Not just the simpler way but the legal way that companies who do it correctly pay average holiday pay. It used to be the average over the last 12 weeks and last April, it changed to the average over the last 52 weeks.Blaine wrote: ↑26 Jun 2021, 18:47Is there any reason why we didn't go for a simpler method? When on annual leave, award average of previous 52 weeks earnings? Wouldn't this have been easier on Payroll systems and restored trust in senior management, because they get their full annual leave pay for all 5.6 weeks and we are capped at 4 weeks.
This guidance explains how to calculate statutory holiday pay for workers without fixed hours or fixed rates of pay. It is for use by workers or employers.
Holiday pay is based on the principle that a worker should not suffer financially for taking holiday.
In simple terms, almost all workers, except those who are genuinely self-employed, are legally entitled to 5.6 weeks’ paid holiday per year. This entitlement is derived from the Working Time Regulations 1998.[footnote 1]
The amount of pay that a worker receives for the holiday they take depends on the number of hours they work and how they are paid for those hours. The principle is that pay received by a worker while they are on holiday should reflect what they would have earned if they had been at work and working.
A worker continues to accrue holiday entitlement while they are on sick leave, maternity leave, parental leave, adoption leave and other types of statutory leave. A worker may request holiday at the same time they are on sick leave.
The majority of the UK’s workforce are full-time workers on fixed hours and fixed pay. For these workers, typically on a fixed monthly salary, if they take a week’s holiday, they will receive the same pay at the end of the month as they normally receive.
The situation becomes more complicated when a worker does not work fixed or regular hours and so does not receive the same amount of pay each week, month or other pay period. In these circumstances an employer should normally look back at a worker’s previous 52 paid weeks (known as the holiday pay reference period) to calculate what that worker should be paid for a week’s leave.
This 8 hours a month in every month within a 6 month period is an unnecessary complication which only serves to save RM money at the expense of their employees who are entitled to holiday pay at the average of their last 12 months pay:
https://www.peoplemanagement.co.uk/expe ... shell#gref