ERA reforms in depth: Maternity, pregnancy and gender equality
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In 2027, several reforms will be implemented with a view to addressing gender inequality. These include specific protection against dismissal for pregnant employees and new mothers. The existing gender pay gap reporting obligations placed on large employers will also be expanded to include a new obligation to publish action plans, as detailed below.
Both of these areas of reform (gender action plans and dismissal protections for pregnant employees and new mothers) are expected to come into force in 2027. It is not clear at this stage when in 2027 this will be and whether both reforms will be brought into force at the same time.
Current position
When it comes to dismissal protections, there are relatively limited additional protections for pregnant employees and those who are on, or who have recently returned from, family-related leave. The main additional protection is a requirement in a redundancy situation for such employees to be offered suitable alternative vacancies, where available. In April 2024, this additional protection was extended to pregnant employees and those returning from maternity, adoption and eligible shared parental leave.
For pay gap reporting, all employers with 250 or more employees are required to publish data on their gender pay gap every year, but there is no requirement to publish an action plan with this data.
What is changing?
The three key areas of reform outlined in the Act which are relevant to gender equality are:
As the Act does not include many details about the reforms concerning pregnant employees and new mothers, much will hinge on the contents of the supporting regulations which will be issued in due course. At this stage, we can get a flavour for what the regulations might contain from reviewing the consultation launched on 23 October 2025. We have explored some of the key questions from that consultation above.
There are limited steps that employers can take to prepare for this enhanced protection at this stage. However, there is one preparatory action that employers can take – employers should review the systems that they have in place to identify which of its employees are pregnant, are on maternity/adoption/shared parental leave and/or have recently returned from such leave. Employers should already have some systems in place as part of the enhanced redundancy protections introduced in April 2024 so it should largely be a case of confirming that these systems are working effectively and can be adapted to cover not just those who are subject to a redundancy exercise.
Once the government responds to the consultation, we should learn more about who will be protected – Next Steps to Make Work Pay refers to ‘new mothers’ but the Act allows for protections to also be put in place for those returning from other types of family-related leave, such as adoption and shared parental leave. This is a point that the government seeks views on in the consultation. Until the government confirms its position on this point, we suggest that employers also check that their systems can identify who is on, or has recently returned from, adoption and shared parental leave, as well as maternity leave.
Large employers will need to keep a close eye on the gender pay gap reporting reforms. Many already voluntarily produce an action plan to accompany their gender pay gap data (although possibly not menopause action plans). Once regulations are published with further detail, large employers should start considering what they will include in their first action plan or how they will revisit their existing action plans to ensure they are compliant.
Employers will also need to ensure that their gender pay gap data reporting complies with any new requirements surrounding service provider information.
If you would like to discuss how your organisation can prepare for these reforms, please contact Luke Bowery or your usual employment team contact.
The UK’s Employment Rights Act has been hailed by the government as ‘the biggest upgrade to rights at work in a generation’. Visit our hub to find out more about all the key changes and to stay up to date on the latest developments.
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