The summer holiday period can be confusing to employers and employees alike. Public holidays worked or taken as annual leave, business shutdowns, annual leave provisions… There are many rules employers need to understand.
Employees are entitled to annual leave and public holidays under the National Employment Standards minimum entitlements.
Employers can ask employees to work on public holidays within reason. For example, if the business is open every day of the year, and the employment agreement states that public holidays may be required, the employer can reasonably ask an employee to work a public holiday.
An employee can refuse to work on a public holiday if the request is unreasonable or there are reasonable personal grounds for refusing.
This year the following public holidays apply to employers in all states:
Public holidays are paid at ordinary rates for employees who take the day off. Employees who work on a public holiday must either be paid penalty rates according to the relevant award. Or be given an extra day off in lieu of the public holiday. Some awards have specific provisions or additional benefits for public holidays, so it’s important to check.
If an employee has booked annual leave for the Christmas and New Year periods, the public holidays are not counted as annual leave. For example, if a permanent employee is on annual leave from Monday, 26 December to Friday, 6 January, they will use eight days of annual leave, not ten. Two of the days are paid as public holidays.
The FWO has further advice on rules and entitlements during the end-of-year holiday season.
You might also need to think about cash flow planning for the holiday period, particularly if the business shuts down but still has obligations for payroll and other expenses.
We can advise you about your employer responsibilities and help plan holiday period payments so you can make the most of your summer holiday!