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Post-Christmas Redundancies: Handling Tough Conversations Humanely

legal compliance redundancy Dec 31, 2025

January brings cost reviews, budget resets, and uncomfortable truths about business sustainability. For many UK employers, that means facing a reality they've been delaying: redundancies are necessary. 

 

Making roles redundant is never easy. Doing it in January, when people have just returned from the festive break, feels particularly brutal. But timing rarely makes these decisions softer, and delaying often creates more damage than addressing the problem head-on. 

 

The question isn't whether redundancies are difficult. It's whether you'll handle them in a way that protects your legal position, preserves your reputation, and treats people with dignity. 

 

Why January Triggers Restructuring 

The new financial year forces businesses to confront what they've known for months: current structures aren't sustainable. Revenue missed targets. Market conditions shifted. Expenses that seemed manageable in June look untenable in January. 

 

January also offers a clean break psychologically. But poorly handled redundancies don't just affect those leaving, they poison morale among those who stay, damage your employer brand, and create legal risks that dwarf any cost savings. 

 

The Legal Framework You Cannot Ignore 

UK redundancy law is prescriptive for good reason. Getting it wrong exposes businesses to tribunal proceedings, compensation payments, and reputational damage. 

 

Genuine redundancy exists when: 

  • The business is closing 
  • The workplace is closing 
  • The requirement for that particular work has diminished 

 

You cannot make a person redundant whilst immediately replacing them with someone cheaper or more convenient. 

 

Consultation requirements: 

  • 20+ redundancies within 90 days trigger collective consultation with specific timescales and government notification 
  • Smaller redundancies require individual consultation, giving affected employees opportunity to discuss the situation and explore alternatives 

 

Selection criteria must be: 

  • Objective and applied fairly 
  • Based on length of service, skills, performance records, disciplinary history 
  • Non-discriminatory (cannot discriminate on protected characteristics like age, gender, disability) 
  • Fully documented, tribunals scrutinise redundancy decisions closely 

 

Having the Conversation 

Redundancy meetings are amongst the hardest conversations a manager will have. There's no script that makes it easy, but preparation and honesty make it bearable. 

 

Tell people clearly and directly: "I need to tell you that your role is being made redundant." Don't bury the message in corporate speak. Explain why the decision was made, what happens next, and what support is available. 

 

Expect emotion: People may cry, get angry, or shut down. Allow space for that response without becoming defensive. This is likely the worst professional news they've received. Your job is to be clear, compassionate, and present. 

 

Provide written confirmation: Include the reason for redundancy, notice period, redundancy pay entitlement, and appeal rights. People in shock won't remember verbal explanations. 

 

Consultation That Actually Means Something 

Legal consultation isn't just a tick-box exercise. It's an opportunity to explore whether redundancy can be avoided. Businesses that rush this stage often defend their decisions in tribunals. 

 

Meet with affected employees individually: 

  • Explain the business situation honestly 
  • Outline why their role is at risk 
  • Invite their input: Can alternative roles be found? Would reduced hours avoid redundancy? Are there cost-saving measures they might suggest? 

 

Document everything: Record what was discussed, what alternatives were considered, and why they were or weren't viable. This proves you consulted meaningfully, not just procedurally. 

 

Supporting People Through the Process 

How you treat people during their notice period affects those leaving and those staying. 

 

Offer practical support: 

  • Outplacement services, CV writing assistance, job search guidance 
  • References prepared promptly and worded positively where performance justifies it 
  • Statutory redundancy pay as minimum; consider enhanced payments where appropriate 

 

Allow dignity in departure: Forced garden leave feels punitive unless there's genuine reason. Where possible, let people work their notice, say proper goodbyes, and leave on their own terms. 

 

Protecting Those Who Remain 

Survivors watch how you handle the process and draw conclusions about their own security and your values as an employer. 

 

Communicate clearly: Explain the changes, why they were necessary, and what happens next. Uncertainty breeds anxiety and disengagement. Transparency builds trust. 

 

Address workload implications honestly: If redundancies mean more work for fewer people, acknowledge it. Ignoring increased pressure whilst expecting the same output creates resentment and burnout. 

 

Reaffirm your commitment: Make it clear the business is now on more stable footing and that remaining roles are secure. People need reassurance they won't face another round of cuts in three months. 

 

When to Seek Expert Guidance 

Redundancy law is complex, particularly around consultation, selection, and discrimination risks. Many businesses benefit from HR consulting services when planning restructures. 

 

External HR support proves particularly valuable for: 

  • Small businesses facing their first redundancy situation 
  • Redundancy calculations and consultation processes 
  • Documentation and legal compliance 
  • Managing practical aspects whilst protecting company culture 

 

Getting It Right Under Pressure 

Post-Christmas redundancies test leadership in ways few other business decisions do. The financial pressure is real, the legal requirements are strict, and the human cost is significant. 

 

But businesses that approach redundancy with care, transparency, and genuine compassion emerge with their reputation intact and their remaining team still engaged. 

 

Cut corners, rush the process, or treat people callously, and you'll pay for it through tribunal claims, damaged morale, and a tarnished employer brand that makes future recruitment harder and more expensive. 

 

January may force tough decisions, but how you make them defines who you are as an employer. 

 

Facing redundancy decisions and need guidance on doing it right? The HR Doctor provides practical support through every stage of the redundancy process, from initial planning through to aftercare. 

 

Contact us for expert advice on managing redundancies lawfully and humanely. 

HARDWIRE HR

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