If you’ll have been working for your employer for at least 2 years by the time your job ends, check that your redundancy is genuine. A genuine redundancy is one where your employer has a real business reason to make you redundant – usually because:
- your employer doesn’t need you to do your job any more
- your workplace is closing
- your employer is going out of business or has less demand for its services
What counts as genuine redundancy
You can be made redundant if:
- the business is failing
- the business, or part of it, has stopped operating (often called becoming insolvent or going bust)
- your skills are no longer needed
- your work is being done by other people, after a reorganisation
- the business, or the work you’re doing, moves to another location
- the business is taken over by another company
- your employer was the sole owner of the business and they die
Signs it might not be a genuine redundancy
Sometimes an employer might say you’re being made redundant to hide the true reason for dismissing you. Signs it might not be a genuine redundancy include:- your employer has recently taken on other people doing similar work
- you have a bad relationship with your employer or other people at work
- you’re singled out or treated differently from other people at work