Employment Rights Bill - Flexible Working

Employers should prepare for stricter rules on handling flexible working requests by reviewing policies, training managers, and promoting a more open approach to flexibility.

What is the current situation?

Employees already have the legal right to request flexible working from their first day of employment.

Before refusing a request, an employer must consult with the employee.

Employers can currently refuse a request for these eight business reasons:

  • It will create extra costs that would damage the business
  • The work cannot be reorganised among existing staff
  • No suitable person can be recruited to do the work
  • It would affect quality
  • It would affect performance
  • It would limit the ability to meet customer demand
  • There is not enough work to do during the proposed working times
  • The employer is planning structural changes to the workforce

What’s changing and when?

The Employment Rights Bill is intended to make it easier for employees to have flexible working requests approved.

Regulations will introduce a clear and mandatory consultation process that employers must follow before turning down a request.

The Bill will also require that any refusal for one of the eight reasons must be reasonable, meaning the employer can demonstrate that the reason genuinely applies and was reached through a fair, evidence-based decision-making process.

Employers will also need to provide the employee with a written explanation outlining why the refusal is reasonable.

These reforms are expected to come into effect in 2027, with Government consultations planned for Winter 2025 and early 2026.

What you need to do now

  • Review and update your flexible working policy and approach to ensure they align with the upcoming changes.
  • Provide training to managers and decision-makers so they know how to follow the consultation process and record evidence-based decisions.
  • Consider whether your organisational culture supports flexibility or if the default response to requests remains overly restrictive.

How Bhayani Law can help you

Whether you are an existing client or seeking our support for the first time, we can help you prepare for these changes and stay compliant.

Already getting support from Bhayani Law?

You will receive updates from us as legal changes are confirmed, helping you stay compliant and confident.

We offer detailed HR and employment law guidance, along with template policies, letters and an impact assessment form to support fair and well-documented decision-making on flexible working requests.

If you have questions or need advice, your dedicated advisor is available to help. We can deliver manager training and review your HR policies.

Our HR and legal team can also provide hands-on assistance with projects to prepare your organisation for these changes.

New to Bhayani Law?

You don’t have to face the changes alone. Whether you need quick input or ongoing support, we can help you however works best for your business.

Ongoing HR & Employment Law Support

Our Watertight HR Retainer service includes:

  • Direct access to specialist employment law and HR advisors
  • Regularly updated HR policies, contracts, and templates via our Watertight HR Hub
  • Practical advice for day-to-day HR issues and strategic planning
  • Access to monthly HR Spotlights
  • Different plans to suit your organisation: Light, Standard or Premium.

One-off, Project-Based Support

If you need targeted assistance:

  • Watertight OnSite Support – Bring our specialists into your organisation for short-term, high-impact support, ideal for periods of upheaval like restructures, policy rollouts, or crisis management.
  • HR Training  – Custom training sessions delivered by our employment law specialists and HR advisors, focusing on real-world scenarios like discrimination, tribunal preparation, or strategic HR compliance.

Not sure where to start?

Call us on 0333 888 1360 or contact us online and one of our team will get in touch.

Please note: The Employment Rights Bill is still going through Parliament. The details above reflect our current understanding and may change after consultations and final legislation. This is general guidance, not legal advice.

More news articles