A strong employment contract is the written guide to your working relationship — what the job is, what you’ll pay, and what each side agrees to do.

In 2026, employers face an evolving legal landscape: new rules on predictable working patterns, extended redundancy protections, flexible working from day one, and stronger enforcement around holiday pay and working time.

An employment contract is simply a written agreement between you and your employee that explains:

  • what the job is
  • what you’ll pay
  • what you expect from them
  • what they can expect from you

It’s there to prevent misunderstandings and make sure everyone knows the rules from day one.

A weak contract exposes employers to unnecessary disputes, tribunal claims, and reputational damage. A well-drafted one, however, provides legal certainty, transparency, and long-term stability. A good contract protects both sides. A bad one leaves room for arguments.

If the contract is unclear or incomplete, the employee might say they never agreed to certain hours, duties or pay arrangements. Clear wording avoids these issues and saves a lot of stress later. This in-depth guide explains how to draft a legally strong UK employment contract in 2026, what clauses need special attention, and the common drafting pitfalls that catch employers out. You’ll also find template clauses you can adapt for your workplace

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1. What Makes an Employment Contract “Legally Strong” in 2026?

A strong employment contract must:

  • Comply with UK employment legislation
  • Meet the Section 1 Employment Rights Act 1996 requirements (the “written particulars”)
  • Incorporate updates from 2024–2025 legislative changes
  • Use clear, unambiguous language
  • Balance business protection with fairness
  • Anticipate disputes by setting expectations upfront

In 2026, that means building in several updated rights, including:

  • Flexible working from day one
  • Extended redundancy protection for pregnant employees and new parents
  • Clear holiday pay rules for irregular-hours and part-year workers
  • Predictable working patterns requests
  • Stronger protections for agency workers and atypical contracts

If your contracts pre-date 2024 and haven’t been updated since, they likely miss key requirements. A strong contract follows the law, is written in plain English, and answers the questions that usually cause arguments later – hours, pay, duties, holiday and what happens if things change or go wrong.plexity and maximum strategic advantage. Especially for those planning to operate internationally or relocate as entrepreneurs, free zones offer a compelling platform.


2. Mandatory Information All Contracts Must Include

Under the Employment Rights Act 1996, employers must provide certain “written particulars” on day one. Other information must be provided within two months.

A legally strong contract will always include:

Day One Written Particulars

  • Employer’s name
  • Employee’s name, job title & start date
  • Place of work
  • Rate of pay & frequency
  • Hours of work, including variable hours
  • Holiday entitlement & holiday pay
  • Sickness absence & pay terms
  • Notice periods
  • Length of employment or fixed-term end date
  • Probation period terms
  • Benefits
  • Training requirements

Within Two Months

  • Pension information
  • Disciplinary & grievance procedures
  • Collective agreement details
  • Details of any other required training

Failure to provide the required particulars can lead to tribunal claims.


3. The 15 Clauses Every 2026 Employment Contract Should Contain

Below are the essential clauses that should form the backbone of a modern contract.

1. Job Title & Duties (with flexibility wording)

Roles evolve. Without flexibility wording, employees may argue that new tasks or changes are beyond their contractual remit.

Template Clause:

“Your duties are set out in the job description but may be reasonably amended to meet the needs of the business, provided such changes are consistent with your skills and experience.”

2. Working Hours & Working Patterns

In 2026, clarity is essential because:

  • Flexible working is a day-one right
  • Predictable working patterns legislation gives workers the right to request stability
  • Irregular-hours staff must have transparent pay and holiday arrangements

Include:

  • Normal hours
  • Flexibility clauses
  • Variable or zero-hours arrangements
  • Overtime rules
  • Breaks (Working Time Regulations 1998)

3. Pay, Deductions & Pay Review Terms

Specify:

  • Basic salary
  • Overtime rates
  • Bonuses (discretionary vs contractual)
  • Deductions (overpayments, equipment costs, advances)
  • Pay review frequency (clarify that reviews do not guarantee an increase)

4. Holiday Entitlement & Holiday Pay Calculation

This is a major problem area for employers.

You should include:

  • Number of days
  • How holiday is calculated for irregular-hours workers
  • Carry-over rules
  • Holiday year
  • How holiday pay is calculated, including reference to:

    • Commission
    • Regular overtime
    • Allowances

Contracts must reflect recent case law requiring holiday pay to be based on “normal pay”, not just basic salary.

5. Place of Work & Mobility Clause

Remote & hybrid working patterns are common, but mobility clauses still matter.

A strong clause allows reasonable relocation or hybrid adjustments without requiring agreement every time.

6. Probation Period & Extension Terms

Include:

  • Length (e.g., 3 or 6 months)
  • Conditions for extension
  • Reduced notice during probation
  • Performance expectations

7. Sickness Absence & Pay

Cover:

  • Process for reporting sickness
  • Fit note requirements
  • Company sick pay (if any)
  • Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) rights
  • Absence monitoring

8. Family Leave & New 2026 Protections

Contracts should summarise statutory rights including:

  • Maternity, adoption & shared parental leave
  • 2024–26 extension: priority protection in redundancy until 18 months after birth or placement
  • Parental bereavement leave
  • Carer’s leave
  • Neonatal leave (due to come into effect)

9. Disciplinary & Grievance Procedures

A strong contract references the employer’s policies and the Acas Code of Practice without embedding the full procedures into the contract itself.

This avoids making informal policies contractually binding.

10. Data Protection & Employee Monitoring (UK GDPR)

Every employment contract should include:

  • Employer processing grounds
  • Data protection compliance expectations
  • Monitoring and surveillance disclosure
  • Employee consent wording (where applicable)
  • Reference to privacy notice

11. Confidentiality & Intellectual Property

A core business protection clause.

Include:

  • Confidential information standards
  • Restrictions after employment ends
  • IP ownership (especially for creative, technical or design roles)

12. Post-Employment Restrictive Covenants

Restraints must be:

  • Reasonable
  • Time-limited
  • Geographically limited
  • Focused on legitimate business interests

Common forms include:

  • Non-solicitation
  • Non-dealing
  • Non-competition (high scrutiny in 2026 as reform discussions continue)

13. Notice Periods & Termination Provisions

Cover:

  • Statutory notice
  • Contractual notice (usually longer)
  • Right to pay in lieu of notice (PILON)
  • Garden leave
  • Summary dismissal grounds

14. Company Policies & Handbooks

Best practice:

  • Include policies in the handbook, not the contract
  • Reference them as non-contractual
  • Clarify that the employer can amend them

15. Variation Clause

Allows the employer to make reasonable changes to the terms where necessary—otherwise you risk breach of contract claims.

Template Clause:

“The Company reserves the right to make reasonable changes to the terms of your employment. You will be notified in writing of any such changes.”


4. New Employment Law Changes Affecting Contracts in 2026

Employment contracts drafted before 2024 are likely out of date. These are the major updates employers should consider.

Flexible Working from Day One (2024 Reform)

Employees can now request flexible working immediately on starting employment. Employers must:

  • Consult before refusal
  • Give a decision within 2 months
  • Allow 2 requests per year

Contracts should reflect the possibility of tailored working arrangements.

Redundancy Protection Extended to 18 Months After Birth

As of April 2024:

  • Pregnant employees
  • Employees returning from maternity, adoption or shared parental leave

…receive priority protection in redundancy for up to 18 months after birth or placement.

Contracts and policies should reflect these enhanced protections.

Holiday Pay Reforms for Irregular-Hours and Part-Year Workers

The updated Working Time Regulations require:

  • A 12.07% rolled-up holiday pay option for some workers
  • Clear contractual wording for leave accrual
  • Precision in defining “normal” pay

Predictable Working Patterns (Workers’ Rights Act changes)

Workers with unpredictable hours can request a predictable schedule. Employers must consider this when drafting variable-hours contracts.

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5. Employment Contract Template (Short-Form)

Below is a simple, adaptable outline.

Employment Contract Template (2026)

(For guidance only — not a substitute for legal drafting)

1. Parties

  • Employer: [Company Name]
  • Employee: [Name]

2. Job Title & Duties
 Role + flexibility wording.

3. Start Date & Continuous Employment

4. Working Hours & Patterns
 Normal hours, flexible arrangements, variable hours if applicable.

5. Salary & Deductions
 Salary, pay frequency, deductions wording.

6. Holiday Entitlement & Holiday Pay
 Days, accrual, holiday year, calculation method.

7. Sick Pay & Absence
 SSP + company policy.

8. Place of Work & Mobility

9. Probation Period

10. Notice Periods

11. Data Protection & Monitoring

12. Confidentiality & IP

13. Restrictive Covenants

14. Disciplinary & Grievance Procedures

15. Variation of Terms

16. Entire Agreement Clause


6. Common Pitfalls That Make Contracts Legally Weak

Even well-intentioned employers fall into familiar traps:

Pitfall 1: Using old templates

Contracts drafted even 3 years ago likely miss newer statutory rights.

Pitfall 2: Making policies contractual

This limits flexibility. Policies should sit separately from the contract.

Pitfall 3: Not specifying holiday pay

Failing to define “normal pay” exposes employers to significant back-pay claims.

Pitfall 4: Overbroad restrictive covenants

Unreasonable restraints are unenforceable—and risk the entire clause being struck out.

Pitfall 5: Forgetting post-2024 family leave protections

Failure to apply priority protection properly can lead to discrimination claims.

Pitfall 6: Ambiguous working hours

Vague clauses on “flexibility” or variable hours often lead to disputes about overtime or predictability.

Pitfall 7: Excluding statutory rights

Any clause that tries to waive statutory rights is unenforceable—and undermines the contract.


7. How to Future-Proof Your Employment Contracts

  • Review annually to keep up with legal changes
  • Use clear, plain English to avoid ambiguity
  • Keep policies as non-contractual
  • Include flexibility wording where appropriate
  • Train HR and managers on the meaning of key clauses
  • Document any agreed contractual variations

A legally strong employment contract in 2026 protects both sides

 For employers, it reduces risk, avoids costly disputes, and builds trust. For employees, it provides clarity and fairness from the moment they start.

By including the right clauses, staying aligned with 2026 legislative changes, and avoiding common drafting pitfalls, employers can create contracts that stand up to scrutiny—and support stable, transparent working relationships.

To discuss your plans or begin the process:
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Email: info@marlegal.co.uk
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