(England & Wales)
Create your hybrid working policy with eligibility rules, working pattern, anchor days, core hours, equipment provision, health and safety, UK GDPR and review provisions.
Professionally drafted — structured following the Employment Rights Act 1996 (as amended by the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 and the Employment Rights Act 2025) for England and Wales.
Download a professionally drafted UK Hybrid Working Policy template, also known as a hybrid working policy template, home and hybrid working policy, remote working policy, or flexible working location policy. Covers policy statement, eligibility, request procedure under the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 and the Employment Rights Act 2025, the requirement to consult with the employee before refusing a flexible working request, working pattern, anchor days, core hours, place of work, working time, equipment and connectivity, expenses and allowances, health and safety under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, Display Screen Equipment (DSE) self-assessment under the Health and Safety (Display Screen Equipment) Regulations 1992, RIDDOR reporting, data protection under UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018, IT security and confidentiality, communication and collaboration, performance management, conduct, equality and reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010, sickness and absence, insurance and household costs, tax implications and HMRC working from home tax relief, working from outside the United Kingdom, trial period and review, variation suspension and withdrawal, breach and grievances, and governing law. The Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 gives employees the right to request flexible working from day one of their employment, and to make up to two such requests in any 12-month period. The Employment Rights Act 2025 introduces a duty on employers to consult with the employee before refusing a flexible working request, with a reasonableness requirement expected to follow in 2027. Employers retain health and safety duties for home and hybrid workers under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 regardless of work location. Structured following the Employment Rights Act 1996 (as amended by the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 and the Employment Rights Act 2025) and the Acas Code of Practice on requests for flexible working, for England and Wales.
Whether you prefer step-by-step guidance or a traditional form, both methods produce the identical professionally-formatted Hybrid Working Policy. Choose the style that suits you.
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Any UK employer setting clear rules for office vs remote working — from small businesses issuing their first policy to growing teams formalising hybrid arrangements.
A UK hybrid working policy — also known as a home and hybrid working policy — is a workplace document that sets out the framework for splitting time between the employer's premises and an approved remote location. It should cover eligibility, working pattern, anchor days, core hours, equipment, health and safety, UK GDPR, and review provisions, drawing on the Employment Rights Act 1996 (as amended by the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 and the Employment Rights Act 2025) and the Acas Code of Practice on requests for flexible working.
A Hybrid Working Policy is a workplace policy that sets out how employees split their working time between the employer's premises and an approved remote location (usually the employee's home). It is one of the most commonly issued workplace policies in the UK following the post-pandemic shift in working patterns.
Our template is structured following the Employment Rights Act 1996 (as amended by the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 and the Employment Rights Act 2025), the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, the Health and Safety (Display Screen Equipment) Regulations 1992, UK GDPR, the Data Protection Act 2018, the Working Time Regulations 1998, the Equality Act 2010, and the Acas Code of Practice on requests for flexible working.
Without a written hybrid working policy, employers face higher risk of inconsistent decisions, employment tribunal claims under the Equality Act 2010 or Employment Rights Act 1996, health and safety breaches under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, and data protection failures under UK GDPR. Informal arrangements often expose employers to unmanaged risk.
The Health and Safety Executive has reminded employers that their duties under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 apply equally at the employee's home as in the workplace.
Our Hybrid Working Policy template covers 28 sections including policy statement, scope, definitions, request procedure under the Flexible Working Act 2023, working pattern, anchor days, place of work, working time, core hours, equipment and connectivity, expenses, DSE health and safety, UK GDPR, IT security, performance management, equality and reasonable adjustments, international working, trial period, variation, breach, grievances and governing law.
Common drafting mistakes include omitting anchor day rules, not setting core hours, leaving health and safety responsibilities undefined, missing UK GDPR remote working obligations, forgetting to address working outside the UK, and failing to make clear that the policy is non-contractual and may be varied or withdrawn.
Our template addresses each of these areas with built-in clauses you can keep, edit or remove.
When issued correctly, a Hybrid Working Policy is a recognised workplace policy under England and Wales employment law.
It does not form part of the contract of employment unless expressly stated to do so, which means the employer can amend, suspend or withdraw it following appropriate consultation.
Our template is structured following the Employment Rights Act 1996 (as amended by the Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 and the Employment Rights Act 2025), the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, UK GDPR, and the Acas Code of Practice on requests for flexible working.
Hybrid working policies are widely used across the UK by employers to set out expectations for office attendance, remote working, equipment, data protection, and health and safety. Many employers complete this confidently without additional legal costs. Consider solicitor review for high-risk or complex situations.
Solicitor fees for a bespoke hybrid working policy typically range from £300 to £900+ depending on complexity and firm.
Our template is £15 one-time, covers both the Smart Interview and Classic Editor versions, and includes free lifetime updates.
Many employers complete the policy confidently without additional legal costs. Consider solicitor review if you have complex circumstances such as unionised workforces, TUPE-transferred staff, or international working arrangements.
A Hybrid Working Policy focuses specifically on splitting working time between the employer's premises and an approved remote location, with rules on attendance, equipment, health and safety and data protection at the remote site.
A Flexible Working Policy is broader — it covers all forms of flexible working including hybrid, compressed hours, part-time, job share, term-time working and changes to start/end times. Both can sit alongside each other.
If you only want to set the rules for office vs home days, the Hybrid Working Policy is the right choice.
Not usually. A hybrid working policy is normally issued as a standalone workplace policy that sits alongside the contract of employment rather than being incorporated into it. This gives the employer flexibility to update the policy without varying every contract.
If hybrid working represents a permanent change to an individual's contractual terms — for example, a permanent change of place of work — that change should be confirmed in writing with the employee.
Our template makes clear that the policy is non-contractual and may be amended, suspended or withdrawn subject to consultation.
Many businesses complete standard policies without one.
Our template is based on UK law and includes all essential clauses for a typical UK Hybrid Working Policy.
Consider review for complex circumstances or where the policy interacts with collective agreements, TUPE arrangements, or international working.
The Employment Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent on 18 December 2025 and introduces a phased package of reforms to UK employment law.
For hybrid and flexible working, the most important change is a new duty on employers to consult with the employee before refusing a flexible working request — moving the process from post-decision discussion to pre-decision consultation. The Government's consultation on the procedural rules closed on 30 April 2026, with further detail expected through secondary legislation.
From 2027, a reasonableness requirement is expected to apply: employers will need to show it was reasonable to rely on the chosen statutory ground for refusal, not just cite one.
Other April 2026 changes include day-one statutory sick pay, day-one paternity and unpaid parental leave, and the launch of the Fair Work Agency.
Our template is updated to reflect the new pre-refusal consultation duty and references the Acas Code of Practice on requests for flexible working. Existing customers receive the updated version free in their My Templates page.
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