WORKPLACE BREAK LAW

Workplace breaks are governed by the Working Time Regulations (1998), as amended, and an employee’s contract of employment.

The Working Time Regulations describe the various different types of break, who they apply to, and what employee and employer responsibilities are. The regulations also cover how many hours an individual can work for in a week, what holiday time and pay they’re entitled to, and the requirements for those involved in night work or dangerous activities.

The Working Time Regulations were introduced to implement the UK’s obligations under EC law, specifically the Working Time Directive and certain provisions of the Young Workers Directive.

Beyond the Working Time Regulations (1998), there are a few other pieces of regulation that are relevant to employee breaks. This will be spoken about in greater detail later, but include the Equality Act 2010 and a number of EU and UK measures concerning safe driving practices.

Employment Law on Breaks | Rest Breaks and Rest Periods For Your Employees

The main legal requirements concerning rest breaks and rest periods are found in the Working Time Regulations (1998). They detail the various different types of breaks and describe when they should be taken and for how long. The different types of break include;

  • Daily rest breaks – when your employees work for MORE than 6 hours, it is necessary to provide them with a rest break of at least 20 minutes. This rest break should be uninterrupted, can be taken away from the workspace, and should not occur at either the start or end of the shift. If an employee works a shift lasting exactly 6 hours, this right is not applicable. They must work in excess of 6 hours.
  • Workers are also entitled to a minimum of 11 hours rest a day.
  • Weekly rest – your employees are entitled to 24 hours uninterrupted rest every 7 days. This can be replaced by two 24 hour rest periods or one period of 48 hours uninterrupted rest every two weeks.
  • Annual leave – employees have the right to 5.6 weeks annual leave.

In this guide, we’ll primarily focus on Employment Law on breaks and specifically daily rest breaks, as they’re easily the most complex and least understood aspect of the regulations. It’s also important to know that you as an employer are under no obligation to pay an employee for these breaks.

Exceptions to Rest Break Rules

There are a number of exceptions to the rest break rules for your employees, many of which apply to younger workers or employees who are carrying out certain types of work. They include;

  • Children above compulsory school age but under 18. Rather than a 20-minute rest break in any working day that lasts more than 6 hours, if you have employees in this age bracket they are entitled to a 30-minute break in any working day that lasts more than 4.5 hours. They’re also entitled to 12 hours uninterrupted rest every day, rather than the usual 11.
  • Those who work in the Armed Forces, emergency services, or police are excluded from the rest break rules
  • Those who work with sea, road, or air transport are excluded from the rest break rules. However, there are usually other regulations that apply to these sectors.
  • Those who work in a job where they freely choose the hours they work (e.g. a managing director) or where the work is not measured (e.g. a job that has no set hours) can exclude themselves from the rest break rules.

Compensatory Rest

In some cases, where your employees aren’t entitled to rest breaks or rest periods, they may be able to take compensatory rest instead. This compensatory rest should equate to the amount of time they would have had in rest breaks or rest periods, were they entitled to them.

Compensatory rest is generally available to employees in the following circumstances;

  • Shift workers who can’t take their rest periods between ending one shift and starting another.
  • Employees working in seasonal industries, or in jobs where there is a predictable upswing in trade. This includes those working in agriculture, tourism, and retail, amongst others.
  • Workers in jobs that require 24 hour or around the clock staffing, such as hospital employees.
  • Those that work a long distance from their home, such as employees on an oil rig.
  • Workers involved in security or surveillance-based work.
  • Those who work in a workplace where management have made a deal with the relevant trade union (a collective agreement), or with the workforce directly (a workforce agreement), to remove these rights for a specific group of employees.
  • Those who work in two or more places that are a reasonable distance apart.
  • Workers who split their working day into two or more periods (e.g. those who work a morning shift followed by an evening shift).

However, compensatory rest breaks are complex and there are many grey areas. For instance, the Employment Tribunal (ET) and Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) recently made contradictory rulings on the same case.

Employment Law on Breaks and Contracts of Employment

In some cases, additional breaks for your employees will be included in the terms of the employment contract. Generally, the duration and timing of these breaks will be set out in the contract and an employer may even decide to pay the employee during these rest breaks.

Many employers do offer their workers an extended lunch break and a shorter morning or afternoon break as well. There has been a great deal of research conducted into the effect of regular breaks on productivity, with nearly every report arguing that more frequent breaks make for a happier and more productive workforce.

Though we commonly think of breaks as distracting from employees’ workloads, regular stops are likely to improve their performance and keep them focused in the long run.

What Do Your Employees Have To Do To Take Their Break?

Whether or not employees have to request their mandated 20-minutes rest break in order to take it, is currently a topic of hot discussion.

A 2016 EAT case highlighted this particular issue. It involved an employee who worked an 8.5-hour shift and whose employer reorganised his hours so that he took his 30-minute lunch break at the end of this shift. This meant that he worked for 8 hours, had a 30-minute “break” at the end of his shift, and then went home – if he hadn’t already.

While the ET originally ruled that this was perfectly legal, the EAT overruled this decision. Instead, they found that employers are still breaking the law by making work arrangements like those mentioned above.

Rather than there only being a breach of the regulations if an employer refuses a legitimate break request, the EAT ruled that a failure to facilitate breaks by making work arrangements that don’t allow for them is also a breach.

Smoking Breaks

Though they’re a fairly common occurrence, smoking breaks can be a source of tension between non-smokers and smokers, result in decreased productivity, and interrupt workflow. Consequently, it’s a good idea to take the issue seriously, and understand the legalities of Employment Law on breaks.

Legally, your employees have no right to additional smoking breaks. While they can do whatever they like – including smoking – in their rest breaks, there is no legislation that grants smokers the right to take extra smoking breaks. While this may be an unpopular stance to adopt, it might be necessary to avoid confrontation in the workplace.

After all, why should smokers receive more breaks than non-smokers?

If you wish to handle the issue properly, it might be best to draw up a smoking policy. At the very least, this will detail;

  • When smoking is permitted, if at all.
  • Where smoking is permitted on the company property.
  • The rules for smoking outside of the work premises while on company business.
  • The punishments for breaking these rules.

Though there is no mention of e-cigarettes in legislation either, it’s probably a good idea to set the same ground rules for vapers as smokers. Vapes can be disruptive in the workplace and permitting their use inside the office is likely to cause further splits, divisions, and tensions.

Compulsory Breaks

In some industries, it is compulsory for employees to take breaks on a regular basis. The most obvious example of this type of compulsory break is for Heavy Goods Vehicles (HGV) drivers.

Driving large and powerful vehicles for long periods of time is likely to prove dangerous to the driver and other road users. Consequently, the EU has legislated a certain amount of compulsory break time, reducing the scope for tiredness-related incidents and making the roads safer for everyone.

With HGV drivers, there are a number of important rules to follow. They include:

  • HGV drivers must have at least 11 hours of rest each day. On three occasions every week, they can drop this to 9 hours.
  • Every week, HGV drivers must take an uninterrupted break of 45 hours. Every other week, they can drop this to an uninterrupted break of 24 hours.
  • They must take a weekly rest after six consecutive days of working.
  • After no more than 4.5 hours of uninterrupted driving, HGV drivers must take a single break of at least 45 hours minutes or series of breaks that total 45 minutes.

It is worth noting that all of these rules are based on EU legislation. While the UK government is pursuing a policy of alignment with EU standards in most cases, they may change upon Britain leaving the EU.

In the UK, all HGV drivers are monitored by a tachograph, which provides accurate details of speed, distance travelled, break times, and driving times. This prevents employers pressuring their drivers into working without the necessary breaks and ensures employees don’t ignore their mandated break times.

Religious Breaks

As with smoking, there is no legislation pertaining to an individual’s right to take religious breaks. This means that your employees have no legal right to a religious break and will need to take up the issue with a manager or the relevant authority. You may decide to make it a contractual agreement, by which the right to religious breaks is inserted into their employment contract, or you may decide to come to a general agreement about how the process works.

However, religion is one of the protected characteristics detailed in the Equality Act 2010. This means that if you do reject a request for religious breaks by an employee, you have to ensure that you’re not treating them less favourably than someone not of that religion.

As with most things, common sense, compassion, and an understanding attitude play a big role in deciding what you should do about religious breaks. If the request is reasonable and doesn’t distract too much from work, it should either be granted or an agreement arrived at. It may be possible to take time off a lunch break, so that the religious break can be accommodated. Your employee may be willing to make up the time in other ways.

Next Steps

As you can see, the law surrounding employee breaks is relatively simple for the average worker but becomes increasingly complex as you factor in the various exceptions and additional considerations. This means that employers and employees need to be sure that they understand their rights and responsibilities and are doing what’s legally right.

Recent legal decisions suggest that you as an employer have to be increasingly careful about how you organise rest breaks and that you should be ensuring and insisting your employees take the required rest breaks.

Not only would it be disadvantageous to fall foul of the law, but a happy, well-rested workforce is a better performing workforce that’s far less likely to cause an accident, commit an error, or do something dangerous. For everyone involved, it’s best to offer employees the rest breaks they need.