Contact
Employment

Publish date

27 May 2025

Redundancy and restructuring: Key considerations for the education sector

The government has awarded a 4% teacher pay increase from September 2025, after the Education Secretary accepted the teachers’ pay body recommendation in full, but it is not fully funded by the government.

Schools are therefore expected to provide approximately the first 1% through improved efficiency and spending, and then the government will cover the remaining 3%. This means schools will need to prioritise their budgets and may need to reallocate funds from other areas to cover the teacher pay increase. Difficult to achieve when there are so many conflicting priorities. In addition to this, others may need to find ways to streamline operations and reduce costs through restructuring and redundancies.

For those that are considering restructuring or redundancies,  it is essential that any redundancy process is carefully planned, lawfully executed, and sensitively communicated. For many in the sector, they may not have had to make significant headcount reductions involving collective consultation processes with union engagement.

What does it mean to restructure rather than make redundancies?

Restructuring involves reshaping roles or redistributing responsibilities across the workforce, often without reducing headcount. It might mean consolidating departments, adjusting pay bands, or changing working patterns. Redundancy, by contrast, arises where there is a cessation or diminution in the need for employees to do work of a particular kind.

Employers must identify whether the need for work has reduced or ceased, whether in terms of the whole business, a specific site, or a category of job.

Consultation process: A legal and practical imperative

Any redundancy process is difficult for employers and employees alike. Employers must consult meaningfully with employees before reaching any redundancy decision. Presenting a fait accompli risks a finding of unfair dismissal.

Where fewer than 20 redundancies are proposed, consultation is individual but must still be genuine and evidenced.

In collective redundancy cases, where 20 or more redundancies are proposed at one establishment within a 90-day period, collective consultation obligations apply:

  • At least 30 days before the first dismissal (if 20–99 staff are affected)
  • At least 45 days (if 100 or more affected)

This means:

  • Consulting with recognised trade unions
  • Completing and submitting an HR1 form to the Insolvency Service

Employees on maternity or other family leave must be included in consultations and considered for suitable alternative roles.

Consultations can take place face to face, using video conferencing or over the phone and should involve explaining the situation to employees and the business’s proposals getting their feedback, which should be worked into final plans.

Fair selection: Avoiding discrimination

Unless one role is being eliminated involving one employee, referred to as being in a selection pool of one, selection must be based on objective and non-discriminatory criteria — such as skills, performance, attendance, and disciplinary records. Criteria should be consulted on and clearly evidenced. Organisations should avoid allowing scores to be assigned by managers unfamiliar with the employee’s work history.

It is unwise to rely solely on “application for own job” models. While competitive interviews can be appropriate for dissimilar roles, requiring staff to reapply for the same role, in cases of head count reduction, is viewed as procedurally unfair by employment tribunals.

Suitable alternative employment and ‘bumping’

Employers must actively explore whether there are alternative roles available for at-risk staff. This duty extends during the notice period, particularly if that period is lengthy. It is necessary to consider “bumping” – displacing another employee (A) in a different role to retain a more senior or skilled individual (B) at risk, who is bumped into A’s role.

A trial period of up to four weeks applies when offering alternative employment (or longer if agreed in writing to assess suitability for the new suitable alternative role), after which statutory redundancy pay may still be claimed if the role proves unsuitable.

Redundancy dismissal letters: What to include

Final redundancy letters should set out:

  • The reason for redundancy and selection rationale
  • Notice period and termination date
  • Redundancy pay and other final payments (e.g. accrued holiday)
  • Continuation or cessation of benefits
  • Right of appeal and appeal procedure

Ensure someone independent of the original decision is reserved to hear any appeal.

Settlement agreements

For risk mitigation or where enhanced packages are being offered — especially under voluntary redundancy schemes — consider offering a settlement agreement. These provide finality and protect against future claims. Watch our latest video on settlement agreements here.

Redundancy pay and notice

Statutory redundancy pay is calculated based on age, length of service (up to 20 years), and weekly pay (subject to the statutory cap). Notice periods must comply with both the employee’s contract and statutory minimums and cannot start until consultations are complete.

Conclusion

If your education business is considering a restructure or redundancy process, we can guide you through each stage — from consultation strategy and scoring matrix design to settlement agreements and risk mitigation. Procedural fairness, legal compliance, and effective communication are critical. Getting it wrong could result in not only tribunal claims, which are exhausting in management time, even if you are an academy and the DfE risk protection arrangement (RPA scheme) covers up to £100,000 worth of tribunal awards, settlements, and legal fees. There is also reputational damage and lasting disruption to consider.

Heathervale House reception

Keep up to date with our newsletters and events

icon_bluestone98