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Whether TUPE applies
One of the first issues to consider as an employer is whether there is a relevant transfer at all, which can depend on factors such as:
- whether the business or service retains its identity
- whether the activities remain fundamentally the same
- whether there is an organised grouping of employees assigned to the work in question
These are often the points that create uncertainty, especially in service provision changes and partial transfers. If TUPE is assumed to apply when it does not, or ignored when it does, then this can have significant commercial and legal consequences.
TUPE and business transfers
TUPE (Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations) is the set of rules that can apply when a business, part of a business, or a service moves from one employer to another. Where TUPE applies, employees assigned to the transferring business or service may move automatically to the new employer, together with important rights and liabilities linked to their employment.
For employers, TUPE is important because it can affect staffing, consultation, inherited liabilities and what changes can lawfully be made after the transfer. That is why it is important to identify the TUPE position early, rather than once the deal or service change is already underway.
TUPE usually arises in two broad situations:
- a business transfer, where a business or part of it moves to a new employer
- a service provision change, such as outsourcing, retendering or bringing a service back in-house
It does not usually apply to a simple share sale, because the employing entity itself remains the same.
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What transfers with the workforce
If TUPE applies, the incoming employer generally steps into the shoes of the outgoing employer. That usually means taking on the transferring employees on their existing terms and conditions, in turn preserving their continuity of service. It can also mean inheriting certain liabilities connected with those employment relationships.
These can include:
- pay and contractual benefits
- holiday entitlement
- collective agreements in place before the transfer
- liabilities linked to past employment issues in some situations
Pensions are more complicated and do not transfer in exactly the same way as other contractual rights, which is one reason why it is important to carefully review the pension position with any transfer.
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Information, consultation and employee liability information
Not properly managing the procedural side of TUPE is often where employers expose themselves to avoidable claims. Both the outgoing and incoming employers may have duties to inform and, where measures are proposed, consult with affected employees or their representatives before the transfer. Employees must be informed even where no measures are proposed.
The outgoing employer must also provide employee liability information to the incoming employer at least 28 days before the transfer date. That information should be accurate, up to date and sufficient to allow the incoming employer to understand the workforce it is taking on. Failure to inform and consult properly can lead to an award of up to 13 weeks’ gross pay per affected employee, which is one reason TUPE consultation needs to be planned carefully.
TLW Solicitors can help businesses work out who is affected, what needs to be communicated, whether representatives need to be elected, and how consultation should be handled so that the process is smooth and defensible.
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Contract changes, harmonisation and redundancies
Post-transfer change is one of the main risk areas in TUPE. Employers often want to align terms, reporting lines or ways of working after a deal or service change, but TUPE places real limits on what can be changed simply because of the transfer. Changes made for that reason are often void.
The main exception is where there is a genuine economic, technical or organisational reason involving changes in the workforce. Even then, the position needs to be handled carefully: a genuine post-transfer redundancy or restructure may still be possible, but only with the right reasoning and a fair process. Trying to use TUPE as a route to harmonise terms for administrative convenience is much harder to defend.
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Due diligence, indemnities and commercial protection
TUPE is not only an employment issue, it is also a deal-risk issue. Hidden liabilities, unresolved grievances, holiday accrual, discrimination claims and poor workforce data can all affect the value and risk profile of a transaction or service handover.
That is why due diligence and contractual protection matter: warranties and indemnities can be critical in allocating pre-transfer risk, but they only work properly if the TUPE issues have been identified early enough for the documents to reflect them.
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TUPE for Employers FAQs
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What is TUPE?
TUPE stands for the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations. It can apply when a business, part of a business, or a service moves to a new employer.
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Does TUPE apply to share sales?
Not usually. In a share sale, the employing entity normally stays the same, so TUPE will not usually be triggered.
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What is employee liability information?
Employee liability information is the workforce information the outgoing employer must provide to the incoming employer, usually at least 28 days before the transfer.
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Do both employers have to consult?
They may both have duties to inform and, where measures are proposed, consult with affected employees or their representatives before the transfer.
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Can terms be changed after a TUPE transfer?
Not simply because of the transfer itself. Post-transfer changes are restricted, and any attempt to harmonise terms needs to be approached with care.
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Can redundancies still happen under TUPE?
Potentially, yes. Redundancies may still be lawful where there is a genuine economic, technical or organisational reason involving changes in the workforce, but the employer must still follow a fair process.
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What is the penalty for failing to inform and consult?
A tribunal can award up to 13 weeks’ gross pay per affected employee for a failure to inform and consult properly.
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When should an employer take legal advice on TUPE?
Usually as early as possible, particularly where there is uncertainty about whether TUPE applies, who may transfer, what liabilities may be inherited, or whether post-transfer changes are likely to be needed.
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What is TUPE?
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How TLW Solicitors can help
TLW Solicitors can support employers from the point where TUPE first becomes a possibility, not just once a dispute has started.
We can help with:
- assessing whether TUPE is likely to apply
- advising on organised groupings and which employees may transfer
- reviewing employee liability information and workforce risk
- planning information and consultation
- dealing with Trade Unions
- advising on contract changes, harmonisation and ETO arguments
- supporting post-transfer redundancy and restructuring decisions
- drafting or reviewing warranties and indemnities
- dealing with claims that arise before or after the transfer