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Constructive Dismissal Policy Template

A constructive dismissal policy defines how your organization prevents, identifies, and responds to conduct or conditions that could cause an employee to resign and claim they were effectively dismissed by the employer's behavior. Without a clear policy, organizations face Employment Tribunal claims that are both expensive to defend and largely preventable. This constructive dismissal policy template gives HR managers and employment teams a complete, editable framework covering the definition of constructive dismissal, management obligations, the grievance process employees must follow before resigning, and the investigation and response procedures that protect the organization.

What Is a Constructive Dismissal Policy?

A constructive dismissal policy establishes the framework for preventing employer conduct that could force an employee to resign, and for responding when an employee raises concerns that suggest a risk of such a claim. It governs how the organization handles grievances, investigates alleged breaches of the employment contract, and addresses management conduct that may be creating intolerable working conditions.

Constructive dismissal in UK employment law occurs when an employee resigns in response to a fundamental breach of their employment contract by the employer. Common triggers include unilateral changes to pay or job duties, a sustained pattern of bullying or harassment by a manager, and failure to address a formal grievance adequately. Employment Tribunal statistics from ACAS (2022) show that constructive dismissal claims settle at an average of more than 10,000 GBP per case. Organizations with a well-documented grievance and escalation process are significantly more likely to successfully defend or early-resolve these claims.

What a Constructive Dismissal Policy Should Include

A complete constructive dismissal policy covers both prevention and response, and must be understood by both managers and employees.

  • Definition of constructive dismissal: What it is, the legal threshold, and common circumstances that give rise to claims.
  • Management conduct obligations: The specific standards of conduct that managers must maintain to avoid creating dismissal conditions.
  • Prohibited unilateral changes: The contract variations that require employee consent and cannot be imposed without risking a constructive dismissal claim.
  • Grievance procedure link: The requirement for employees to raise a grievance before resigning to preserve their claim and give the organization an opportunity to remedy the situation.
  • Investigation process: How the organization investigates allegations of management conduct that may constitute a breach.
  • Remediation: What steps the organization can take to remedy a breach before a resignation occurs.
  • Appeals process: How employees can challenge an investigation outcome or a failure to adequately remedy their concerns.
  • Record-keeping: The documentation requirements that support a legal defense.
  • Support for employees: Resources available to employees who feel they are in a situation that may lead to constructive dismissal.

Constructive Dismissal Policy Template


Constructive Dismissal Policy

Effective Date: [DATE]

Approved by: [NAME / TITLE]

Policy Owner: [HR DEPARTMENT / LEGAL]

Review Date: [DATE]

Version: [1.0]

Policy Brief and Purpose

[COMPANY NAME] is committed to maintaining a working environment where all employees are treated with dignity, respect, and fairness in accordance with their employment contracts and applicable employment law. This constructive dismissal policy sets out [COMPANY NAME]'s approach to preventing conduct that could give rise to a constructive dismissal claim, and the process for addressing situations where an employee believes their working conditions have become intolerable due to employer conduct.

[COMPANY NAME] takes all allegations of breached employment obligations seriously and will investigate and act on them promptly. The goal of this policy is to resolve concerns before they escalate to resignation and legal proceedings.

Scope

This constructive dismissal policy applies to all employees of [COMPANY NAME] with the qualifying service required to bring a constructive dismissal claim under applicable employment law [typically 2 years in the UK]. It applies to conduct by managers, HR personnel, and the organization itself that may constitute a breach of the employment contract.

What Constitutes Constructive Dismissal

Constructive dismissal occurs when an employee resigns because [COMPANY NAME] has committed a fundamental breach of their employment contract and the employee's resignation is a direct response to that breach. Common circumstances include:

  • A unilateral reduction in pay, hours, or significant change in job responsibilities without consent
  • A sustained pattern of bullying, harassment, or hostile treatment by a manager
  • Failure to address a formal grievance relating to workplace conduct
  • Requiring an employee to work in unsafe or illegal conditions
  • Treating an employee in a way that is fundamentally inconsistent with the trust and confidence necessary for an employment relationship

A single serious incident or a pattern of conduct can each constitute a fundamental breach. [COMPANY NAME] does not need to have intended to breach the contract for a claim to arise.

Management Conduct Obligations

Managers at [COMPANY NAME] are required to:

  • Treat all employees with dignity and respect in every interaction
  • Never impose unilateral changes to an employee's pay, role, or material working conditions without prior HR consultation and, where required, the employee's consent
  • Address grievances raised by direct reports promptly and in good faith
  • Never engage in conduct that could reasonably be described as bullying, harassment, intimidation, or isolation
  • Seek HR guidance before taking any action that changes a material term of an employee's employment
  • Report to HR any situation in which an employee has expressed a concern about working conditions that may require investigation

Breaches of these obligations by managers may result in disciplinary action against the manager, independent of any constructive dismissal claim.

Unilateral Contract Changes

[COMPANY NAME] recognizes that some changes to employment terms require employee consent. The following cannot be imposed without consultation and consent:

  • Changes to base pay or salary structure
  • Changes to agreed working hours or location that are material to the employment relationship
  • Changes to job title or core responsibilities where those changes fundamentally alter the nature of the role
  • Removal of benefits that form part of the employment contract

[COMPANY NAME] will always follow a proper consultation process before making changes to employment terms. Employees who believe a change has been imposed without consent should raise a formal grievance.

Employee Grievance Requirement

Employees who believe that [COMPANY NAME]'s conduct constitutes or risks constituting a fundamental breach of their employment contract should raise a formal grievance before resigning. This is important for two reasons: it gives [COMPANY NAME] the opportunity to remedy the situation, and Employment Tribunals expect employees to have exhausted internal grievance processes before resigning.

Failure to raise a grievance before resigning may affect an employee's ability to bring a successful constructive dismissal claim and may reduce any compensation awarded.

Grievances must be submitted in writing to [HR CONTACT] in accordance with [COMPANY NAME]'s Grievance Policy.

Investigation Process

When a grievance is received that raises concerns consistent with potential constructive dismissal, HR will:

  • Acknowledge receipt within [X] working days
  • Appoint an independent investigator who had no direct involvement in the matter
  • Conduct interviews with the complainant, the manager or other parties named, and any relevant witnesses
  • Review all relevant documentation
  • Produce a written investigation report with findings and recommended actions

The investigation will be completed within [X] working days wherever possible. Where the investigation requires more time, the employee will be kept informed of progress.

Remediation

Where the investigation finds that a fundamental breach has occurred or that conditions are at risk of becoming intolerable, [COMPANY NAME] will take prompt corrective action. This may include:

  • Reinstating pay, benefits, or job responsibilities that were wrongly removed
  • Formal disciplinary action against the manager responsible for the conduct
  • Mediation between the parties where ongoing working relationship is possible
  • Redeployment to a different team or manager where the existing relationship cannot be repaired
  • An apology from [COMPANY NAME] where appropriate

[COMPANY NAME] will not take adverse action against an employee for raising a grievance under this policy.

Appeals

Employees who are dissatisfied with the outcome of the investigation or the remediation offered may appeal in writing to [SENIOR HR / DIRECTOR NOT INVOLVED IN ORIGINAL INVESTIGATION] within [5] working days of receiving the outcome letter. The appeal hearing will be arranged within [10] working days. The decision of the appeal manager is final within [COMPANY NAME]'s internal process.

Support Resources

Employees in situations covered by this policy may access the following support:

  • [Employee Assistance Program (EAP)] at [CONTACT / PHONE / WEBSITE]
  • An appointed HR Business Partner for confidential discussion
  • [ACAS Early Conciliation] before or instead of Employment Tribunal proceedings

Employee Responsibilities

  • Raise concerns about working conditions through the formal grievance process promptly.
  • Do not resign without raising a grievance first, if the goal is to preserve a constructive dismissal claim.
  • Cooperate fully with any investigation conducted under this policy.
  • Maintain confidentiality about the investigation process and its participants.

Manager and HR Responsibilities

  • Never impose unilateral changes to employment terms without HR consultation and, where required, employee consent.
  • Respond to all grievances promptly and in good faith.
  • Escalate any situation that may constitute a breach of the implied term of mutual trust and confidence to HR immediately.
  • Document all employment-related decisions and communications.

Disciplinary Action

Managers whose conduct gives rise to a constructive dismissal claim, or who impose unilateral contract changes without following the required consultation process, may face disciplinary action up to and including dismissal. This policy does not limit [COMPANY NAME]'s right to take separate disciplinary action for management conduct that constitutes a breach of this policy.

Disclaimer

This template is a starting point and does not constitute legal advice. Constructive dismissal law is complex and varies by jurisdiction. This template is primarily drafted with UK employment law in mind. Consult a qualified employment attorney before finalizing this policy and before responding to any specific constructive dismissal situation.


How to Customize This Constructive Dismissal Policy Template

Check the qualifying service period in your jurisdiction before publishing this policy. In the UK, employees generally need two years of continuous service to bring an unfair or constructive dismissal claim. In Ireland, the threshold is 12 months. Different rules apply in other jurisdictions. Define the qualifying period explicitly in the scope section.

Link this policy directly to your Grievance Policy. The two documents need to work together. An employee raising a concern under this policy should be immediately directed to the formal grievance process, and the grievance policy should reference the constructive dismissal context.

Review the unilateral contract changes section with legal counsel and make sure the list reflects the specific terms in your standard employment contract. What constitutes a "material" change depends on the contract itself and applicable case law. Generic language here is less protective than specific reference to your own contractual terms.

Train your HR Business Partners on the early warning signs of constructive dismissal before publishing the policy. This policy is most effective as a prevention tool, and HR staff need to recognize the patterns (ignored grievances, post-return workplace hostility, unexplained role changes) that precede claims.

Constructive Dismissal Policy Best Practices

  • Train all people managers on what constructive dismissal is and what conduct triggers it. Most constructive dismissal situations develop from management behavior that managers don't recognize as legally risky until it's too late.
  • Document every change to employment terms and every grievance response thoroughly. In a tribunal, the documentary record is often the difference between a defensible case and a settlement.
  • Take grievances involving management conduct seriously at the preliminary stage. Employment tribunals consider whether the employer acted promptly and in good faith. An employer that dismisses a constructive dismissal grievance without investigation has a very weak defense.
  • According to ACAS (2022), 76% of constructive dismissal cases that reached tribunal resulted in a finding for the claimant when the employer had not followed a proper grievance process. The process matters as much as the substance.
  • Create a culture where managers consult HR before making any change to a direct report's employment conditions. Most constructive dismissal situations are preventable at the point where a manager considers imposing a unilateral change.
  • Conduct exit interviews for all voluntary resignations and analyze the data for patterns. Constructive dismissal situations often develop slowly and are visible in exit interview themes before they become legal claims.

Common Mistakes in Constructive Dismissal Policies

  • Not linking the policy to the formal grievance procedure. A constructive dismissal policy that doesn't direct employees to a specific grievance process creates ambiguity about what employees are supposed to do with their concerns.
  • Defining constructive dismissal so narrowly that managers believe only deliberate hostile conduct triggers a claim. The duty of mutual trust and confidence extends to unilateral pay cuts, unexplained role changes, and ignored grievances. Managers need to understand that accidental breaches are still breaches.
  • Failing to include a manager conduct obligations section. The most useful part of this policy for prevention is the explicit list of what managers must not do. Omitting it reduces the policy to a reactive document rather than a preventative one.
  • Not training HR on the investigation requirements. An investigation that fails to interview all relevant parties, that takes too long, or that reaches a conclusion without adequate evidence can make a constructive dismissal defense worse rather than better.
  • Having a policy but no process. A document without connected workflows for grievance intake, investigation assignment, and timeline management isn't operational. Connect every step of this policy to a named process and a named owner.

Frequently Asked Questions About Constructive Dismissal Policies

Q: What should a constructive dismissal policy include?

A: A complete policy covers the legal definition of constructive dismissal, management conduct obligations, the types of unilateral contract changes that require employee consent, the grievance process employees must follow, the investigation process and timeline, the remediation steps the company can take, the appeals procedure, and the documentation requirements for a defensible legal record.

Q: Is a constructive dismissal policy legally required?

A: No UK statute requires a standalone constructive dismissal policy, but the duty to provide a written grievance procedure is statutory. Employment Tribunals assess whether employers followed a reasonable process before finding a constructive dismissal well-founded. A documented policy and procedure is the strongest evidence of a reasonable process.

Q: How often should a constructive dismissal policy be updated?

A: Review annually and update whenever case law in your jurisdiction establishes new precedents on what conduct constitutes a breach of the implied term of mutual trust and confidence, when your grievance procedure changes, or after any constructive dismissal claim is made against the organization.

Q: What happens if an employee resigns without raising a grievance first?

A: Employment Tribunals expect employees to have raised their concerns internally before resigning. Failure to raise a grievance may affect the outcome of a tribunal claim and may reduce compensation. However, an employee who delayed resigning while grievances went unaddressed may still have a valid claim. Consult legal counsel before drawing conclusions about individual cases.

Q: How do you communicate a constructive dismissal policy to employees?

A: Include it in your employee handbook and distribute it through your HRIS with a required acknowledgment. The most important communication is manager training, because prevention depends on managers understanding what conduct creates risk. Hold a dedicated session for people managers on the specific behaviors this policy governs.

Q: Can a constructive dismissal policy be customized per department?

A: The policy itself should be consistent across the organization. The risk profile may differ by department: environments with high management turnover, recent restructuring, or known interpersonal conflict require more active monitoring and intervention. HR Business Partners should calibrate their proactive engagement accordingly, but the policy framework should apply uniformly.

Q: What is the difference between unfair dismissal and constructive dismissal?

A: Unfair dismissal occurs when an employer terminates the employment without a fair reason or without following a fair process. Constructive dismissal occurs when an employee resigns because the employer's conduct makes continued employment untenable. Both are claims that can be brought at Employment Tribunal, and both require qualifying service periods. They arise from different factual circumstances and involve different legal tests.

Q: What should we do immediately if an employee says they are considering resigning due to their manager's conduct?

A: Take it seriously. Ask the employee to put their concerns in writing through the formal grievance process. Assign an independent HR contact to support them through the process. Do not allow the manager who is the subject of the concern to be involved in the grievance investigation. Move quickly. Employment Tribunals expect prompt response, and delay itself can be evidence of a failure to take concerns seriously.

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