Working mums running out of annual leave
According to a poll of 36,000 working mums with primary school-aged children, nearly two-thirds don’t have enough childcare to cover the six-week school summer holiday period this year, increasing to three-quarters among single mothers. What are employers' options in being flexible towards them?
Due to the coronavirus pandemic a large percentage of working mothers have already used their annual leave entitlement, for example where they have had to take time off to support home-schooling during the lockdowns. With family support networks also being heavily affected due to isolation requirements etc. employers are encouraged to be supportive regarding childcare needs during the summer holidays. Options include:
- allowing the employee to work, or to continue to work, from home if that helps with childcare and assuming that the role can be undertaken remotely
- agreeing a temporary flexible working arrangement with them, which employers can do outside the statutory flexible working procedure, such as reduced or flexible hours or amended start and finish times
- granting a period of special unpaid leave
- permitting them to use some of their paid annual leave entitlement from the following holiday year - but this risks simply pushing the problem into a future period, rather than resolving it
- enabling them to take statutory unpaid parental leave if they’re eligible - the provisions enable employees who are parents (including birth and adoptive parents and those with legal parental responsibility) and who have been employed for at least one year to take up to four weeks’ parental leave per year (or more if agreed otherwise), up to a maximum of 18 weeks in total, and this can be taken up until the child’s 18th birthday. However, parental leave applies to each child, not each job, so the employer will need to check what parental leave an employee may already have used with a previous employer. Normally, employees must give at least 21 days’ notice to take parental leave, but employers can agree to accept lesser notice in the current circumstances.
Related Topics
-
Should you use simplified expenses?
The flat rate expense you can claim for business journeys if you’re self-employed has increased to 55p per mile. Can you use simplified expenses for motoring costs and is it more tax efficient to do so?
-
HMRC targets smaller tax debts
HMRC is stepping up collection of lower‑value tax debts, signalling a firmer approach to long‑overdue liabilities while encouraging earlier engagement. Direct recovery from bank and building society accounts has been re‑introduced on a trial basis, alongside a government consultation on HMRC powers and tax administration. What are the key points to be aware of?
-
New digital process for NI refunds
HMRC has introduced an online service to claim a refund of Class 1 NI contributions but not everyone can use it. What can you do if you've paid too much NI?

This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.