If youโ€™ve seen headlines about โ€œemployment law shake-upsโ€ in 2026, you might assume settlement agreements will suddenly become easier, harder, or more generous across the board.

The truth is more nuanced.

A settlement agreement is still, at its core, a private contract that ends (or settles) workplace disputes on agreed terms, usually with a payment, a reference, and a waiver of certain legal claims. But in 2026, the context around settlement agreements is changing: new employment reforms are being phased in, expectations around confidentiality are tightening, and the stakes in exit negotiations may rise as wider rights expand over the next two years.

This guide explains what matters in real life โ€” not just what makes the news.

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What a settlement agreement actually is (and what it is not)

A settlement agreement is a written document that sets out terms to settle an employment dispute (or potential dispute). In most cases, the employee agrees not to pursue certain claims in an employment tribunal, in exchange for an agreed package.

It is not:

  • a โ€œguaranteed pay-offโ€
  • a requirement you must accept
  • the same as a redundancy process (though it can appear alongside redundancy)

The first thing headlines miss: timing and leverage matter more than ever

Major reforms are being phased in between 2026 and 2027 under the Employment Rights Act 2025 (which became law on 18 December 2025). Many changes are not yet in force, but the direction is clear: more employee protections, and potentially higher risk for employers who mishandle exits.

What that means for settlement agreements in 2026:

1. Some employers may offer settlements earlier

When employers perceive future risk (for example, changes to unfair dismissal rights and compensation rules), they often try to resolve issues sooner and privately.

2. Some offers may become more โ€œstandardisedโ€

More employers may lean on templates and process-driven exits to reduce the chance of a dispute escalating.

3. Your negotiation position may be shaped by whatโ€™s coming next

For example, commentary from employment law firms suggests key changes are expected to phase in from April 2026, with some headline items (like the reduced unfair dismissal qualifying period and removal of the compensatory award cap) expected later (commonly referenced as January 2027 in some briefings).

Bottom line: in 2026, settlement agreements arenโ€™t โ€œnewโ€ โ€” but the risk environment is shifting, which can affect how quickly employers want resolution and how flexible they are on terms.


The confidentiality point: what you canโ€™t be forced to keep quiet about

A lot of settlement agreements include confidentiality clauses (sometimes called NDAs). Headlines often make this sound like: โ€œNDAs are being banned.โ€

Reality: itโ€™s more targeted.

Recent reporting and legal briefings indicate reforms aimed at restricting NDAs being used to silence victims of harassment or discrimination, while still allowing confidentiality for legitimate business interests (for example, trade secrets).

So in 2026, if a settlement agreement includes confidentiality language, the questions to ask are:

  • What exactly am I being asked not to say?
  • Does it try to stop me speaking to:
    • regulators?
    • medical professionals/therapists?
    • police?
    • close family?
  • Does it try to restrict discussion of potential harassment/discrimination issues in a way that may be challenged under evolving rules?

This area is changing quickly, and the wording matters.ss and family stability.


โ€œWithout prejudiceโ€ and โ€œprotected conversationsโ€ are not magic shields

Many employees are told: โ€œThis conversation is off the record.โ€

Two different concepts can apply:

Without prejudice

This usually applies where thereโ€™s an existing dispute, and it can make genuine settlement discussions inadmissible in tribunal.

Protected conversations (s111A Employment Rights Act 1996)

This can apply even where there isnโ€™t an existing dispute, but itโ€™s limited (commonly focused around unfair dismissal) and itโ€™s not a blanket cloak of confidentiality for everything said or done. ACAS provides guidance and templates for initiating these discussions.

What headlines miss: employers sometimes overstate how โ€œprotectedโ€ a conversation is. The facts and conduct still matter.complications.

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The practical process: how long do you get to decide?

EEmployees often feel rushed.

ACAS guidance (and commentary on it) commonly references giving employees at least 10 calendar days to consider a written offer and get independent advice, unless both sides agree otherwise.

If youโ€™re pushed to sign quickly, that can be a red flag โ€” not always, but often.


Money isnโ€™t the only โ€œvalueโ€ in a settlement agreement

Headlines focus on payout figures. In real settlements, what matters is often:

1. The reference

A pre-agreed reference (wording attached to the agreement) can be worth more than an extra few hundred pounds.

2. The tax position

In the UK, you do not usually pay tax on the first ยฃ30,000 of certain termination payments (including redundancy and some compensation), but not everything is tax-free (for example, pay in lieu of notice is typically taxed as earnings). The type of payment and how itโ€™s described matters.

3. Benefit continuation

Private healthcare, company car arrangements, laptop/phone, outplacement support โ€” these can be negotiated.

4. Restrictive covenants

Sometimes employers try to add or tighten restrictions (non-compete, non-solicit) in exchange for money. This should be scrutinised carefully.


One major misunderstanding: you usually need independent advice

For a settlement agreement to validly waive certain employment claims, it generally requires the employee to receive independent advice on the terms and effect of the agreement.

This is why employers often contribute to the cost of that advice as part of the package (sometimes as a fixed contribution).


Settlement agreement vs COT3: the alternative route

There are limited ways an employer can legally secure a waiver of tribunal rights. Citizens Advice highlights that one route is a COT3 agreement via ACAS (often used where a dispute is being conciliated).

The right route depends on your situation, timing, and whether a tribunal claim is already in play.

A simple โ€œbefore you signโ€ checklist for 2026

If youโ€™re offered a settlement agreement in 2026, consider:

  1. What claims am I being asked to waive?
  2. What exactly is being paid โ€” and how is it described for tax?
  3. Is there a reference attached and agreed?
  4. What does the confidentiality clause stop me from doing?
  5. Are there restrictive covenants โ€” and are they reasonable?
  6. Am I being given enough time to consider it (ideally 10 days)?
  7. Does the agreement accurately reflect why the employment is ending?
  8. What happens if either side breaches the terms?

Where MAR Legal can help

Settlement agreements are not โ€œone-size-fits-all,โ€ especially in a changing legal landscape. If youโ€™ve been offered one โ€” or youโ€™re negotiating an exit and want to understand your options โ€” MAR Legal can help you review the terms in plain English, flag risks, and support you in negotiating improvements where appropriate.

To discuss your plans or begin the process:
Call +44 (0)161 491 3933
Email: info@marlegal.co.uk
Or enquire via our Contact page.