Employment law changes in the UK: what hiring managers need to prepare for
The UK recruitment landscape is shifting again, this time driven by significant employment law reform.
The Employment Rights Act 2025 introduces wide-ranging changes to workplace rights, with key measures being phased in from 2026 into 2027. Alongside this, further proposals around equality and pay transparency point to a clear direction of travel: stronger worker protections, increased transparency, and higher expectations on employers.
For hiring managers, this is not just a compliance exercise. It is a prompt to review hiring processes, employer value propositions, and workforce planning strategies.
Why these employment law changes matter for hiring
The scale of reform is substantial. According to the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), the changes span flexible working, dismissal rights, pay transparency, and wider employee protections.
For hiring managers, the impact is twofold:
- Increased complexity in recruitment processes and decision-making
- Rising expectations from candidates around flexibility, fairness, and transparency
In an already competitive hiring market, getting this wrong can quickly affect your ability to attract and retain talent.
Key employment law changes to be aware of
While implementation is ongoing, several changes are already in force, with others confirmed for rollout over the coming years.
1. Stronger day-one rights and reduced qualifying periods
There is a clear move towards strengthening employee protections from the start of employment.
This includes:
- Day-one rights to request flexible working (already in place)
- Expanded day-one rights for certain types of leave, including paternity leave from April 2026
- A reduction in the unfair dismissal qualifying period from two years to six months, expected from 2027
What this means for hiring managers:
- Less margin for error in hiring decisions
- Greater need for structured, fair selection processes
- Increased focus on effective onboarding and probation management
2. Flexible working as a baseline expectation
Flexible working is now embedded in both legislation and candidate expectations.
Employees already have the right to request flexible working from day one, with further emphasis on employers providing clear, reasonable grounds when requests are declined.
In practice:
- Candidates expect flexibility as standard
- Roles without flexibility risk reduced applicant pools
- Hiring conversations need to reflect realistic working patterns from the outset
3. Increased focus on fairness, equality and transparency
Alongside the Employment Rights Act, wider legislative developments are reinforcing a stronger focus on workplace fairness.
This includes proposals under the Equality (Race and Disability) Bill, which are expected to introduce requirements around ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting for larger employers.
For hiring managers, this means:
- Greater scrutiny on hiring decisions and outcomes
- A need for consistent, well-documented processes
- Increased importance of inclusive hiring practices
This is not just about compliance. It directly shapes employer brand and candidate perception.
4. Changes to redundancy and consultation processes
Updates to collective consultation requirements, alongside increased protective awards for non-compliance, are changing how organisations approach restructuring.
For hiring managers involved in workforce planning, this adds complexity when balancing hiring with organisational change.
5. Broader protections across the employee lifecycle
Recent reforms also strengthen protections across areas such as:
- Workplace harassment and whistleblowing
- Statutory sick pay
- Parental and family-related leave
The direction is clear. The environment is becoming more regulated and more employee-focused.
For hiring managers, this means thinking beyond hiring and considering the full employee experience from day one.
What this means for your hiring strategy
These changes are landing alongside ongoing challenges such as skills shortages, evolving candidate expectations, and increased competition for talent.
Three priorities stand out:
1. More robust hiring decisions
With stronger employee protections, the cost of a poor hire increases.
This places greater emphasis on:
- Clear role definition
- Structured interview processes
- Strong alignment between hiring managers and HR
2. A stronger employer value proposition (EVP)
Flexibility, fairness, and transparency are no longer differentiators. They are baseline expectations.
Your ability to communicate these clearly during the hiring process will directly impact your success in securing talent.
3. Processes that stand up to scrutiny
Hiring processes need to be:
- Consistent
- Documented
- Fair
This becomes increasingly important as reporting requirements expand and candidate awareness grows.
How hiring managers can prepare now
While some changes are still being phased in, there are practical steps you can take now:
- Review your hiring processes
Ensure they are structured, consistent, and aligned with best practice - Align closely with HR teams
These changes require closer collaboration between hiring and people functions - Revisit job design and expectations
Particularly around flexibility and working patterns - Train hiring managers
Ensure they understand the implications of evolving legislation - Audit your candidate experience
From application to offer, does it reflect fairness and transparency?
The bottom line
Employment law in the UK is evolving in a way that places greater emphasis on fairness, transparency, and employee protection.
For hiring managers, success will depend on more than compliance. It will require adapting hiring strategies to meet changing expectations while maintaining the ability to attract and retain the right talent.
At EMR Recruitment, we are supporting clients through these changes, helping ensure hiring strategies remain effective, compliant, and competitive in a rapidly evolving market. If you are reviewing your hiring approach in light of these changes, chat to our team for any support.