What is Shared Parental Leave and Pay?

Written by Crystal HR & Payroll
22 Sep 2014

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The Government is reforming the statutory pay and leave entitlements available to employed parents. For babies due or adopted children matched or placed on or after 5 April 2015 a new entitlement of Shared Parental Pay and Leave (ShPP/SPL) will replace Additional Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave (ASPP/APL). The parents of babies due or adopted children matched on or before 4 April 2015 will continue to be eligible for ASPP and APL.

ShPP/SPL gives families greater choice over how they arrange childcare in the first year by allowing working mothers the option to end their maternity pay and leave early and to share untaken leave and pay with their partner. An adopter will similarly be able to bring their adoption leave and pay to an early end to opt into ShPP and SPL.

It is intended to enable partners to take a greater role in caring for a child, and to help both parents to better balance childcare responsibilities with staying in work. For businesses, this helps them keep their best talent and allows employers to recruit with confidence that their employees will be less likely to drop out of the workforce when they have children.

Shared Parental Leave & Pay

Current entitlement to 52 weeks statutory maternity/adoption leave, 39 of which is paid, and two weeks of statutory paternity leave and pay is all unchanged. However, the first six weeks of Statutory Adoption Pay will increase to 90% of average weekly earnings to bring it in line with Statutory Maternity Pay.

How does it work?

Working parents of a baby due or an adoptive child placed on or after 5 April 2015 may be eligible for SPL and ShPP. Under SPL and ShPP, mothers/adopters will be able to choose to end their maternity/adoption leave and pay early (at any point from two weeks after the birth/placement), and share their untaken pay and leave with their partner. Shared parental leave and pay can be stopped and started and parents can be off at the same time, if they wish.

Parents will be able to take their leave in phases, for example 20 weeks for the mother/adopter, followed by 20 weeks for the father/partner, followed by 10 weeks for the mother/adopter. So it may be the case that statutory parental pay is paid over one or two discontinuous periods. Parents must notify their employers of their plans under SPL 8 weeks before they become eligible for it, and all shared leave and pay must be taken between the birth/placement and the child’s first birthday.

What do employers need to do?

We expect the first notifications of intention to take SPL to arrive with employers from February 2015. The Government will provide an example form for parents to use. Some employers may wish to create their own requirements for how their employees notify them.

We anticipate that employers will need to update payroll systems where relevant to accommodate providing ShPP to employees taking SPL, and to enable these payments to be paid discontinuously where necessary.

The Government will provide online tools to check eligibility, and publish detailed guidance on the rules around SPL and ShPP. A key part of SPL is the discussion between employer and employee to agree the phasing of SPL and the return to work, and ACAS will also publish guidance to support this process.

Early Births

Shared Parental Leave and Pay is available to eligible parents of babies due on or after 5 April 2015. Of course some babies will arrive early. So long as the due date is on or after 5 April, eligible parents of babies born earlier will still be eligible for Shared Parental Leave and Pay.

Legislation designed to allow comparable rights for working parents to be introduced in Northern Ireland is currently being considered by the Northern Ireland Assembly.

This means employees in Northern Ireland will not be able to access ShPP/L for early births and will continue to be able to apply for Additional Statutory Paternity Pay and Leave.

An employer guide providing further information is available on the GOV.UK website.

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