Your options if your employer offers you another job
This advice applies to Scotland. See advice for See advice for England, See advice for Northern Ireland, See advice for Wales
Before your employer makes you redundant they might offer you another job in the organisation. This is called ‘suitable alternative employment’.
Tell your employer in writing if you decide to accept the alternative job. Ask for a new contract, new job description and any changes to your terms and conditions, for example your pay.
You might not want the alternative job - for example if it pays less or it’s a different type of work. You might be able to get redundancy pay instead if you have a good reason to refuse the job. To get redundancy pay you’ll need to have worked for your employer for at least 2 years by the time your original job ends.
If you’ll have worked for your employer for at least 2 years by the time your job ends, your employer has to look for other jobs they could offer you. If they don’t, your redundancy could be unfair.
How you should get an alternative job offer
Your employer can offer you an alternative job in any way, but unless they follow the rules you can refuse it and get your redundancy pay instead. Your employer has to:
offer you the new job in writing or orally
make the offer before your current job ends
make sure the new job starts within 4 weeks of your current job ending
give you enough detail about the job to understand what you’d be doing and how it would be different to your current job
Trying out alternative jobs
You can spend 4 weeks trying out any alternative job you’re offered. If your employer offers you several alternative jobs you can try each one for 4 weeks.
Your trial period could start up to 4 weeks after your current job ends. No matter when your trial period starts, you’ll still get 4 weeks to try the alternative job.
Your trial period still only lasts 4 weeks if you’re ill or on holiday for part of it.
You and your employer can agree to extend your trial period if you need training to do the new job. Make sure you get your employer’s agreement in writing, with a clear end date.
Your redundancy might be unfair if your employer doesn’t let you try the job before deciding whether to take it.
If you don’t want to take an alternative job
Tell your employer in writing if you don’t want to accept an alternative job. Check that they’ll give you your redundancy pay instead. You have a right to redundancy pay if you’ll have worked for your employer for at least 2 years by the time your current job ends. To get your redundancy pay, you’ll also need to:
refuse the alternative job before your current job ends, or before the end of the alternative job’s 4-week trial
give a good reason for refusing your new job
A good reason could be about the job itself or about your personal situation. It’s best to explain your reasons when you refuse the job. You might give reasons like:
lower pay
longer journey to work or lack of public transport
extra costs of getting to work
disruption to your family life, eg problems with childcare
health issues
If you’re offered a job in another location
Check if your contract has a ‘mobility clause’ that says you have to work anywhere your employer asks you to.
If your contract doesn’t have a mobility clause
You can take your redundancy pay instead of the alternative job if it would cost you more or take you longer to get to work.
If the costs and travel time are the same, the change of location alone won’t be enough to let you refuse the job and keep your redundancy pay.
If your contract has a mobility clause
A mobility clause means your employer can ask you to work somewhere else instead of making you redundant. You might not get any redundancy pay if you refuse to change location.
Contact your nearest Citizens Advice if you have a mobility clause but you’re being asked to work somewhere you can’t get to.
If your employer doesn’t accept your reason for not taking the job
Your employer can refuse to pay your redundancy pay if they don’t think you have a good reason for turning down the job.
To get your redundancy pay, follow these steps:
Step 1: talk to your employer
If your employer doesn’t accept you have a good reason, try having an informal chat with them. Ask them to explain why they don’t agree. You might be able to sort the issue out by talking to them.
Step 2: raise a grievance
Check if your employer has a formal grievance procedure you can use. Even if they haven’t, you can still raise a grievance - for example by writing a letter.
Explain why you think the job wasn’t suitable and ask them to pay your redundancy pay.
If you think a grievance will take a long time, you might want to go straight to the next step, as there’s a time limit.
Step 3: early conciliation
If your grievance doesn’t get the result you want, you can start ‘early conciliation’. This is a chance to resolve your dispute without the stress of a tribunal claim. Early conciliation is free and organised by Acas, an independent organisation that can help you and your employer reach an agreement.
You need to apply for early conciliation by 6 months minus 1 day from the date you turned down the alternative job offer. If you did a trial period of an alternative job, the time limit runs from the end of your trial period.
Your time limit will be shorter if you want to make other claims as well as redundancy pay. Most other claims only give you 3 months minus 1 day.
You can apply for early conciliation on the Acas website. You can also call Acas.
Acas early conciliation team
Telephone: 0300 123 1122
Monday to Friday, 8am to 8pm
Saturday, 9am to 1pm
Step 4: take your employer to a tribunal
Your last resort is to take your employer to a tribunal. You can only do this if you’ve tried early conciliation and didn’t reach an agreement.
You have at least a month after the end of early conciliation to start a tribunal claim - get more detail on the deadline.
Contact your nearest Citizens Advice if you’re thinking of making a tribunal claim, as it can be challenging.