Skip to content
Small Business UK

Small Business UK

Advice and Ideas for UK Small Businesses and SMEs

  • My Account
  • Login
  • facebook
  • x
  • linkedin
  • RSS
  • Start
    • Start a New Business
    • Startup Funding and Grants
    • Sole Trader
    • Banking
    • Getting Online
  • Run
    • Customer Engagement
    • Employing & Managing Staff
    • Insurance
    • Marketing
    • Payments
    • Accounting
    • Tax
  • Grow
    • Funding Your Business
    • Grants
    • Alternative Finance
    • Import & Export
    • Buying & Selling a Company
  • News
  • Get Small Business Funding
  • Memberships
    • Business Essentials
    • Pro
    • Earn with us
  • More
    • Popular Topics
      • Advice
      • Business Loans
      • Business Management
      • Crowdfunding
      • Funding
      • Ideas & Planning
      • International Business
      • Franchising
      • Legal Advice
      • Office & Homeworking
      • Payroll
      • Productivity
      • Setting up a Company
      • Success Stories
      • Technology
      • Work Life Balance
    • Guides
      • Whitepapers & Downloads
      • Partner Content
      • Business car leasing
      • Small business insurance
    • Business Tools
      • Compare business bank accounts
      • Making Tax Digital
      • Website Checker
    • Partners
      • British Small Business Grants
      • Events
      • Masterclass Series
      • Smart Energy GB
      • The Start-Up Series
    • Multi-Media Content
      • Galleries
      • Podcasts
      • Videos
  • Start
    • Start a New Business
    • Startup Funding and Grants
    • Sole Trader
    • Banking
    • Getting Online
  • Run
    • Customer Engagement
    • Employing & Managing Staff
    • Insurance
    • Marketing
    • Payments
    • Accounting
    • Tax
  • Grow
    • Funding Your Business
    • Grants
    • Alternative Finance
    • Import & Export
    • Buying & Selling a Company
  • News
  • Get Small Business Funding
  • Memberships
    • Business Essentials
    • Pro
    • Earn with us
  • More
    • Popular Topics
      • Advice
      • Business Loans
      • Business Management
      • Crowdfunding
      • Funding
      • Ideas & Planning
      • International Business
      • Franchising
      • Legal Advice
      • Office & Homeworking
      • Payroll
      • Productivity
      • Setting up a Company
      • Success Stories
      • Technology
      • Work Life Balance
    • Guides
      • Whitepapers & Downloads
      • Partner Content
      • Business car leasing
      • Small business insurance
    • Business Tools
      • Compare business bank accounts
      • Making Tax Digital
      • Website Checker
    • Partners
      • British Small Business Grants
      • Events
      • Masterclass Series
      • Smart Energy GB
      • The Start-Up Series
    • Multi-Media Content
      • Galleries
      • Podcasts
      • Videos
  • My Account
  • Login
Home » Running a Business » Legal advice » New starter left after a week to take another job

New starter left after a week to take another job

Avatar photoby Peter Done30 October 2012

I have a new starter who worked with us for a week before leaving to take another job. During this week he was in full time on-the-job training. Do we have to pay him? Can we just pay him minimum wage if so?

This employee will be deemed to have been working for you for the week that you employed him therefore he is entitled to be paid in accordance with the contract of employment that you gave him when he commenced employment with you.

If you fail to pay, the employee would be able to bring a tribunal claim against you for unlawful deductions to pay. He would have three months within which to bring the claim.

Just because the employee did not perform any productive work for you does not mean that he is not entitled to be paid. He has performed under his contract of employment, ie turned up and participated in the training that was required of him to carry out his role and this will be deemed as ‘work’.

It does not matter if the employee had not yet been given a written contract of employment stating his terms and conditions because the concept of a ‘contract’ was already in place since the beginning of his employment with you.

His rate of pay for this week should be the rate that had been agreed between yourselves, either in the contract, or in the employee’s offer letter etc. This must be at least national minimum wage but you cannot revert to paying the employee at minimum wage if a higher rate had already been agreed.

To conclude the employment properly, the employee is entitled to any other payment that his contract entitles him to upon termination of employment, for example, accrued holiday pay, calculated at his normal hourly rate.

Tagged: Managing Staff
Avatar photo

Peter Done

Peter is the founder and group managing director of Peninsula Business Services, established in 1983. More by Peter Done

Related Topics

Managing Staff

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Related Stories

Legal advice

A guide to trade marks and the benefits of registration

SmallBusiness.co.uk and intellectual property specialist NOVAGRAAF provide this guide to trade marks and the benefits of registering them.

Legal advice

The new Procurement Act and how it affects SMEs

The overdue Procurement Act 2023 is finally in force. Shaun Toner explains how the new frameworks are advantageous to small businesses

Legal advice

Need to know: Age discrimination laws

Getting to grips with the minefield that is age discrimination is a perennial problem for small sized businesses, but owners ignore these issues at their peril.

Legal advice

How to get a sponsor licence in the UK

Baya Immigration lay out what a sponsor licence is, which businesses need it and how you go about applying for one.

Helping you grow your business is our number one priority, if you would like to take your business to the next step just sign up!

sign up now

Related Stories

Legal advice

A guide to trade marks and the benefits of registration

SmallBusiness.co.uk and intellectual property specialist NOVAGRAAF provide this guide to trade marks and the benefits of registering them.

Legal advice

The new Procurement Act and how it affects SMEs

The overdue Procurement Act 2023 is finally in force. Shaun Toner explains how the new frameworks are advantageous to small businesses

Legal advice

Need to know: Age discrimination laws

Getting to grips with the minefield that is age discrimination is a perennial problem for small sized businesses, but owners ignore these issues at their peril.

Legal advice

Business Companion launch invaluable free guide to Contract Law Basics

This new guide from Business Companion will help navigate contract law and secure the future of your small firm

SmallBusiness.co.uk provides advice and useful guides to UK sole traders and small businesses. Our goal is to help owner managers and entrepreneurs to start, run, grow and succeed in business, helping turn your business idea into a profitable business.

Further Information

  • Contact Details
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Blog
  • About this Website
  • Media Packs
  • Contributor guidelines
  • Small Business Whitepapers

Manage my preferences

  • Edit preferences

Contact us

  • +44(0) 207 846 1378

Address

  • Stubben Edge
  • 77 Cornhill
  • London
  • EC3V 3QQ