Certain particulars must be included in a single document. This single document was referred to as the “principal statement” in the legislation prior to the ERA 1996 (the Employment Protection (Consolidation) Act 1978). While the reference to a principal statement does not appear in the ERA 1996, that term is still used in practice.
The principal statement must contain the following particulars of employment:
- The names of the employer and the employee or worker.
- The date when the employee’s employment, or worker’s engagement, began.
- Where the statement is being given to an employee, the date on which the employee’s period of continuous service began (taking into account any employment with a previous employer which counts towards that period).
- The scale or rate of remuneration or the method of calculating remuneration.
- The intervals at which remuneration is paid (that is, weekly, monthly or other specified intervals).
- Any terms and conditions relating to hours of work, including any terms and conditions relating to:
- normal working hours;
- the days of the week on which the employee or worker is required to work; and
- whether or not such hours or days may be variable and, if they may be, how they may vary or how that variation will be determined.
- Any terms and conditions relating to holiday entitlement, including public holidays, and holiday pay (with the particulars given being sufficient to enable the entitlement, including entitlement to accrued holiday pay on termination, to be precisely calculated).
- The length of notice that must be given by either party to terminate the contract. The section 1 statement may refer the employee or worker to the law or to the provisions of a reasonably accessible collective agreement for these particulars.
- The job title or a brief description of the work the employee or worker is employed or engaged to do.
- Where the employment or engagement is not expected to be permanent, either the period for which it is expected to continue or, if it is for a fixed term, the date when it is to end.
- Any probationary period, including any conditions and its duration.
- The place of work or, where the employee or worker is required or permitted to work at various places, an indication of that and the address of the employer.
- Where the employee or worker is required to work outside the UK for more than one month:
- the period for which they are to work outside the UK;
- the currency in which they are to be paid while they are working outside the UK;
- any additional remuneration payable to them, and any benefits to be provided to or in respect of them, by reason of their being required to work outside the UK; and
- any terms and conditions relating to their return to the UK.
- Regarding training:
- any part of any training entitlement which the employer requires the employee or worker to complete (section 1(4)(m), ERA 1996); and
- any other training which the employer requires the employee or worker to complete but which the employer will not pay for.
- Any other benefits provided by the employer that do not fall within any other paragraph of section 1(4)
- The scale or rate of remuneration, or the method of calculating it, and the intervals at which the money is paid (that is weekly, monthly or other specified intervals) must be stated in the principal statement.