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

Whistleblowing Rights UK — How Protected Disclosures Work

Your legal rights when whistleblowing in the UK, what counts as a protected disclosure, how to raise concerns, and protection against retaliation.

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’ve witnessed wrongdoing at work, UK law protects you when you speak up. Here’s how whistleblowing protection works.

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

What Is Whistleblowing?

ElementDetail
DefinitionReporting certain types of wrongdoing at work that are in the public interest
LegislationEmployment Rights Act 1996 (Part IVA), as amended by the Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998
Key termProtected disclosure — a qualifying disclosure made in the right way
Protection applies fromDay one of employment — no qualifying service period

What Counts as a Qualifying Disclosure

Your disclosure must relate to one of these six categories:

CategoryExample
A criminal offenceFraud, theft, bribery, tax evasion
Failure to comply with a legal obligationBreach of contract, regulatory non-compliance, data protection breaches
A miscarriage of justiceSomeone wrongly convicted or imprisoned
Danger to health and safetyUnsafe working conditions, ignoring safety regulations
Environmental damageIllegal pollution, dumping waste
Deliberate concealment of any of the aboveCovering up wrongdoing

What Is NOT Whistleblowing

Not coveredWhy
Personal grievances (e.g. bullying, pay dispute)Not in the public interest (use grievance procedure instead)
Breach of your own employment contractPersonal, not public interest
Disagreement with management decisionsMust relate to one of the six categories
Information covered by legal professional privilegeSolicitor-client communications are protected

How to Make a Protected Disclosure

To whomProtection levelWhen to use
Your employer (internal)StrongestFirst step in most cases
A legal adviserStrongestIf you need legal advice before reporting
A prescribed person (regulator)StrongIf you reasonably believe the information is true and the concern falls within the prescribed person’s remit
A government minister (if Crown employee)StrongGovernment workers
Any other person (e.g. media, MP, police)ConditionalOnly if other routes are inappropriate AND the disclosure is reasonable in all the circumstances

List of Prescribed Persons (Key Examples)

Prescribed personWhat they cover
Health and Safety Executive (HSE)Workplace health and safety
Care Quality Commission (CQC)Health and social care
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)Financial services misconduct
Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA)Financial firm safety/soundness
HMRCTax fraud, money laundering
Environment AgencyEnvironmental damage
Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO)Data protection breaches
Serious Fraud Office (SFO)Serious fraud, bribery, corruption
OfstedChildren’s education and care
Charity CommissionCharity misconduct
National Audit Office (NAO)Public sector financial propriety

Full list at: gov.uk/government/publications/blowing-the-whistle-list-of-prescribed-people-and-bodies

Your Protection

Protection from Dismissal

FeatureDetail
Dismissal typeAutomatically unfair if the reason (or principal reason) is the protected disclosure
Qualifying serviceNone required — protection from day one
Compensation capNo cap — unlimited compensation
Who can claimEmployees, workers, agency workers
Time limit to claim3 months minus 1 day from dismissal (after ACAS early conciliation)

Protection from Detriment

Detriment exampleProtected?
Overlooked for promotionYes
Given worse shifts or dutiesYes
Bullied or harassedYes
Denied training or developmentYes
Disciplinary action as retaliationYes
Contract not renewedYes
Poor reference because of disclosureYes

Steps to Take

StepAction
1Keep evidence — save copies of emails, documents, and notes (be careful not to breach data protection)
2Record dates and details — write down what you’ve seen, when, and who was involved
3Check internal policy — your employer should have a whistleblowing policy
4Consider getting legal advice first — this is also a protected disclosure
5Report internally if appropriate (to manager, compliance officer, or via whistleblowing hotline)
6If internal reporting isn’t appropriate, report to a prescribed person
7Keep records of your disclosure and any response
8If you face retaliation, document everything and take advice immediately

If Things Go Wrong

IssueWhat to do
Employer ignores your concernReport to the relevant prescribed person (regulator)
Retaliation or victimisationRaise a formal grievance, then consider an employment tribunal claim
DismissedContact ACAS for early conciliation, then file an employment tribunal claim
Don’t know who to report toContact Protect (whistleblowing charity): 020 3117 2520 or protect-advice.org.uk
Feel unsafeIf there’s an immediate risk to life or safety, call the police or HSE

Compensation at Employment Tribunal

ClaimWhat you can receive
Unfair dismissal (whistleblowing)Unlimited compensation — basic award + compensatory award (no cap)
DetrimentCompensation for losses suffered
Injury to feelingsVento bands: Lower £1,200–£11,700 / Middle £11,700–£35,200 / Upper £35,200–£58,700
Aggravated damagesIn exceptional cases

Where to Get Advice

OrganisationWhat they do
Protect (formerly Public Concern at Work)Free, confidential whistleblowing advice — protect-advice.org.uk
ACASEmployment rights advice — 0300 123 1100
Citizens AdviceFree general advice
Trade unionRepresentation and support
Employment solicitorLegal representation (many offer free initial advice)

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings