Moving to the UK for Work? Your Holiday Rights Explained

Everything you need to know about UK statutory holiday entitlement as an international worker.

Last updated: April 2026

What is the UK Minimum Holiday Entitlement?

Under the Working Time Regulations 1998, all workers in the UK are entitled to a minimum of 5.6 weeks of paid statutory annual leave per year. This equals 28 days for someone working a 5-day week.

Important: This is the legal minimum. Many employers offer more than 28 days as part of their employment benefits.

Key Facts About UK Holiday Entitlement

28 Days Maximum

The maximum statutory entitlement is 28 days, even if you work 6 days per week. Working 6 days doesn't give you 33.6 days — it remains capped at 28 days.

Bank Holidays: Your Employer's Choice

Under UK law, employers can choose whether bank holidays count within or in addition to your 28 days. There are two common approaches:

  • Model A (top-up): Bank holidays are additional — you get 28 days + 8 bank holidays = 36 days total
  • Model B (inclusive): Bank holidays count within your 28 days — you have 20 days to book freely plus 8 fixed bank holidays

Check your employment contract to know which model applies to you.

Part-Time Workers

Part-time workers receive 5.6 weeks pro-rata based on days worked:

  • 5 days/week = 28 days (full entitlement)
  • 4 days/week = 22.4 days (5.6 × 4)
  • 3 days/week = 16.8 days (5.6 × 3)
  • 2 days/week = 11.2 days (5.6 × 2)

This is calculated as: (days worked per week) × 5.6 weeks

Pro-Rata Holiday for Mid-Year Starters

If you start working mid-way through the leave year, your entitlement is calculated proportionally. The formula is:

Pro-rata days = (days employed in leave year ÷ 365) × full entitlement

For example, if you start on 1 July and work 3 days/week:

  • Leave year (April–March): ~275 days employed
  • Full entitlement: 3 × 5.6 = 16.8 days
  • Pro-rata: (275 ÷ 365) × 16.8 = 12.6 days

Always round UP to the nearest half day — you cannot lose entitlement from rounding.

Use our Pro-Rata Calculator →

Who is Entitled?

UK law covers all types of workers:

  • Full-time employees — permanent staff
  • Part-time workers — anyone working under 35 hours/week
  • Agency workers — those employed through agencies
  • Part-year workers — e.g., school support staff
  • Irregular hours workers — those with variable hours/days

There is no minimum working hour requirement for holiday entitlement — zero-hours contract workers are also entitled.

How Does the UK Compare to Other Countries?

🇺🇸 United States

No federal minimum paid holiday. However, several states (California, New York, Massachusetts, Washington) now require paid sick leave or paid leave. Many employers offer 10–15 days voluntarily.

UK statutory minimum is 2–3× higher

🇪🇺 European Union

Minimum 20 days (4 weeks) under EU Working Time Directive. Many countries mandate 25–30 days.

UK 28 days matches or exceeds EU average

🇦🇺 Australia

Minimum 20 days (4 weeks) paid leave. Shift workers often receive 25 days plus leave loading (additional pay in lieu of leave).

UK offers 40% more minimum leave

🇨🇦 Canada

Varies by province: 10 days in Ontario, 15 in Saskatchewan, 20 in Nunavurt. Federal workers get 20 days minimum.

UK minimum typically 2× Canadian provinces

Common Questions for Migrants

Does my employment start date affect my first-year entitlement?

Yes. If you start mid-year, your entitlement is prorated for that leave year. Your employer must calculate how much leave you've accrued from your start date to the end of the leave year.

Can I carry over unused holiday to the next year?

Legally, you can only carry over 8 days (1.6 weeks) if your employer agrees and there's a written agreement. However, many employers are more flexible — check your contract.

What happens if I'm sick during my holiday?

If you fall ill or are hospitalised during annual leave, you can request to have those days reclassified as sick leave instead. You'll need medical evidence for periods over 7 days.

Do I get holiday pay during probation?

Yes. Holiday entitlement applies from day one of employment, regardless of probation status. You accrue holiday from your start date.

What about holiday entitlement if I work overtime?

You're entitled to paid leave for all hours worked, including overtime. Your holiday pay should reflect your normal wages including regular overtime.

Calculate Your Entitlement

Use our calculators to find your exact UK holiday entitlement:

Use Main Calculator

Official Sources

This information is based on UK government guidelines: