manage talent without building separate local HR and legal functions in every country. The right solution depends on whether the company is hiring employees, engaging contractors, or expanding operations across several jurisdictions at once.
Social Insurance
National Insurance (NI) contributions fund the NHS, state pension, and welfare benefits.
April 2026 Change — Employer NIC Increased
Employer NIC rises from 13.8% to 15%. Secondary threshold drops from £9,100 to £5,000/year. Employment Allowance rises to £10,500 to offset impact on smaller employers.
Employer Contributions
Employee Contributions