TUPE: What It Is, When It Applies, and What HR Needs to Do About It
- 06 October 2025
- Employment
If you have ever been through a business sale, outsourcing, or insourcing exercise, chances are someone muttered the word “TUPE”, and maybe everyone suddenly looked nervous!
But fear not, TUPE is not a completely insurmountable area of law. Remember, it is there to ensure employees are not left in the lurch when the business they are working for changes hands.
In this article, we will walk you through:
What is TUPE?
TUPE stands for the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006. It is a piece of UK legislation designed to protect employees and employee rights when the business they work for changes owner. Essentially the legislation ensures that the staff and liabilities automatically move across to the transferee (the incoming employer) from the transferor (the outgoing employer).
TUPE makes sure that:
When Does TUPE Apply?
TUPE applies when a business or part of a business is transferred from one employer to another, whether through a sale, outsourcing, insourcing, or a service provision change.
TUPE applies in two main situations:
This is where an economic entity (an organised grouping of resources which has the objective of pursuing an economic activity) moves from one owner to another.
A transfer of an economic entity is most evident in a business sale, typically involving assets like equipment, premises, customers, staff, and goodwill. To determine if TUPE applies, it is important to identify the undertaking in question and assess whether it has transferred with its identity retained. Generally, if activities and customers remain the same and staff are still needed, then the identity is likely retained.
Common in outsourcing and facilities management, these include:
To apply, the service must involve an organised grouping of employees whose principal purpose is carrying out the relevant activities which are switching from one employer to another.
When Does TUPE Not Apply?
TUPE is wide-ranging, but not limitless. It will generally not apply where:
TUPE applies when a business or part of a business is transferred from one employer to another, whether through a sale, outsourcing, insourcing, or a service provision change.
What Steps Must Employers Take to Comply with TUPE?
Whether you are the outgoing employer (the “transferor”) or the incoming one (the “transferee”), you will have legal responsibilities. Here is what needs to happen:
Figure out which employees are “assigned” to the transferring business or service, as TUPE only applies to employees who are permanently assigned to the relevant undertaking or organised grouping of employees. You may need to consider the following to determine whether an employee is assigned or not:
– does the employee do other activities in practice?
– is the employee temporarily allocated to the group?
– physical proximity to other employees in the group.
The outgoing employer must give the new employer key information about the transferring employees, including:
This must be provided at least 28 days before the transfer. If a transferor fails to comply with the ELI obligations, an Employment Tribunal may order it to pay the transferee compensation.
Both employers must:
Failing to inform and consult can result in protective awards of up to 13 weeks’ gross pay per affected employee. Claims may be brought against either or both of the transferor and the transferee for failure to inform and consult.
The new employer takes on employees as if nothing had changed. All their existing rights, obligations, and liabilities transfer with them.
TUPE FAQs (Quickfire Answers)
TUPE can be a legal minefield, but it does not have to be. With proper planning, early consultation, and the right advice, HR leaders can steer their organisations through transfers smoothly and safely.
We advise HR teams and businesses at every stage, from due diligence to managing risk post-transfer. Get in touch to speak to one of our employment law specialists.
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Disclaimer
This information is for guidance purposes only and should not be regarded as a substitute for taking legal advice. Please refer to the full General Notices on our website.