UK Employment Rights: Redundancy, Leave, Contracts and Workplace Protections
Agency Worker Rights UK — The 12-Week Rule, Pay, and Protections
Your rights as an agency worker in the UK — the 12-week rule for equal pay, holiday pay, sick pay, and what your agency and hirer must provide.
Around 1 million people in the UK work through employment agencies. You have specific legal rights from day one — and more rights after 12 weeks. Here’s what you’re entitled to.
For the wider cluster covering redundancy, statutory pay, leave rights, contract protections, and dispute routes, use the main Employment Rights hub.
Your Rights from Day One
| Right |
Detail |
| National Minimum Wage / National Living Wage |
Must be paid for all hours worked |
| Paid holiday |
5.6 weeks per year (28 days full-time equivalent) |
| Rest breaks |
20 minutes after 6 hours, 11 hours between shifts |
| Working time limits |
Maximum 48 hours/week (unless you opt out in writing) |
| Protection from discrimination |
Same as any other worker |
| Health and safety protection |
Hirer must provide safe working conditions |
| Access to job vacancies |
Must be told about permanent vacancies at the hirer |
| Access to shared facilities |
Canteen, car parking, childcare facilities |
| Right to written terms |
Your agency must give you a written statement of terms |
Rights After 12 Weeks (The 12-Week Rule)
After 12 continuous calendar weeks in the same role at the same hirer, you gain:
| Right |
Detail |
| Equal pay |
Same basic pay as a comparable permanent employee |
| Equal overtime rates |
Same overtime and shift allowances |
| Equal bonus entitlement |
Same performance and annual bonuses |
| Same annual leave entitlement |
If permanent staff get more than 28 days, you get the same |
| Equal rest periods |
If permanent staff have longer breaks |
| Working time protections |
Same as permanent staff (night work limits, etc.) |
What Counts Toward the 12 Weeks?
| Situation |
Does the clock reset? |
| Continuous weeks in the same role |
No — keeps counting |
| Short break (up to 6 weeks) for any reason |
No — clock pauses, doesn’t reset |
| Break of up to 28 weeks for pregnancy/maternity |
No — clock pauses |
| Break for sickness or injury (up to 28 weeks) |
No — clock pauses |
| Break for jury service (any length) |
No — clock pauses |
| Workplace closure (e.g. Christmas shutdown) |
No — clock pauses |
| Break over 6 weeks |
Yes — clock resets to zero |
| Moved to a substantially different role at the same hirer |
Yes — new role, new 12-week count |
| New assignment at a different hirer |
Yes — different workplace, different count |
Equal Pay After 12 Weeks
| Pay element |
Must be equal? |
| Basic hourly/daily rate |
Yes — same as comparable permanent employee |
| Overtime rates |
Yes |
| Shift allowances |
Yes |
| Performance bonuses |
Yes (if linked to output) |
| Annual bonuses |
Yes (pro-rated for time worked) |
| Commission |
Yes |
| Vouchers (e.g. childcare vouchers) |
Yes — if given to permanent staff |
| Holiday pay |
Yes — if permanent staff get more than statutory |
| Occupational pension |
No — not covered by the regulations |
| Redundancy pay |
No — not covered |
| Maternity/paternity pay |
No — statutory minimums apply |
How to Find Out What Permanent Staff Earn
| Method |
Detail |
| Ask your agency |
They should request this information from the hirer |
| Check the company’s careers page |
May show advertised salaries for similar roles |
| Ask colleagues (carefully) |
You have a legal right to discuss pay |
| Submit a formal request |
Request the hirer’s pay information through your agency |
Holiday Pay
| Detail |
Information |
| Entitlement |
5.6 weeks (28 days) per year — from day one |
| Calculation |
Based on average weekly earnings |
| Rolled-up holiday pay |
Some agencies include 12.07% in your hourly rate |
| Can you take actual time off? |
You should be able to book and take holiday |
| What if you’re not given holiday? |
This is a legal right — raise with your agency, then ACAS |
Rolled-Up Holiday Pay Example
| Detail |
Amount |
| Base hourly rate |
£12.00 |
| Rolled-up holiday pay (12.07%) |
£1.45 |
| Total hourly rate |
£13.45 |
| But no separate paid holiday |
You’re not paid when you take time off |
Sick Pay
| Detail |
Information |
| SSP eligibility |
Average earnings of £123+/week |
| SSP rate |
£116.75/week |
| Who pays? |
Your agency (as your employer) |
| Duration |
Up to 28 weeks |
| If you don’t qualify |
Apply for UC or ESA |
Pension
| Detail |
Information |
| Auto-enrolment |
From day one (if aged 22+, earning £10,000+/year) |
| Minimum contributions |
5% employee, 3% employer |
| Who provides it? |
Your agency (as your employer) |
| Workplace pension access (hirer’s scheme) |
Not required after 12 weeks — pension is excluded from equal treatment |
Common Problems and Solutions
| Problem |
What to do |
| Not being paid NMW |
Contact HMRC: 0300 123 1100 |
| No holiday pay |
Raise with your agency → ACAS → employment tribunal |
| Not getting equal pay after 12 weeks |
Ask agency to confirm comparable permanent rates → ACAS |
| Agency says 12 weeks don’t apply (role changed) |
Challenge if the role is substantially the same |
| Hirer ends your assignment after you raise concerns |
This may be unlawful — contact ACAS about unfair treatment |
| Agency deducting fees for finding work |
Illegal — agencies cannot charge workers for finding them work |
| Agency withholding pay |
Contact ACAS and consider employment tribunal claim |
| Not told about permanent vacancies |
Raise with agency/hirer — this is a day-one right |
Swedish Derogation (Abolished)
| Detail |
Information |
| What it was |
A contract type that let agencies avoid equal pay after 12 weeks by paying between assignments |
| Current status |
Abolished from April 2020 |
| Implication |
If you’re still on a “Swedish derogation” contract, it’s no longer valid — you should receive equal pay after 12 weeks |
Agency Workers vs Other Worker Types
| Feature |
Agency worker |
Zero hours |
Permanent employee |
| Employer |
The agency |
The company |
The company |
| Holiday pay |
Yes (from day one) |
Yes |
Yes |
| SSP |
Yes (if earnings qualify) |
Maybe |
Yes |
| Equal pay |
After 12 weeks |
No entitlement |
N/A |
| Unfair dismissal protection |
No (generally) |
After 2 years |
After 2 years |
| Redundancy pay |
No |
After 2 years (if employee status) |
After 2 years |
| Notice period |
As per contract (often 1 week) |
Statutory minimum |
Contractual |
| Pension auto-enrolment |
Yes |
Yes (if eligible) |
Yes |
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