Last updated: 29 May 2026
Restructuring a workforce in Australia has never carried more legal risk than it does right now. Redundancy obligations Australia employers must satisfy under the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) and the National Employment Standards (NES) have been sharpened by successive rounds of reform, with the latest changes reinforcing consultation duties, strengthening employee protections and expanding avenues for unfair dismissal claims. For HR directors, general counsel and SME owners planning headcount reductions in 2026, a single procedural misstep, an inadequate consultation meeting, a poorly documented selection decision, or a missed Services Australia notification, can convert a lawful restructure into costly litigation. This guide provides the litigation-focused, step-by-step compliance playbook that employers need before making any role redundant.
AI Overview, Redundancy Obligations Australia (2026)
Australian employers planning redundancies must satisfy three core duties under the Fair Work Act 2009 and the NES: (1) ensure the redundancy is genuine, the role is no longer required and redeployment within the business is not reasonable; (2) consult affected employees as required by the applicable modern award or enterprise agreement; and (3) pay the correct redundancy pay and notice entitlements based on continuous service. For large-scale redundancies affecting 15 or more employees, employers must also notify Services Australia in writing. Failure to meet any of these requirements exposes the employer to unfair dismissal, adverse-action and sham-redundancy claims before the Fair Work Commission. (Sources: Fair Work Ombudsman; Department of Employment and Workplace Relations.)
Before any restructure proceeds, employers should take three immediate actions:
The redundancy obligations Australia employers must meet are anchored in the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth), the NES contained in Part 2-2 of that Act, and the modern awards and enterprise agreements that overlay statutory minimums. Understanding how these layers interact is the first step toward a defensible restructure.
Section 389 of the Fair Work Act 2009 establishes that a dismissal is a genuine redundancy only if three conditions are satisfied simultaneously:
If any one of these elements is missing, the dismissal is not a genuine redundancy, and the employer loses the statutory defence against an unfair-dismissal application under section 385 of the Act. Industry observers note that the Fair Work Commission has taken an increasingly rigorous approach to scrutinising each element, particularly the redeployment and consultation limbs.
Not every worker is entitled to NES redundancy pay. The Fair Work Act and the Fair Work Ombudsman’s guidance confirm that the following categories are generally excluded from the national employment standards redundancy pay entitlement:
Even where a statutory exclusion applies, employers should check whether a more generous entitlement exists under the applicable modern award, enterprise agreement or individual employment contract. These instruments frequently override NES minimums and create additional redundancy obligations Australia employers must honour.
Accurate calculation of redundancy pay is one of the highest-risk compliance areas. Underpayment, even by a small margin, can trigger a Fair Work Ombudsman investigation, a claim by the employee, or both. The NES redundancy pay scale in section 119 of the Fair Work Act 2009 sets the statutory minimum.
| Period of Continuous Service | NES Redundancy Pay (Weeks) | Example, Weekly Base Rate of $2,000 |
|---|---|---|
| At least 1 year but less than 2 | 4 weeks | $8,000 |
| At least 2 years but less than 3 | 6 weeks | $12,000 |
| At least 3 years but less than 4 | 7 weeks | $14,000 |
| At least 4 years but less than 5 | 8 weeks | $16,000 |
| At least 5 years but less than 6 | 10 weeks | $20,000 |
| At least 6 years but less than 7 | 11 weeks | $22,000 |
| At least 7 years but less than 8 | 13 weeks | $26,000 |
| At least 8 years but less than 9 | 14 weeks | $28,000 |
| At least 9 years but less than 10 | 16 weeks | $32,000 |
| 10 years or more | See Fair Work guidance on capping rules | Varies, check applicable award or agreement |
Source: Fair Work Ombudsman, Redundancy.
Worked examples. Consider an employee earning a base rate of $2,000 per week for ordinary hours:
In addition to redundancy pay, employers must provide the minimum notice period prescribed by section 117 of the Fair Work Act. The NES notice scale is:
An additional week of notice applies if the employee is over 45 years of age and has completed at least 2 years of continuous service. Employers may elect to pay in lieu of notice, but should document this decision clearly and ensure the payment covers base rate, applicable loadings and any other amounts required under the relevant instrument.
A genuine redundancy payment receives concessional tax treatment under Australian tax law, up to a tax-free limit that is indexed annually by the ATO. Employers should confirm the current-year limit and ensure payroll systems apply the correct tax withholding. Superannuation guarantee contributions are generally not payable on genuine redundancy payments that exceed the employee’s ordinary earnings, but employers should verify this with their tax adviser for each affected employee to avoid unexpected exposure.
Consultation is the area where employers most frequently fail, and it is the element that transforms an otherwise lawful restructure into a successful unfair-dismissal claim. The redundancy consultation obligations imposed on employers are not optional courtesies; they are enforceable legal duties that the Fair Work Commission will scrutinise closely.
The obligation to consult about redundancy arises from the modern award or enterprise agreement that covers the affected employees, not from the Fair Work Act itself. Almost every modern award and enterprise agreement in force in 2026 contains a consultation clause that is triggered when an employer has made a definite decision to introduce a major change in the workplace that is likely to have a significant effect on employees. Redundancy of one or more roles plainly satisfies this threshold.
Employers should identify the specific consultation clause in the relevant instrument before commencing any restructure. The consultation term may prescribe particular timeframes, information-disclosure requirements and representative-access rights that go beyond general Fair Work Commission guidance.
While exact requirements vary by instrument, the following steps reflect the minimum best practice that the Fair Work Commission expects, and that will materially reduce redundancy litigation risk:
Where an employer proposes to dismiss 15 or more employees for reasons of an economic, technological, structural or similar nature, written notification must be given to Services Australia (formerly Centrelink). This obligation, set out in section 530 of the Fair Work Act 2009, exists to allow the government to provide employment services to affected workers. Failure to comply is a breach of the Act and may also be raised as evidence of a flawed process in any subsequent litigation. The Department of Employment and Workplace Relations publishes a Redundancy Information Statement that employers should provide to every affected employee at or before the time of dismissal.
When multiple employees hold similar roles and only some positions are being made redundant, the selection process becomes the highest-risk element of the restructure. Poor selection methodology is a primary driver of sham-redundancy findings and discrimination claims under restructuring employment law Australia principles.
Employers should apply an objective, documented selection matrix that scores affected employees against criteria relevant to the ongoing business need. A defensible matrix typically includes measurable factors such as:
| Selection Criterion | Weighting | Evidence Source |
|---|---|---|
| Skills, qualifications and certifications relevant to remaining roles | 30% | HR records, training database |
| Performance ratings (last 2 review cycles) | 25% | Documented performance reviews |
| Length of service | 15% | Payroll records |
| Disciplinary record | 15% | HR file |
| Adaptability / cross-functional capability | 15% | Manager assessment with examples |
Every score should be recorded and retained. If a claim is later filed, the employer will need to demonstrate that the selection was made on objective operational grounds, not on the basis of personal preference, age, gender, disability, union membership or any other protected attribute.
Redeployment is not a box to tick, it is a substantive obligation. The employer must consider whether there is any reasonably suitable vacant position within the business or an associated entity. Industry observers expect the Fair Work Commission to give close attention to the adequacy of redeployment efforts, particularly where the employer is a large or multi-site organisation with numerous vacancies.
A redundancy that fails any element of the genuine-redundancy test in section 389 of the Fair Work Act is exposed to challenge. The redundancy litigation risk for employers has increased in the current environment as the Fair Work Commission and the Federal Court apply heightened scrutiny to consultation compliance and redeployment efforts. Understanding the main avenues of challenge is essential for any employer navigating redundancy obligations Australia rules require.
A “sham redundancy” occurs where the employer claims a role is redundant but the operational reality demonstrates otherwise. The Fair Work Commission will examine whether the role was genuinely abolished or whether it continues to exist, perhaps under a different title, or performed by a contractor, or redistributed among remaining staff without a genuine change in operational requirements.
Common indicators that the Commission treats as red flags include:
Where the Commission finds that a redundancy was not genuine, the typical remedies include reinstatement to the employee’s former position (or a comparable role) and compensation of up to 26 weeks’ pay. In adverse-action claims under Part 3-1 of the Act, the remedies can be significantly larger and the burden of proof shifts to the employer.
Large-scale redundancies carry the additional risk of group unfair-dismissal applications or representative complaints. Where multiple employees are dismissed in a single restructure and they share a common grievance, for example, a failure to consult under the enterprise agreement, or a discriminatory pattern in selection, individual claims may be consolidated or run as a representative proceeding. Early indications suggest that unions and employee advocacy groups are increasingly coordinating group filings following mass redundancy events, particularly in sectors undergoing rapid technological change.
Employers can materially reduce exposure by engaging with early dispute-resolution mechanisms before positions are formally terminated:
The following 12-step checklist is designed as a sequential playbook that employers should work through from the earliest planning stage to post-termination record keeping. Each step directly addresses one or more elements of the redundancy obligations Australia employers must satisfy to defend any subsequent claim.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Andrew Chakrabarty at Adero Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The following annotated templates provide a starting framework for the key documents employers need during a redundancy process. Each should be adapted to the specific facts of the restructure and reviewed by an employment-law practitioner before use.
Redundancy obligations Australia employers face in 2026 are more complex and more heavily scrutinised than at any previous point. The intersection of updated NES entitlements, instrument-specific consultation duties and an assertive Fair Work Commission means that employers cannot afford to treat redundancy as a routine HR exercise. A defensible restructure requires legal precision at every stage, from the initial business-case documentation through selection, consultation, redeployment and final payment.
Global Law Experts connects organisations with experienced employment-litigation practitioners across Australia who advise on restructures, defend unfair-dismissal and sham-redundancy claims, and conduct pre-termination compliance audits. To find the right adviser for your restructure, visit the Australia lawyer directory or request a confidential consultation through the contact form below.
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