← Back
⚠ Verified from GOV.UK · ACAS · IFS · Shelter · JRF

What Was Promised
vs What's Actually Law

A transparent look at the real gaps between what was promised and what became law. Factual. Plain English. No spin.

All information verified from GOV.UK, ACAS, IFS, Shelter, Joseph Rowntree Foundation and leading employment law firms. Last verified June 2026. For information only — not legal advice.
Work Rights Benefits Housing Minimum Wage Equality
⚖️ Employment & Work Rights 6 contradictions
1
Broken Promise
Day-One Unfair Dismissal — Abandoned Before Becoming Law
✓ Promised
Workers would have full protection from unfair dismissal from day one of any job — a Labour manifesto commitment.
✗ What Happened
Dropped just before Royal Assent. The qualifying period was reduced from 2 years to 6 months — but day-one protection was scrapped entirely.

For the first six months of any job, your employer can dismiss you without giving a reason and you have no right to bring an unfair dismissal claim. The 6-month threshold takes effect from January 2027.

📅 6-month qualifying period from January 2027
2
Quietly Shelved
Right to Switch Off — Promised, Then Dropped Entirely
✓ Promised
A statutory right to disconnect from work calls, emails and messages outside contracted hours — similar to laws in Ireland and France.
✗ What Happened
Confirmed shelved in March 2025. It does not form any part of the Employment Rights Act 2025.

There is currently no legal protection stopping your employer from contacting you outside working hours. You have no right to ignore those messages without consequence.

3
Tension in the Law
Day-One Sick Pay — But You Can Still Be Fired During That Time
✓ What Changed
From 6 April 2026, Statutory Sick Pay applies from day one for all workers — no 3-day wait, no earnings threshold.
⚠ The Gap
Until January 2027 you have no unfair dismissal protection for your first 6 months. An employer can dismiss you for being sick and you may have no claim.

You have the right to receive sick pay from day one — but no guaranteed right to keep your job in the same period. These two rights were introduced separately without bridging the gap between them.

4
Known Loophole
Mass Redundancies — The Workplace-by-Workplace Gap
✓ Planned
Collective redundancy protections would apply across a whole organisation — closing the loophole of spreading cuts across sites.
✗ Not Yet
Won't happen until 2027. Rules still apply site by site — a large employer can make 500 people redundant across 30 sites and avoid full consultation.

Collective redundancy consultation is only triggered when 20 or more redundancies happen at one workplace. Large employers continue to use the site-by-site approach legally.

📅 Organisation-wide threshold: 2027
5
Still Not Confirmed
Zero Hours — Promised Protections Still Not in Force
✓ Promised
Zero hours workers would get the right to guaranteed hours, reasonable notice of shifts, and payment for cancelled or cut-short shifts.
✗ Reality
What counts as "reasonable notice" is still unconfirmed. All zero hours protections are delayed to 2027 and details are still being consulted on.

If you are on a zero hours contract today, none of the promised new protections are yet in force. You still have no guaranteed hours, no shift cancellation pay, and no confirmed notice period.

📅 Zero hours protections: 2027
6
Rights on Paper, Backlog in Practice
Employment Tribunal Rights Extended — But the System Is Overwhelmed
✓ Coming
From October 2026, the time limit to bring an employment tribunal claim increases from 3 months to 6 months.
⚠ Reality
Tribunals are already severely backlogged. With Early Conciliation now extended to 12 weeks, a claim may not reach a hearing for well over a year after the incident.

Your rights may exist in law but the system to enforce them has not grown at the same pace. Extended deadlines give more time to start a claim — but not a faster route to justice.

📅 Extended time limits from October 2026
💷 Benefits & Universal Credit 3 contradictions
7
Government's Own Admission
UC Standard Rate Is Below the Cost of Essentials
✓ What Was Said
The UC standard allowance would increase above inflation from 2026/27, giving people more financial security.
✗ The Reality
The government's own documents acknowledged UC "contributes to hardship and destitution." Even after increases, the rate remains below the weekly cost of basic essentials.

Since April 2026, the standard allowance for a single adult over 25 has been £98 per week. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation calculates a single adult needs at least £120 per week to cover food, clothing and basic bills. The government's own destitution threshold is £105 per week — meaning the standard rate falls below even that.

8
Two-Tier System
Disability UC Support — Cut in Half for New Claimants
✓ Existing Claimants
Those already receiving the UC health element (LCWRA) before April 2026 keep their existing rate of £429.80 per month.
✗ New Claimants
Anyone newly found to need the LCWRA element from April 2026 receives only £217 per month — roughly half — with the rate frozen until 2029/30.

This creates a two-tier system where support depends on when you became disabled or when your condition worsened — not on the nature or severity of what you're dealing with. Up to 750,000 disabled people are projected to receive the lower rate by 2029/30, representing an average annual loss of around £3,000.

9
Policy Gap
Right to Try Work — Promised Protection Doesn't Fully Deliver
✓ What Was Said
A new "Right to Try" policy would mean that attempting paid work would not trigger a PIP review or Work Capability Assessment for UC health claimants.
⚠ The Gap
The Social Security Advisory Committee found the regulations still allow reassessment at any time. Evidence from the work itself could trigger a review — the very outcome the policy was meant to prevent.

The government's own advisory body concluded the policy "promises more than it delivers" and risks deepening mistrust if claimants attempt work in good faith and are then reassessed based on that very employment.

🏠 Housing & Renting 3 contradictions
10
Not Yet Complete
Housing Association Tenants Left Out Until 2027
✓ Private Renters
From 1 May 2026, private renters have much stronger protections — no-fault evictions ended, fixed terms gone, rolling tenancies introduced.
✗ Social Renters
Housing association tenants get the same protections only from Autumn 2027 — an 18-month gap between the two groups of renters.

Millions of housing association tenants continue under the old system while private renters next door have significantly stronger rights. The same Act, two different timelines.

📅 Housing association protections: Autumn 2027
11
Still Coming
Landlord Database and Ombudsman — Not Live Yet
✓ Promised
A public register of all landlords and a Private Landlord Ombudsman to resolve disputes quickly without going to court.
⚠ Not Yet
The landlord database will roll out gradually by area from late 2026. The Ombudsman also launches later in 2026. Neither is currently available to check your landlord or resolve a complaint.

You cannot yet check whether your landlord is properly registered or use an ombudsman service. If you have a dispute today, you still have to go through existing routes — court, mediation or council enforcement.

📅 Landlord database: late 2026 (by area)
12
Long Wait
Decent Homes Standard for Private Renters — Not Until 2035
✓ The Plan
The Decent Homes Standard — minimum standards for safe, warm, dry housing — would be extended to cover private rented homes.
✗ The Reality
The government confirmed the Decent Homes Standard will not come into effect for the private sector until 2035 — nearly a decade away.

If your private rented home has damp, mould or other dangerous conditions, your landlord will not face mandatory minimum standards for another nine years. You still have rights to report conditions to your council, but the structural legal baseline is a very long way off.

📅 Decent Homes Standard for private renters: 2035
💰 Minimum Wage 3 contradictions
13
Still in Law
Under-21s Legally Paid Less — Despite Facing the Same Costs
✓ The Plan
The government signalled a long-term intention to move towards a single adult rate, removing age distinctions from minimum wage.
✗ Still Law
Workers aged 18–20 are legally paid £10.85 per hour from April 2026 — £1.86 per hour less than those aged 21+, despite paying identical prices for rent, food, travel and bills.

As raised in Parliament: under-21s do not pay a lower rate of income tax, national insurance, housing, food or transport costs — but they are legally entitled to a lower wage. No timeline has been confirmed for ending this.

14
Enforcement Gap
Maximum Penalties for Wage Theft Have Never Been Applied
✓ What the Law Says
Employers who underpay face fines of up to 200% of the underpayment, capped at £20,000 per worker, plus possible criminal prosecution.
✗ What Actually Happens
A peer in the House of Lords stated they "could not find anyone who has actually faced this maximum penalty." The UK has less than 0.4% of the ILO recommended inspection rate — employers can expect a visit once every 500 years.

The right to minimum wage exists in law and penalties exist on paper — but enforcement is so thin that the deterrent effect is minimal. Over 560,000 workers have been found to be underpaid since 1999, suggesting the system consistently catches violations after the fact rather than preventing them.

15
National Law, Regional Reality
One Minimum Wage — But Wildly Different Real Value by Location
✓ The Law
One National Living Wage of £12.71 per hour applies to everyone aged 21+ across England, Scotland and Wales regardless of where they live.
⚠ The Gap
The Real Living Wage — based on actual cost of living — is £13.45 across the UK and £14.80 in London. The legal minimum is economically unsustainable in London without shared housing or additional income.

The same wage has a materially different purchasing power depending on where you live. Someone in London on the legal minimum is in a fundamentally different financial position to someone in northern England — but the law treats them identically.

⚖️ Equality & Discrimination 3 contradictions
16
Not in This Act
Ethnicity & Disability Pay Gap Reporting — Separate Bill, No Date
✓ Gender Pay Gap
Employers with 250+ staff must already report their gender pay gap. Action plans become mandatory in 2027.
✗ Ethnicity & Disability
Ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting is not included in the Employment Rights Act 2025 at all. It requires a separate Equality (Race and Disability) Bill with no confirmed date.

An employer can have a significant pay gap between white and ethnic minority employees, or between disabled and non-disabled employees, and face no obligation to report it or act on it. The legal protection is materially unequal depending on which protected characteristic you have.

17
Narrow Scope
Whistleblowing Doesn't Cover Most Discrimination or Bullying
✓ What People Expect
Workers commonly assume that reporting discrimination, bullying or harassment to a regulator or externally gives them whistleblowing protection.
✗ What the Law Says
Whistleblowing protection only applies to disclosures in the public interest about specific categories of wrongdoing. Personal grievances, bullying and most discrimination claims are generally not covered.

Sexual harassment disclosures became a protected disclosure from 6 April 2026 — a welcome change. But general discrimination, harassment and bullying do not typically qualify unless they can be framed as a criminal offence, health and safety breach or legal violation. Most people raising personal workplace complaints have no whistleblowing protection.

18
Delayed Again
Enhanced Maternity & Pregnancy Protections — Not Until 2027
✓ In the Act
The Employment Rights Act 2025 includes strengthened protections against dismissal for pregnant workers and those returning from maternity leave.
✗ Not Yet
These stronger protections will not come into force until 2027. Pregnant workers and those on maternity leave still rely on existing law in the meantime.

Pregnancy and maternity discrimination is already unlawful under the Equality Act 2010. But the additional layer of protection promised in the new law — including enhanced redundancy protection during and after maternity leave — remains pending for at least another year.

📅 Enhanced maternity protections: 2027

18 Documented Contradictions

Across employment rights, benefits, housing, minimum wage and equality law — the gap between what has been promised and what is actually law is significant and, in many cases, affects people's day-to-day decisions right now.

None of this is political opinion. These are documented facts from GOV.UK, ACAS, Parliament, the IFS and other authoritative sources.

Always seek advice from ACAS or Citizens Advice before making decisions based on your rights.