27 November 2025
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A new era of enforcement for UK employers: Are you ready for the Fair Work Agency?

To The Point
(5 min read)

In April 2026, the Employment Rights Bill (ERB) will establish the Fair Work Agency (FWA), a new single enforcement body for employment rights.  The FWA aims to transform how employment rights are enforced across the UK.  We explain how the new rights will work and what employers can do to prepare.

Overview

The FWA will bring together the work of existing state enforcement bodies to oversee compliance with the national minimum wage, the regulation of employment agencies, licensing standards for gangmasters and enforcing unpaid employment tribunal awards.  But that’s not all.  There will be new powers to enforce failure to pay statutory holiday and statutory sick pay.  From 2027, the FWA will oversee the regulation of umbrella companies.  Over time, the FWA will take on enforcement of a wider range of employment rights.  

The FWA will be able to issue notices of underpayment of non-payment of any statutory payment (e.g. statutory sick pay, holiday pay or national minimum wage), requiring payment within 28 days, plus a 200% penalty.  Underpayments may go back 6 years from the date of the notice.  

Background
How will the FWA work?
What powers will the FWA have?
Holiday pay
Umbrella companies

What should you do now?

Employers should conduct a thorough compliance check ahead of the FWA becoming operational in April 2026.  The government has said that the FWA will be “using new powers to ensure the estimated 900,000 people who have holiday pay withheld each year finally receive it” and “cracking down on those employers failing to pay the minimum wage”, so it seems likely that these two areas may be a particular focus in the FWA’s initial enforcement strategy.  

Given the complexity of calculating holiday pay, employers will need to mitigate the increased financial exposure by checking the accuracy of their calculations and keeping these under review, whilst retaining adequate records to demonstrate compliance with holiday pay and leave for six years.  This is especially relevant given that the FWA will have the power to investigate and enforce rights to holiday pay without the need for an individual worker to bring a claim.  

Employers using umbrella companies will want to conduct a thorough review of their arrangements to ensure the umbrella company is compliant with tax and employment laws and/or introduce safeguards to mitigate potential liability for PAYE ahead of the April 2026 changes. With HMRC data showing that £500 million was lost to disguised remuneration tax avoidance schemes in 2022-2023 (almost all of which facilitated by umbrella companies), this is expected to be another area of focus for the FWA.

With Business Secretary Peter Kyle quoted as saying: “Our Fair Work Agency will be a game-changer in ensuring rights are properly enforced, whilst backing those businesses that already do the right thing”, for employers, now is the time to get your house in order before April 2026.  

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