Payment for Leave and Holidays in a Final Pay

When you leave your employment for any reason, you may be entitled to get paid for annual holidays, alternative holidays and/or public holidays in your final pay.

Public holidays
Employees are sometimes entitled to be paid for public holidays that fall after their employment has ended (i.e. after their termination date). This can happen if the employee has unused annual holidays they are entitled to at the time their employment ends. This rule doesn’t apply to employees who haven’t completed 12 months’ service because they aren’t entitled to annual holidays yet.

To work out whether an employee is entitled to paid public holidays that happen after their employment has ended, follow these steps:

  1. Treat any remaining annual holidays that the employee is entitled to as if the employee had taken them immediately after the date their employment ended.
  2. The employee must be paid for a public holiday if it:
    happens within the time period created by adding on these remaining annual holidays to the end of employment, and
    happens on a day that the employee would have worked if they were still employed, and the day wasn’t a public holiday.
  3. If the employee is entitled to be paid for a public holiday then:
    o the period that the annual holidays covers is extended by one day for each public holiday the employee is entitled to be paid for, and
    o this new extended period may contain more public holidays which also need to be considered for payment.

The payment for any public holidays is calculated in the usual way. They are paid at the rate of relevant daily pay or average daily pay (if applicable) for the day. Note that this situation has no effect on the actual end date of employment.

Examples

Scenario 1
Tara works 5 days a week, Monday to Friday. At her termination date of 22 December (which in this example falls on a Friday in 2017) she has 5 days remaining of annual holiday entitlement. If these 5 days are added on to her termination date, this takes them to 29 December. Two public holidays fall within this period (25 and 26 December), so these must be treated and paid as public holidays.

The 2 days’ annual holidays which would have covered 25 and 26 December are then added on to the end of the period (ending on 29 December). This creates an extended period which ends on 2 January. This extended period includes the public holidays 1 and 2 January. These public holidays are also treated and paid as public holidays.

1 and 2 January are now treated as public holidays. This means two annual holiday days are not being used. These two annual holiday days are then added on to the end of the period ending on 2 January, creating a new extended period ending on 4 January. There are no public holidays falling on 3 or 4 January, so this has no further effect.

Scenario 2
Cory has worked for his employer for 2 years and works 5 days a week, Monday to Friday. He finishes work 4 days before a public holiday (which falls on a Tuesday), and has 6 days left from his annual holiday entitlement.

Cory gets a day’s pay at his relevant daily pay or average daily pay (if applicable) for the public holiday. This is because if his 6 days’ annual holiday entitlement was added on to his termination date, this period would include the public holiday. Tuesday is also a day on which he would otherwise have worked. If Cory only worked Wednesday to Friday, he would not receive any payment for the public holiday.

Alternative holidays

When an employee leaves, they may have unpaid or untaken alternative holidays from when they worked a public holiday. This means the alternative holidays should be paid at the relevant daily pay or average daily pay (if applicable) for the last day of the employee’s work. This is regardless of the rate of pay at the time they earned them. Alternative holidays don’t affect the employee’s termination date for working out pay for public holidays.

Sick leave and bereavement leave

There is no legal entitlement for unused sick or bereavement leave to be paid out when an employee leaves their employment. Some employers choose to pay out a part or all of any unused sick leave entitlement.

Annual holidays

How much an employee gets paid for annual holidays in their final pay depends on how long they have been working for the employer.

Employment ends before entitlement to annual holidays

These employees get an annual holiday payment of 8% of their gross earnings less any amount the employee has been paid for:

  • annual holidays taken in advance
  • annual holidays on a pay-as-you-go basis.

Gross earnings are calculated since the commencement of employment. They include any other payments made in the employee’s final pay.

Employment ends after entitlement to annual holidays

There are two calculations to do to work out the annual holiday payments for these employees:

  • The employee is paid for any remaining annual holidays that they are entitled to. These are paid at the rate of the greater of ordinary weekly pay or average weekly earnings, as if the holidays were being taken at the end of the employment, plus
  • The employee gets an annual holiday payment of 8% of their gross earnings since their last anniversary date for annual holidays. This includes other payments made in the final pay, less any amount the employee has been paid for:
    • annual holidays taken in advance
    • annual holidays on a pay-as-you-go basis.

 

We cover all of this and much more in our Payroll Essentials Training Course via the Small Business Training Hub.  Let us know if you would like more information.

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