Navigating the rules surrounding Statutory Parental Bereavement Pay (SPBP) can feel like charting a maze, especially when your employment status isn’t the most straightforward. The entitlement to SPBP hinges on several factors, including how your job is structured and the type of working arrangement you have. In this post, we cut through the jargon to explain how different employment types—agency workers, directors, and educational workers—are treated when determining SPBP entitlement.
Understanding SPBP basics
Statutory Parental Bereavement Pay is a government-provided benefit for eligible employees who have suffered the death of a child under the age of 18. SPBP is designed to offer financial support during a profoundly difficult time. Eligibility primarily depends on:
– The employee’s length of service with the employer (often a minimum period, such as 26 weeks continuous service).
– The employee’s average weekly earnings, which must meet the lower earnings limit.
– The nature of the employment relationship (employee vs. self-employed, agency worker, etc.).
Key concepts to keep in mind include the definitions of who is an employee, what counts as “service” with a particular employer, and how linked or multiple employments interact with SPBP eligibility. The exact thresholds and rules can be nuanced, and they may vary slightly depending on changes to legislation or government guidance, so it’s important to verify against the most current official guidance.
Agency workers: how the rules apply
Agency workers are those who perform their work through a recruitment or supply agency rather than directly for a hirer. When considering SPBP, several factors come into play:
– Status: If you are engaged by an agency and supplied to a workplace, you may be treated as an employee of the agency for many employment rights purposes, including SPBP, if you pass the statutory definitions of employee status.
– Continuous service: The length of service with the agency and, where applicable, the user organisation can contribute to the qualification period. Some SPBP criteria look at total service with the “employer” paying the wage, which could be the agency.
– Pay and earnings: The average weekly earnings used to determine SPBP will typically be calculated based on earnings through the agency, subject to the relevant thresholds.
– Conditions: In some cases, the right to SPBP can be influenced by whether the agency is providing substantive ongoing employment and the nature of the assignment. If you are effectively treated as an employee of the agency with a direct contract or a contract that mirrors standard employment, SPBP entitlements are more straightforward. If your arrangement is more akin to a zero-hours or a casual arrangement, you’ll still need to meet the standard earnings and service criteria.
Directors: special considerations
Directors, including company directors who are also employees, may face unique considerations:
– Employment status: If a director has an employment contract with the company, they are typically treated as an employee for SPBP purposes. However, some directors hold office without a typical employee contract, especially in larger corporate structures or in private companies where director roles are more akin to governance with limited day-to-day duties.
– Pay and eligibility: SPBP is designed for employees who meet earnings thresholds and have the requisite length of service. For director-only arrangements, the key question becomes whether they have a qualifying contract of employment that resembles standard employee terms, including regular pay that counts toward the earnings test.
– Shared or mixed roles: In cases where a person is both a director and a worker (for example, performing services as an employee of a subsidiary or through a service agreement), the calculation may involve how the pay and service are attributed to the employer paying SPBP.
Educational workers: teacher, lecturer, and support staff considerations
Educational settings add another layer of complexity due to multiple possible employment relationships:
– Direct employment in schools: Teachers and many school staff employed directly by a local authority, academy trust, or school usually qualify as employees. If they meet the statutory service length and earnings criteria, they can claim SPBP.
– Supply staff and agency-backed roles: Educational professionals working via supply agencies may fall under agency worker rules, with the entitlements depending on the agency–employer relationship and the pay arrangements.
– Part-time and term-time workers: SPBP calculations account for average weekly earnings, which can be influenced by the pattern of work. Term-time contracts, pro-rated hours, and long school holidays can all affect the earnings threshold and the number of weeks of service counted.
– Dismissal and job changes: If an educational worker changes roles or employers during the relevant period, the rules consider whether the new contract maintains continuous service with the employer paying SPBP or whether a break in service impacts eligibility.
Practical steps to determine eligibility
1) Confirm your employer or payer: Identify who pays your wages and who has the obligation to administer SPBP. This might be your direct employer, a recruitment agency, or a school/academy trust acting as the payer.
2) Check length of service: Establish whether you meet the required continuity of service with the payer. Consider any breaks, even if due to school holidays or agency assignments, that might affect continuity.
3) Review earnings thresholds: Calculate your average weekly pay over the appropriate reference period. Ensure you are above the lower earnings limit and that your earnings are regular enough to count toward SPBP.
4) Clarify your contract type: Determine whether your contract is that of an employee, an agency worker, a director with an employment agreement, or a different arrangement. The contract type can influence eligibility and how entitlement is calculated.
5) Seek formal confirmation: If in doubt, contact your HR department, payroll, or the payer organisation to obtain written confirmation of SPBP entitlement based on your specific employment arrangement.
Practical tips for employers
– Document employment status clearly: Ensure contracts specify the worker’s status (employee vs. agency worker) and the pay structure, including how SPBP would be calculated if applicable.
– Align payroll practices: Maintain transparent and consistent payroll practices so that the earnings used for SPBP calculations can be verified and are compliant with current guidelines.
– Communicate eligibility early: Provide employees with clear information about potential SPBP entitlement, including what qualifies and what documentation might be required in the event of a bereavement.
– Stay updated: SPBP rules can evolve. Regularly review government guidance and update internal policies to reflect any changes in legislation or interpretation.
Why this matters
SPBP can offer essential financial support during an incredibly challenging time. However, the path to entitlement is not always straightforward when employment types vary. By understanding how agency workers, directors, and educational workers fit into the SPBP framework, employees and employers can navigate the process more confidently, ensuring that eligible individuals receive the support they deserve without unnecessary delay.
If you’d like, I can adapt this draft into a more tailored post for a particular audience—such as HR professionals in the education sector, agency workers navigating permanent roles, or directors in small businesses—with specific examples and step-by-step checklists.
April 6, 2026 at 12:15AM
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