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Enhanced Contractual Holiday Entitlement UK 2026

Above the 5.6-week statutory floor, most UK employers offer enhanced contractual leave. Office-based roles average 25-30 days plus 8 bank holidays. The contract decides whether bank holidays are inclusive or additional, and whether the 5-year service uplift applies.

Updated 18 May 2026. As of May 2026.

Last verified 2 May 2026 · Sourced from UK Working Time Regulations 1998 (with 2024 amendments) and ACAS guidance

25-30 days plus 8 bank holidays is the UK office norm

CIPD 2024 reward survey: median UK office entitlement is 26 days plus 8 bank holidays. Public sector median is 27 plus 8. Private sector median is 25 plus 8. Long-service uplifts typically push the figure to 30 plus 8.

The Statutory Floor and Contractual Top-Up

The Working Time Regulations 1998 set the floor at 5.6 weeks (28 days for a 5-day full-time worker). Employers cannot offer less. Most UK employers offer more, varying by sector, seniority, and tradition.

The legal effect of an enhanced contractual entitlement is that the worker has the right to take the higher figure. The protective rules for the statutory 4 weeks (no payment in lieu during employment, restricted carry-over) apply only to the first 4 weeks taken in any leave year; the additional contractual days are governed by ordinary contract law and can be more flexibly handled. Practical examples: a worker on 30 contractual days can sell 2 of the 30 (those above the statutory 28-day inclusive figure) under a leave sale scheme; they cannot sell more than 2 because the rest are statutory minimum.

The 1.6 weeks of UK additional leave above the EU-origin 4 weeks falls between the two regimes. It is statutory in the sense that the WTR 1998 grants it, but it has more flexibility than the EU 4 weeks: it can be carried over by written agreement and (in many readings) can be paid in lieu in some circumstances. The detail matters for carry-over and pay-out calculations.

Sector-by-Sector Benchmarks

SectorTypical DaysBank HolidaysLong-Service Cap
Civil Service25 to 308 + 2 privilege30 days at 5 years
NHS Agenda for Change27 to 338 (separate)33 at 10 years
Local government NJC22 to 278 (separate)27 at 10 years plus discretionary
Big 4 accountancy25 (entry) to 30 (partner)8 (separate)30 at senior manager
Tech (major)25 to unlimited8 (separate, US firms often)Often unlimited or 30+
Banking (high street)25 to 308 (separate)30 at 5 years
Retail (hourly)28 inclusive of BHInclusiveOften no uplift
Hospitality (hourly)28 inclusive of BHInclusiveOften no uplift

Sources: CIPD 2024 reward management survey, employer published terms, and union-negotiated framework agreements. Individual employers may differ from sector norms; check the specific contract.

The Bank Holiday Wording

The phrasing "28 days inclusive of bank holidays" means the worker gets 28 days of paid leave, of which 8 will be the bank holidays. The worker has 20 days to take at other times. This is most common in retail, hospitality, and other sectors where the bank holiday is a working day.

The phrasing "25 days plus 8 bank holidays" means the worker gets 33 paid days off in total: 25 for their own use plus the 8 bank holidays as additional paid time off. This is the standard office pattern. Most office workers do not need to apply for the bank holidays; they are simply non-working days on which the office is closed.

For workers on a 5-day week, the difference is significant: 28 inclusive provides 20 self-managed days plus 8 employer-designated bank holidays. 25 plus 8 provides 25 self-managed days plus 8 employer-designated. The self-managed flexibility is the key benefit. Workers comparing job offers should check this wording carefully. GOV.UK guidance on holiday entitlement rights covers the inclusive-versus-additional distinction.

Service-Based Uplifts

Many contracts include automatic uplifts at specified service milestones. The most common UK pattern is +2 or +3 days at 5 years and +2 or +3 more at 10 years. The Civil Service caps at 30 days after 5 years. The NHS caps at 33 days after 10 years. Local government caps at 27 days after 10 years.

Private sector practice varies. Many large employers run service-based uplifts: a typical pattern is 25 days on entry, 27 days after 3 or 5 years, 30 days after 10 years. Some employers cap earlier (28 days as the maximum); others allow uplifts to continue through to 35+ days for very long-service workers. The detail is in the staff handbook.

For workers approaching a service milestone, the uplift is sometimes pro-rated for the year in which the milestone is reached. A worker hitting 5 years on 1 July may get the extra 2 days for the second half of the calendar leave year, then the full extra 2 days from the next leave year onwards. Other employers grant the full extra 2 days in the year of the milestone. Check the specific employer's rule.

Recent Trends

CIPD's 2024 reward management survey reported a slow but consistent upward trend in UK contractual leave entitlement since 2018. The median figure rose from 25 to 26 days over the 6-year period, driven mainly by service-based uplifts and by employer competition for talent in tight labour markets.

Unlimited leave policies (where the worker takes as much leave as they need with manager approval, with no formal annual cap) appeared at a handful of UK tech firms post-2015 and have spread. In 2024, roughly 8% of UK tech firms over 500 staff offered unlimited leave per the BCS Tech Pay Survey. Outside tech the policy remains rare. The practical effect of unlimited leave is contested: research suggests workers on unlimited schemes actually take less leave than workers on fixed allocations, because of social pressure not to exceed peer norms.

The 4-day week experiment (32-hour week paid as 40-hour week, run as a UK pilot in 2022-23 by 4 Day Week Foundation) does not reduce holiday entitlement; the 5.6-week statutory minimum still applies and is calculated on the actual working pattern. A 4-day worker on a 32-hour week gets 5.6 weeks × 32 hours = 179.2 hours of holiday per year, or 22.4 four-day weeks of leave (which is 22 days of leave because each week of holiday is 4 days off plus the regular 3-day rest pattern).

Worked Examples

Solicitor at mid-tier law firm, 5 years' service

27 days + 8 BH = 35 days total

Salary £65,000. Started at 25 days, uplift to 27 at year 5. Bank holidays are additional. Most firm closes between Christmas and New Year, with the 3 closure days drawn from the 27-day allocation.

Junior tech engineer, 1 year service, £50,000

25 days + 8 BH = 33 days total

Plus unlimited "wellbeing days" (typically 5-10 per year additional, manager approval). Total available: 38-43 days. Tech sector benchmark.

NHS staff nurse Band 5, 6 years' service, full-time

29 days + 8 BH = 37 days total

Agenda for Change tier 2 (5-10 years service). Bank holidays are separate from the 29-day allocation. 37.5-hour week. Holiday balance significant; rostering takes account of the full balance.

Retail floor manager (salaried), 25 days inclusive of BH

25 days total including 8 bank holidays

Self-managed days: 17. Bank holidays are typically worked (retail trades on them), accruing TOIL or premium pay. Total paid time off including TOIL: 25 days plus a few days of TOIL on average.

Not legal advice. Contractual leave entitlements vary widely by employer, sector, and individual contract. Always read the offer letter and staff handbook carefully. For specific contract queries, contact ACAS on 0300 123 1100 or consult a qualified employment lawyer.

Enhanced Contractual FAQ

What is the typical UK contractual holiday entitlement?
The most common UK contractual entitlement is 25 days of annual leave plus 8 bank holidays (33 days total) for office-based workers. Senior roles often get 28 or 30 days. Lower-paid hourly roles typically stay at the statutory 5.6 weeks (28 days inclusive of bank holidays). The headline figure depends on sector, seniority, and employer policy.
How does enhanced contractual leave interact with the statutory minimum?
Statutory leave under the WTR 1998 is the floor; contractual leave is the actual entitlement. The 5.6-week floor cannot be reduced even by contract. Where the contractual figure is higher, it applies in full. The protective rules for the statutory 4 weeks (no payment-in-lieu, carry-over restrictions) apply to the first 4 weeks of leave taken; the additional contractual days can be more flexibly handled.
Do bank holidays count as part of the contractual entitlement?
Depends on the contract. The phrase 'inclusive of bank holidays' means bank holidays count against the leave allocation. The phrase 'plus bank holidays' means they are additional. Check the contract carefully because 'inclusive' is the more common form in retail and hospitality (where bank holidays are working days), while 'plus' is more common in office-based roles where bank holidays are typically not worked.
What about service-based uplifts in contractual entitlement?
Many contracts include service-based uplifts: the worker starts at one level (e.g. 25 days) and gains additional days at service milestones (e.g. 27 at 5 years, 30 at 10 years). The Civil Service, NHS, and local government use this structure formally. Many large private employers do too, though the milestones vary (5-year cycles are common; 3-year and 7-year cycles also seen).
Can the employer reduce contractual leave to save costs?
Not unilaterally. The contractual leave entitlement is part of the contract of employment, and changes require either negotiated variation with the worker or, in unionised workplaces, collective bargaining. The employer can change terms for new hires but cannot retrospectively reduce the entitlement for existing workers without consent. Attempted reductions are typically resisted through industrial action or constructive dismissal claims.

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Updated 2026-04-27