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HOW IS STATUTORY SICK PAY CHANGING IN NORTHERN IRELAND?

Although most of the GB Employment Rights Act 2025 will not apply in Northern Ireland, SSP is a devolved matter, and the Department for Communities has confirmed that Northern Ireland will follow the same SSP reforms as Great Britain.

In light of this the SSP changes coming into effect on 6 April 2026 will apply to Northern Ireland.

How do the SSP rules currently operate in Northern Ireland?

SSP is currently paid from the 4th day of sickness absence at a flat weekly rate (£118.75 per week from 6 April 2025, reviewed annually).

To qualify, employees need to be earning more than the Lower Earnings Limit, which is currently £125 a week (reviewed annually).

What is changing from 6 April 2026?

The key changes are:

  1. SSP will be paid from the first full day of sickness, instead of from day 4. The current 3‑day waiting period will be removed;
  2. The Lower Earnings Limit will be abolished, meaning employees will qualify for SSP regardless of how much they earn;
  3. The SSP weekly rate will increase as part of the annual uprating cycle, rising from £118.75 to £123.25 per week from 6 April 2026.

These changes apply in Northern Ireland on the same timeline as Great Britain and represent the most significant reform to SSP in years.

The changes are explained in more detail in the Government Factsheet: Statutory Sick Pay (SSP)

What your Organisation needs to do

Removing the waiting days and the earnings threshold will mean more employees will qualify for SSP. It may also increase your levels of short‑term absence and the associated costs for your Organisation.

You should take steps now to prepare for the changes coming in April 2026 as follows:

  1. Update your payroll systems so SSP is paid from day 1 and at the new SSP rate;
  2. Review sickness absence policies to ensure they reflect day a SSP entitlement;
  3. Check attendance management procedures so managers follow them consistently, particularly for repeated short‑term absences;
  4. Brief and train managers on the new rules and re-inforce the importance of return‑to‑work interviews and of pro-active and consistent absence management;
  5. Assess the impact on part‑time and lower‑earning staff, who may now qualify for SSP for the first time;
  6. Audit the potential financial impact of the changes on your Organisation, including any knock‑on effects for enhanced sick pay schemes.

These SSP reforms sit alongside wider employment law changes expected under the forthcoming Good Jobs / Employment Rights Bill in Northern Ireland. However, SSP is one of the few measures being implemented ahead of the wider Bill.

Commentary

If your Organisation already provides contractual sick pay from day 1, the impact of these changes may be limited. However, if you currently pay SSP only, you will need to consider how these changes affect your policies, processes and day‑to‑day management of sickness absence. In particular, clear procedures and effective and consistent management of short term absence will be increasingly important.