Notice Period Guide UK — Statutory, Contractual & Your Rights
How notice periods work in the UK — statutory minimums, contractual notice, gardening leave, pay in lieu of notice, and what happens if you don't work your notice.
·4 min read
Whether you’re resigning or being let go, understanding notice periods is essential. Here’s how they work.
Statutory Notice Periods
Length of service
Notice your employer must give you
Notice you must give your employer
Less than 1 month
None
None
1 month to 2 years
1 week
1 week
2 years
2 weeks
1 week (statutory)
3 years
3 weeks
1 week
5 years
5 weeks
1 week
10 years
10 weeks
1 week
12+ years
12 weeks (maximum)
1 week
Important: Your contract can specify longer notice periods (e.g. 3 months), but never shorter than the statutory minimum.
Contractual vs Statutory Notice
Feature
Statutory notice
Contractual notice
Set by
Law (Employment Rights Act 1996)
Your employment contract
Minimum
As per table above
Must be at least the statutory minimum
Common contractual periods
N/A
1 month, 3 months, 6 months
Which applies?
Whichever is longer
Typical Contractual Notice Periods
Role level
Common notice period
Entry level / hourly
1 week – 1 month
Mid-level / salaried
1–3 months
Senior / management
3–6 months
Director / C-suite
6–12 months
Ways Notice Periods End
1. Working Your Notice
Detail
Information
What happens
You continue working normally until the end date
Pay
Normal salary, benefits, pension contributions continue
Holiday
You continue to accrue holiday and can take it (or be paid in lieu)
Rights
All normal employment rights continue throughout
2. Payment in Lieu of Notice (PILON)
Detail
Information
What happens
Employer pays your salary for the notice period but you leave immediately
Tax treatment
Taxable as normal earnings (if PILON clause is in your contract)
Benefits
Usually stop on your leaving date
Pension
Usually stops on your leaving date
When it’s used
Employer wants you to leave quickly, redundancy situations
3. Gardening Leave
Detail
Information
What happens
You stay employed but don’t come in to work
Pay
Full salary and benefits continue
Can you start a new job?
No — you’re still employed by your current employer
Must you be available?
Yes — employer can recall you to work
Non-compete clauses
Continue to apply — the notice period “uses up” some of the restriction
Common for
Senior staff, people joining competitors, those with trade secrets
4. Summary Dismissal (No Notice)
Detail
Information
What happens
Employer dismisses you immediately with no notice and no pay in lieu
When it’s lawful
Gross misconduct only
Examples
Theft, fraud, violence, serious health and safety breaches, serious insubordination
Your rights
You can still challenge it at tribunal if you believe the misconduct claim is unfair
During Your Notice Period
Right
Detail
Pay
Full normal pay (including regular overtime, commission if applicable)
Holiday
Continues to accrue. Can take it or be paid in lieu when you leave
Sick pay
Entitled to SSP if you’re ill during notice
Benefits
Continue until your last day of employment
Pension
Contributions continue until last day
Job searching
Reasonable time off to attend interviews (if being made redundant)
Restrictive covenants
Still apply during notice
Resigning — Your Notice Obligations
If your contract says
You must give
No notice period stated
Statutory minimum (usually 1 week)
1 month notice
1 month
3 months notice
3 months
How to Resign
Step
Action
1
Check your contract for the required notice period
2
Write a resignation letter/email stating your last working day
3
Give it to your manager (and HR if required)
4
Your notice starts the day after you give notice
5
Work your notice period professionally
Can You Negotiate a Shorter Notice?
Approach
Detail
Ask your employer
Many will agree — especially if they can hire a replacement quickly
Offer to help with handover
Makes it easier for them to agree
Use holiday
Take accrued holiday during your notice period
Mutual agreement
If both sides agree, the contract terms can be varied
What Happens If You Don’t Work Your Notice
Consequence
Likelihood
Employer sues for breach of contract
Rare — but possible for senior roles or if it causes real financial loss
Employer withholds outstanding pay
Possible — though they can usually only withhold notice pay, not wages already earned
Poor reference
Possible — “would not re-employ” or factual note about not working notice
Restrictive covenants still apply
Yes — leaving early doesn’t void non-compete clauses
Damage to professional reputation
Possible — especially in small industries
Redundancy and Notice
Detail
Information
Notice period on redundancy
Same rules apply — statutory or contractual, whichever is longer
Can employer pay in lieu?
Yes
Time off for job hunting
Reasonable time off if you have 2+ years’ service
Redundancy pay is separate
Notice pay and redundancy pay are different things — you’re entitled to both