UK Employment Rights: Redundancy, Leave, Contracts and Workplace Protections

Grievance Procedure Guide UK — How to Raise a Formal Complaint at Work

How to raise a grievance at work in the UK, the formal grievance procedure, what your employer must do, and your options if the outcome is unsatisfactory.

Salary and income data is based on ONS and other official UK statistical sources. Figures are averages and may not reflect your individual circumstances.

If you have a problem at work that can’t be resolved informally, raising a formal grievance is your right. Here’s how the process works.

For the wider cluster covering redundancy, statutory pay, leave rights, contract protections, and dispute routes, use the main Employment Rights hub.

What Is a Grievance?

ElementDetail
DefinitionA formal complaint to your employer about a workplace issue
Legal basisACAS Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures
Who can raise oneAny employee or worker
FormatWritten — letter or email to your employer
Right to be accompaniedYes — by a trade union rep or work colleague at the meeting

Common Reasons for Grievances

CategoryExamples
Pay and benefitsIncorrect pay, denied bonus, unfair pay compared to colleagues
Terms and conditionsUnreasonable changes to hours, duties, or working location
Bullying and harassmentPersistent intimidation, offensive behaviour, verbal abuse
DiscriminationUnfair treatment because of age, sex, race, disability, religion, sexual orientation, pregnancy, or other protected characteristics
Health and safetyUnsafe working conditions, employer ignoring safety concerns
Unfair treatmentFavouritism, inconsistent application of policies, victimisation
WorkloadExcessive or unreasonable workload causing stress or health issues
Management behaviourMicromanagement, unfair criticism, undermining

The Grievance Procedure — Step by Step

StepWhat happensTimeframe
1. Try to resolve informallySpeak to your manager or HR about the problemBefore raising a formal grievance
2. Submit a written grievanceWrite a letter/email setting out your complaintWhen informal steps haven’t worked
3. Employer acknowledgesWritten acknowledgement of your grievanceUsually within 2–5 working days
4. Grievance meetingFormal meeting to discuss your complaintUsually within 5 working days of your letter
5. Investigation (if needed)Employer investigates — interviews witnesses, reviews evidenceCan take 1–4 weeks
6. OutcomeEmployer writes to you with their decisionUsually within 5–10 working days of the meeting/investigation
7. Appeal (if not upheld)You can appeal in writingUsually within 5 working days of the outcome
8. Appeal meetingHeard by a more senior managerUsually within 5–10 working days
9. Final outcomeWritten decision on your appeal — this is usually finalWithin 5–10 working days

How to Write a Grievance Letter

SectionWhat to include
Your detailsName, job title, department, employee number
DateDate of the letter
Addressed toYour line manager (or HR if the complaint is about your manager)
Subject line“Formal Grievance”
The complaintClear description of the issue — what happened, when, where
Specific incidentsDates, times, what was said/done, who was present
Impact on youHow it has affected your work, health, or wellbeing
Previous attempts to resolveAny informal steps you’ve already taken
What you wantThe outcome you’re seeking (e.g. apology, policy change, mediation)
Supporting evidenceReference any documents, emails, or witnesses

Tips for Your Letter

DoDon’t
Be factual and specificDon’t be vague or emotional
Include dates and detailsDon’t exaggerate or make claims you can’t support
Focus on the issue, not the personDon’t use aggressive language
State what outcome you wantDon’t make threats
Keep a copy of everythingDon’t share your grievance publicly (e.g. social media)

Your Rights During the Process

RightDetail
To be accompaniedBy a trade union rep or work colleague at any grievance meeting
To paid time offFor grievance meetings during working hours
To a fair hearingYour employer must investigate properly and consider your complaint
To an appealIf you’re not satisfied with the outcome
Not to be victimisedYour employer cannot punish you for raising a grievance
Reasonable timeframesYour employer should deal with the grievance without unreasonable delay
ConfidentialityYour grievance should be treated confidentially as far as possible

Right to Be Accompanied

FeatureDetail
Who can accompany youTrade union representative or work colleague
NOT allowedSolicitors, family members, or friends (unless your employer agrees)
What they can doConfer with you, sum up your case, respond on your behalf — but cannot answer questions on your behalf
PostponementIf your chosen companion isn’t available, you can postpone the meeting by up to 5 working days

If Your Grievance Isn’t Upheld

OptionDetail
AppealSubmit a written appeal within the timeframe stated (usually 5 working days)
ACAS early conciliationFree service to try to resolve the dispute before tribunal — mandatory first step
Employment tribunalIf the grievance involves a legal right (discrimination, whistleblowing, breach of contract)
MediationYour employer may offer workplace mediation — a neutral third party helps you reach agreement
Resign and claim constructive dismissalOnly as a last resort — if your employer’s handling was so poor it breached your contract

Grievance vs Other Processes

ProcessWhen to use
GrievanceYou have a complaint about how you’re being treated
WhistleblowingYou’re reporting wrongdoing in the public interest (criminal activity, health and safety danger, etc.)
DisciplinaryYour employer has a concern about your conduct or performance (employer initiates, not you)
Harassment complaintCan be raised as a grievance — but also consider reporting to HR under the anti-harassment policy

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy it matters
Not raising it formally (hoping it goes away)Informal complaints have no legal weight if things escalate
Waiting too longTribunal claims have strict time limits (usually 3 months minus 1 day)
Not keeping recordsYour word against theirs without evidence
Resigning before raising a grievanceWeakens any constructive dismissal claim
Raising it verbally onlyAlways put it in writing for a formal record
Not seeking advice earlyACAS, unions, and solicitors can help shape your grievance properly

Where to Get Help

OrganisationWhat they offer
ACASFree advice on grievance procedures — 0300 123 1100
Citizens AdviceFree employment advice
Trade unionRepresentation and support throughout the process
Employment solicitorLegal advice (many offer free initial consultations)
Equality Advisory Support ServiceFor discrimination-related grievances — 0808 800 0082

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings