Minimum Employment Rights Responsibilities PDF
Minimum Employment Rights Responsibilities PDF
Minimum Employment Rights Responsibilities PDF
and responsibilities
Disclaimer. This document provides an overview of some
of the minimum rights and responsibilities that apply by law
to employers and employees, as at December 2022. The Ministry
of Business Innovation and Employment are not responsible
for the results of any action taken on the basis of information
in this document, or for any errors or omissions.
www.employment.govt.nz | 0800 20 90 20
Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
The Employment Agreement Builder is a free tool to help create contracts customised
to businesses and to each of its employees. It has tips to help decide what to put in an
agreement – and what NOT to put in. It covers what you must do by law, and also sets out
common mistakes and how to avoid them.
Minimum employment rights must always be complied with, even if they aren’t included
in an employment agreement or if the agreement states something less than a minimum
entitlement.
When negotiating their individual employment agreements (IEAs), employees can get
independent advice (for example, from unions, advocates, lawyers, friends or family).
Any changes to the employment conditions must be agreed by the employer and employees.
The employer can’t change the terms and conditions without the employee’s writen consent.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “employment agreements”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Minimum pay
Minimum wage rates apply to all employees, whether they are full-time, part-time,
fxed-term, casual, or working from home, or paid (totally or partly) by commission or
piece rates. Employees aged 16 years and over must be paid at least the adult minimum
wage rate, unless they are starting-out workers or trainees.
Employers and employees may agree to any wage rate as long as it is not less than current
minimum wage rates.
Minimum wages are reviewed each year and current rates are available at
www.employment.govt.nz/minimum-wage.
All employees who are involved in training or supervising other employees must be paid
at least the adult minimum wage rate.
Starting-out workers must be paid at least the starting-out minimum wage rate, and
trainees aged 20 years and over must be paid at least the training minimum wage rate.
The starting-out minimum wage applies to:
ȩ Employees aged 16 and 17 who haven’t completed six months of continuous
employment with their current employer.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
ȩ Employees aged 18 and 19 who have been paid a specifed social security beneft for
six months or more, and who haven’t completed six months’ continuous employment
with any employer since they started being paid a beneft. Once they have completed
six months' continuous employment with a single employer, they won’t be a starting-out
worker and must be paid at least the adult minimum wage.
ȩ Employees aged from 16 to 19 who are required to undertake industry training for at
least 40 credits a year to become qualifed in the occupation that their employment
agreement relates to.
There is no minimum wage for employees aged under 16 but all other employment
rights and entitlements apply. Once they turn 16 and have spent at least six months
working for the same employer, they are entitled to the adult minimum wage.
The training minimum wage applies to employed trainees who are:
ȩ aged 20 years and over, and are
ȩ required by their employment agreement to undertake at least 60 credits a year in
an industry training programme to become qualifed for the occupation that their
employment agreement relates to.
Paying wages
Employers must pay their employees in cash (except for the Crown, and local authorities).
To pay wages another way (eg, direct credit or cheque), employers must include this in the
employees’ writen employment agreement.
Employees must be paid for all the hours they have worked including activities at the start
or end of shif eg a retail employee must be paid for opening and closing up a shop.
Employers cannot deduct any money, excluding what is allowed by law (eg. income tax,
student loans and ACC), unless they have the employee’s writen consent.
For more information visit, www.employment.govt.nz and search “Types of pay”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Availability clause
An employment agreement can’t have an availability clause put in (ie working is conditional
on the employer making work available to an employee and they’re required to be available
to accept any work that the employer ofers) unless:
ȩ the employment agreement specifes agreed hours of work and includes guaranteed
hours of work among those agreed hours, and the availability clause is in addition to
those guaranteed hours of work, and
ȩ the employer has genuine reasons based on reasonable grounds for including the
availability clause and the number of hours of work specifed, and
ȩ the availability clause gives the employee reasonable compensation for making
themselves available to work.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Annual holidays
At the end of each year of continuous employment with any one employer, an employee
becomes entitled to 4 weeks’ paid annual holidays.
Employees can ask (in writing) to cash-up a maximum of 1 week of their annual holidays each
year. Employers can’t pressure employees to cash-up annual holidays, and requests to
cash-up can’t be included in employment agreements.
Annual holidays are paid at the rate of the greater of:
ȩ the employee’s ordinary weekly pay as at the beginning of the annual holiday; or
ȩ the employee’s average weekly earnings for the 12 months immediately before the end
of the last pay period before the annual holiday.
That calculation should include any commission the employee received as part of their
employment agreement.
If an employee leaves before completing a full year of employment, their annual holiday pay
is 8% of gross earnings less any holiday pay already received.
Genuinely casual employees (those who work intermitently) and fxed-term employees
(employed for less than 12 months) can agree to receive holiday pay as above (at 8%)
if certain conditions are met. For more information visit, www.employment.govt.nz
and search “pay as you go”.
Employers can make employees take annual holidays during a closedown period once a year
(eg at Christmas), if they give at least 14 days’ notice. If an employer has a closedown period
that includes public holidays, then the employee is entitled to be paid public holidays if they
would be otherwise working days for them.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Annual holidays”.
Public holidays
Every 12 months, employees must have 12 paid public holidays, if they are days when
the employee would normally work.
Employers must pay employees their relevant daily pay or average daily pay (if applicable)
for the public holiday.
If an employee works on a public holiday they must be paid at least time-and-a-half for the
time worked. If the public holiday falls on a day the employee would normally work, they are
also entitled to an alternative paid day of.
Employees can decline to work on public holidays unless their employment agreement says
something diferent .
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Public holidays”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Sick leave
Afer six months of continuous employment, all employees are entitled to 10 days’
paid sick leave.
Afer the initial 10 days, employees are entitled to an extra 10 days’ sick leave for every
12 months. Afer that and can carry over 10 days of unused sick leave up to a maximum
of 20 days.
Sick leave can be taken if:
ȩ the employee is sick or injured, or
ȩ the employee’s spouse, partner or children are sick or injured, or
ȩ a person who depends on the employee for care is sick or injured.
Employers must pay employees their relevant daily pay or average daily pay (if applicable)
for their sick leave.
Minimum sick leave entitlements increased from 5 to 10 days from 24 July 2021.
Employees get the extra 10 days when they reach their next entitlement date –
either afer reaching six months’ employment or on their sick leave entitlement
anniversary (12 months afer they were last entitled to sick leave).
Employers can request proof of the illness, such as a medical certifcate. If the employer
asks for proof within the frst 3 days of the sickness or injury, the employer must pay
the costs of the doctor. Employers can’t insist employees visit a particular doctor.
Afer three days of sickness, the employee has to pay for the doctor appointment.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Sick leave”.
Bereavement leave
Afer six months continuous employment all employees are entitled to paid bereavement
leave of:
ȩ three days on the death of a spouse or partner, parent, child, sibling, grandparent,
grandchild, or parent of a spouse or partner.
ȩ one day if their employer accepts they’ve sufered a bereavement involving another
close person not included above.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Bereavement leave”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
To help employees deal with the efects of family violence, the law says that people afected
by family violence have the right to:
ȩ take up to 10 days of paid family violence leave each year – on top of annual leave,
sick leave and bereavement leave
ȩ ask for short-term fexible working arrangements – lasting up to two months
ȩ not to be treated adversely in the workplace because they might have experienced
family violence.
Employees have these rights even if the family violence happened in the past.
In a case of family violence, the employee should ask in writing for leave and the employer
must answer in writing within 10 working days at the latest. If the employee asks for fexible
work the employer has two months to get back to them.
For more information visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “family violence”.
Employees may be entitled to unpaid parental leave (including partner’s leave, primary carer
leave and extended leave) if they meet either the six-month or 12-month criteria.
The employee must have worked for the same employer for an average of at least 10 hours
a week for the six months before your baby’s due date (or the date you become responsible
for the care of a child under 6 years on a permanent basis).
Employees who meet the six-month eligibility criteria are entitled to a total of 26 weeks’
unpaid leave (including the primary carer leave).
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
The employee must have worked for the same employer for an average of at least 10 hours
a week for the 12 months before the baby’s due date (or the date they become responsible
for the care of a child under 6 years on a permanent basis).
Employees who meet the 12-month criteria are entitled to a total of 52 weeks’ unpaid leave
(including the primary carer leave).
Employees may share unpaid parental leave with a partner, who also must meet either
the six-month or 12-month criteria.
Pregnant mothers are entitled to up to 10 days’ unpaid special leave for pregnancy-related
reasons before parental leave begins.
For help understanding entitlements to parental leave, visit www.employment.govt.nz
search “parental leave”.
Parental leave payments (sometimes called paid parental leave) are government funded
payments, managed by the Inland Revenue. A person may be able to get parental leave
payments even if they don’t qualify for parental leave from their employment.
Parental leave payments are generally atached to the birth mother or the chosen primary
carer (if they are becoming the permanent primary carer of a child under 6).
Inland Revenue has more information about parental leave payments, visit www.ird.govt.nz
and search “parental leave”.
Discrimination
Employers can’t discriminate in hiring or fring, paying, training or promoting an
employee because of their race, colour, national or ethnic origin, sex or sexual
orientation, marital or family status, employment status, age, religious belief or
political opinion, disability, or participation in certain union activities, or if they are
afected by family violence. This also includes people who are applying for jobs.
They all have the same employment rights and are entitled to receive the same pay as
someone doing the same job, with similar experience.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Discrimination”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Fixed-term employees
Employers can only ofer fxed-term employment if:
ȩ there are genuine reasons – like seasonal work, project work, or where the employee
is flling in for a permanent employee on leave, and
ȩ the employer tells the employee the reasons, how or when the employment will end,
and the employee agrees to this in their employment agreement.
Like other employment agreements, fxed-term agreements must be in writing.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Types of employee”.
Casual employees
‘Casual employee’ isn’t defned in employment legislation, but the term is usually used
to refer to a situation where the employee has no guaranteed hours of work, no regular
patern of work, and no ongoing expectation of employment. The employer doesn’t have
to ofer work to the employee, and the employee doesn’t have to accept work if it’s ofered.
The employee works as and when it suits both them and the employer.
This can sometimes happen because it’s hard for the employer to predict when the work
needs to be done, or when the work needs to be done quickly. Each time the employee
accepts an ofer of work it is treated as a new period of employment.
If an employee is employed to do casual work, the arrangement must be made clear in their
employment agreement.
Employment rights and responsibilities also apply to casual employees, but the way in which
annual holidays, sick and bereavement leave are applied can vary for these employees.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Types of employee”.
Trial periods
Only employers who have 19 or fewer employees can make an ofer of employment that
includes a trial period (up to 90 days).
Trial periods are voluntary. They must be agreed in writing and negotiated in good faith
as part of the employment agreement, before the employee’s employment starts.
An employee who is dismissed before the end of a trial period can’t raise a personal
grievance on the grounds of unjustifed dismissal.
They can raise a personal grievance on other grounds, such as discrimination, harassment
or unjustifed action by the employer.
Employees on trial periods are entitled to all other minimum employment rights.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Trial periods”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Unions
A union is an organisation that supports employees in the workplace by speaking
on their behalf to employers. Employees have the right to decide whether to join
or not a union and, if so, which union. An employer or anyone else must not pressure
an employee to join or not join a union.
Employers must:
ȩ give new employees a form to indicate if they intend to join a union in the frst 10 days
of starting their job
ȩ return the form to the union, unless the employee states they don’t want their details
passed on
ȩ pass on information about the role and function of unions to future employees.
Unions must pay for the costs of using printed materials if they want the material to be
passed on.
Employees have 30 days to give the form back to their employer. This gives them time to
talk to their union representatives before deciding whether to join the union. If they join the
union, they will change to the collective agreement. If they don’t join the union, they will
stay on their individual employment agreement.
Employers must let any employees who are union delegates carry out their union activities
within working hours and be paid their normal hourly rate. An example of a union activity is
representing employees in collective bargaining.
Employees who are union delegates must agree with their employer when they will carry
out their union activities or at least tell them before. The employer can disagree if it will
unreasonably disrupt the business or afect how well the employees carry out their duties.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Union representatives can enter workplaces without consent, provided the employees are
covered under or bargaining towards a collective agreement. Representatives can still only
enter a workplace for certain purposes, must be respectful of normal operating hours, and
follow health, safety and security procedures.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Unions” and
“Employment Relations Amendment Act”.
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Employment New Zealand
Minimum employment rights
and responsibilities
Penalties
There are fnancial penalties for employers not complying with employment laws.
These can be up to $50,000 for individuals; and for companies, the greater of $100,000
or three times the amount of the fnancial gain made by the company as a result of
the breach.
An employer may also be fned or prosecuted for not complying with workplace health
and safety laws.
For more information, visit www.employment.govt.nz and search “Employers who have
breached minimum employment standards”, and visit www.worksafe.govt.nz and search
“enforcement”.
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ENZ 4606 DEC22