Road rules4 mins ago
how long are you aloud to be sick
does anyone know how long you are aloud sick before you need a sick note and the laws about if you get paid or not in the uk ? i was ill with the flu and you dont need a doctors note for this and cant be bothered to go get one when ur ill all you need is a few days to sleep and recover but she refuses to pay me cos of no sick note i think this is wrong ? can anyone show me the law or wensite i can show her ! to get my money !!
Answers
Some employers have their own sick pay schemes. If your employer has such a scheme (which must pay as much, or more, than the SSP explained below) you need to read your contract. Every scheme is different.
If your employer doesn't have their own scheme, you're only entitled to SSP ('Statutory Sick Pay'), which applies to everyone earning at least £95 per...
If your employer doesn't have their own scheme, you're only entitled to SSP ('Statutory Sick Pay'), which applies to everyone earning at least £95 per...
00:51 Tue 09th Feb 2010
-- answer removed --
Some employers have their own sick pay schemes. If your employer has such a scheme (which must pay as much, or more, than the SSP explained below) you need to read your contract. Every scheme is different.
If your employer doesn't have their own scheme, you're only entitled to SSP ('Statutory Sick Pay'), which applies to everyone earning at least £95 per week.
With SSP you get nothing at all for the first 3 days of sickness. Thereafter you get £79.15 per week. If you're only away from work for a few days (after the first three), your employer will calculate a daily rate, based upon how many days you work each week. So, if you work 5 days per week, you'll get £15.83 per day.
Your employer cannot insist that you provide proof of your illness during the first seven days. However they may insist that you 'self-certify' your sickness using the employer's own form or the 'SC2' form which is available from doctors' surgeries (without seeing a doctor or nurse). On the 8th day (or thereafter) your employer has the right to insist that you provide evidence of your inability to work, usually in the form of a certificate from your doctor.
See here:
http://www.direct.gov...llorinjured/DG_175850
and here:
http://www.direct.gov...orinjured/DG_10018786
Chris
If your employer doesn't have their own scheme, you're only entitled to SSP ('Statutory Sick Pay'), which applies to everyone earning at least £95 per week.
With SSP you get nothing at all for the first 3 days of sickness. Thereafter you get £79.15 per week. If you're only away from work for a few days (after the first three), your employer will calculate a daily rate, based upon how many days you work each week. So, if you work 5 days per week, you'll get £15.83 per day.
Your employer cannot insist that you provide proof of your illness during the first seven days. However they may insist that you 'self-certify' your sickness using the employer's own form or the 'SC2' form which is available from doctors' surgeries (without seeing a doctor or nurse). On the 8th day (or thereafter) your employer has the right to insist that you provide evidence of your inability to work, usually in the form of a certificate from your doctor.
See here:
http://www.direct.gov...llorinjured/DG_175850
and here:
http://www.direct.gov...orinjured/DG_10018786
Chris
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