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who is entitled to severance pay in uganda

Who Is Entitled to Severance Pay in Uganda? Eligibility, Six‑month Test & 2026 Updates

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Understanding who is entitled to severance pay in Uganda is one of the most consequential compliance questions an employer can face, and the answer has shifted materially since the Employment (Amendment) Act 2025 took effect. Part IX of the Employment Act, 2006 (Cap. 226), specifically Sections 87 through 92, establishes the core framework, setting out that employees who have completed at least six months of continuous service may qualify for a severance allowance when their employment ends for qualifying reasons. The 2025 amendments, analysed in detail by leading Kampala law firms during May 2026, have broadened the grounds that trigger entitlement and refined employer consultation obligations.

This guide distils the statutory rules, the six‑month service test, calculation mechanics, exceptions, and the practical steps employers must follow to stay compliant as of June 2026.

This article is designed for HR managers, in‑house counsel and business owners operating in Uganda who need clear, actionable rules, not generic summaries. Use the quick employer checklist below as a starting reference, then read on for the full statutory analysis.

  • Verify continuous service. Has the employee completed at least six months of unbroken service? If yes, a severance obligation may arise.
  • Identify the qualifying event. Is the termination driven by redundancy, insolvency, employer death, incapacity, or another ground covered by Part IX?
  • Negotiate and document. Section 89 of the Employment Act requires the severance amount to be agreed between the employer and the employee (or their union representative). There is no fixed statutory formula, document every step.

Legal Framework: The Employment Act and 2025–2026 Amendments

Severance pay in Uganda is governed primarily by Part IX of the Employment Act, 2006. This legislation replaced earlier piecemeal provisions and consolidated the rules around termination payments into a dedicated statutory code. The Act was published in full by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development (MGLSD) and remains accessible through the Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII) consolidated text.

Part IX comprises Sections 87 to 92. Section 87 establishes the entitlement principle: an employee who has served an employer for a continuous period of not less than six months is eligible for a severance allowance where the employment terminates in specified circumstances. Section 88 addresses the obligation of the employer to pay. Section 89 deals with the calculation, notably, it provides that the amount shall be negotiated between the employer and the employee or the employee’s representative (typically a trade union). Section 90 covers situations where severance is not payable, Section 91 addresses the employer’s failure to pay, and Section 92 sets out remedies available to the aggrieved employee.

The Employment (Amendment) Act 2025, whose practical effects have been analysed by Kampala Associated Advocates (KAA) and MMAKS Advocates as recently as May 2026, introduced several changes relevant to severance entitlement. Industry observers note that the key practical effects for employers include the following adjustments.

Key Statute Provisions Employers Must Know

  • Section 87, Entitlement trigger. An employee with six or more months of continuous service qualifies for severance when employment ends for a reason covered by Part IX.
  • Section 89, Calculation. “The amount of severance allowance shall be negotiated between the employer and the employee or the employee’s representative.”
  • Section 90, Exclusions. No allowance is payable where the employee has been summarily dismissed for lawful cause, or where the employee unreasonably refuses a suitable offer of re‑employment.
  • Section 91, Failure to pay. An employer who fails to pay a severance allowance commits an offence and is liable to statutory penalties.

How the 2025 Amendments Changed Entitlement

  • Expanded qualifying grounds. The amendments broadened the circumstances in which severance becomes payable, including clearer treatment of termination arising from the employee’s physical incapacity.
  • Strengthened consultation obligations. Employers pursuing redundancy‑related terminations now face more prescriptive consultation and notification requirements, including earlier engagement with trade unions and the Labour Commissioner.
  • Enhanced remedies. The scope of remedies available through the Labour Officer and Industrial Court has been reinforced, increasing the risk profile for employers who fail to follow the prescribed process.
  • Clarified employer documentation duties. Amendments emphasise that employers must provide written computation statements and maintain records of severance negotiations.

For a broader overview of how these changes affect workplace compliance, see the detailed analysis in Uganda employment law changes 2026.

Who Is Entitled to Severance Pay in Uganda? Qualifying Events and the Six‑Month Service Test

An employee qualifies for severance pay in Uganda when two conditions are met: the employee has completed at least six months of continuous service, and the employment ends for a qualifying reason under Part IX of the Employment Act, 2006.

Qualifying Events That Trigger Severance

The Employment Act identifies several circumstances in which severance becomes payable. Employers should treat the following as the core qualifying events:

  • Redundancy. The employee’s position is eliminated due to organisational restructuring, technological change, economic downturn or operational necessity.
  • Employer insolvency or business closure. The business ceases to operate, whether through liquidation, winding‑up or permanent closure.
  • Death of the employer. Where the employment relationship is personal to a sole‑proprietor employer, the employer’s death terminates the contract and severance falls due.
  • Employee incapacity. Termination arising because the employee can no longer perform the duties of the role owing to illness or physical incapacity, a ground that the 2025 amendments have clarified.
  • Unfair dismissal. Where a court or tribunal finds that the termination of employment in Uganda was unfair, the employee may be awarded severance (or enhanced compensation) as part of the remedy.
  • Other employer‑initiated termination. Terminations initiated by the employer for reasons not amounting to summary dismissal may, depending on the circumstances and contract terms, trigger a severance obligation.

Continuous Service: How to Count the Six Months

The six‑month threshold is measured as continuous service with the same employer. In practice, the following rules apply:

  • Probation periods count. Time served during a probationary period is included in the calculation of continuous service, provided the employee was on the employer’s payroll.
  • Fixed‑term contracts. Successive fixed‑term contracts with the same employer are aggregated. An employer cannot avoid severance obligations by rolling an employee through multiple short‑term contracts that collectively exceed six months.
  • Part‑time employees. Part‑time workers are covered by the Employment Act. If a part‑time employee has served continuously for six months, the entitlement arises.
  • Breaks in service. Genuine breaks, where the employment relationship ends and a new contract is entered into later, may restart the clock. However, industry observers caution that artificial breaks designed solely to defeat severance claims are likely to be challenged before the Industrial Court.

Employers should maintain accurate records of start dates, contract renewals and any breaks in service. The burden of proving that the six‑month threshold has not been met will, in practical terms, fall on the employer if the matter is disputed.

Exceptions: Who Is Not Eligible for Severance Pay in Uganda

Not every departing employee qualifies. Section 90 of the Employment Act and established practice recognise the following exclusions.

Resignation vs Dismissal

An employee who voluntarily resigns is generally not entitled to severance pay. The rationale is straightforward: severance is designed to cushion involuntary loss of employment, not voluntary departure. However, where a collective bargaining agreement or individual employment contract expressly provides for a severance payment upon resignation, that contractual term prevails. Employers should therefore audit their contracts and CBAs to confirm whether resignation triggers any payment obligation.

A separate and increasingly important category is constructive dismissal, where the employee resigns because the employer’s conduct has made continued employment intolerable. If a court or Labour Officer finds constructive dismissal, the resignation is reclassified as a termination by the employer, and severance entitlement may follow. Employers should document all workplace changes carefully to defend against such claims.

Summary Dismissal for Serious Misconduct

Section 90 provides that an employee who has been lawfully and summarily dismissed is not entitled to severance. Summary dismissal is the immediate termination of employment without notice, permitted only in cases of serious misconduct. Common grounds include:

  • Theft or fraud against the employer
  • Gross insubordination or wilful disobedience of a lawful order
  • Habitual neglect of duties
  • Conduct that endangers the safety of co‑workers
  • Conviction of a criminal offence related to employment

The employer must follow a fair disciplinary process and document the misconduct. A poorly documented summary dismissal may be overturned by the Industrial Court, converting the case into an unfair dismissal and reinstating severance entitlement. For more on the legal distinction, see compensation for dismissal or summary dismissal.

Additionally, an employee who unreasonably refuses a suitable offer of re‑employment from the same employer (for instance, into a comparable role at the same terms) is not entitled to severance.

Severance Pay Calculation in Uganda: Negotiation, Worked Examples and Market Practice

Section 89 of the Employment Act makes the severance pay calculation in Uganda fundamentally different from jurisdictions that prescribe a fixed formula. The Act requires the amount to be negotiated between the employer and the employee or the employee’s representative.

This means there is no single statutory multiplier (such as “two weeks per year of service”) mandated by law. Instead, the parties are expected to arrive at an agreed figure. In practice, the following factors typically shape the negotiation:

  • Length of continuous service
  • The employee’s basic monthly salary at the date of termination
  • The reason for termination
  • Any applicable collective bargaining agreement
  • The employer’s financial position (particularly in insolvency scenarios)
  • Market norms within the sector

While the Act does not prescribe a formula, common market practice in Uganda, widely reported by local practitioners and employer compliance platforms, tends to fall in the range of one to four weeks’ basic salary per completed year of service. This is not a legal minimum; it is a negotiation benchmark.

Worked Examples

Example A, Short‑service redundancy. An employee earning UGX 2,000,000 per month is made redundant after eight months of continuous service. The employer and the employee negotiate a severance package equivalent to two weeks’ salary: UGX 1,000,000.

Example B, Long‑service redundancy. An employee earning UGX 3,500,000 per month is made redundant after five years of continuous service. Using a market benchmark of two weeks per year, the calculation would be: 5 years × 2 weeks × (UGX 3,500,000 ÷ 4 weeks) = UGX 8,750,000. The employer and union representative agree on this figure and document it in a written severance agreement.

Termination Reason Severance Entitlement (Statutory / Market Practice) Employer Notes & Timeline
Redundancy Eligible if continuous service ≥ 6 months; amount negotiable (market norm: 1–4 weeks per year) Consult union (if any); follow consultation steps and selection criteria
Summary dismissal (serious misconduct) No severance payable Document misconduct; follow disciplinary procedure
Employer insolvency / closure Eligible if continuous service ≥ 6 months Pay from employer’s estate; employees may claim through liquidator / Labour Officer
Employee incapacity Eligible if continuous service ≥ 6 months; amount negotiable Obtain medical evidence; consult employee on terms
Resignation (voluntary) Generally not eligible unless contract/CBA provides otherwise Audit employment contracts for non‑standard severance clauses

When Severance Is Contractually Fixed

Some employers embed a severance formula directly into the employment contract or company handbook, for example, “three weeks’ basic salary per completed year of service.” Where such a clause exists and is lawful, it binds both parties and removes the need for negotiation under Section 89. Employers drafting such clauses should ensure they meet or exceed any floor established by a relevant CBA and that the wording is unambiguous. For guidance on structuring termination payments, see severance package or termination, what you should know.

Tax and Benefit Treatment

Severance payments are subject to Ugandan income tax rules. The Income Tax Act provides specific treatment for terminal benefits, but the precise tax liability depends on the structure of the payment and the employee’s total income in the year of receipt. Employers should obtain tax advice before processing the payment to ensure correct withholding. For related tax developments, industry observers recommend reviewing the latest guidance on Uganda’s fiscal changes.

Employer Procedure: Notice, Redundancy Process and Documentation

Complying with the redundancy procedure in Uganda requires employers to follow a structured process, not simply issue a cheque. The Employment Act, reinforced by the 2025 amendments, prescribes consultation, notification and documentation steps.

Notification Obligations, Union and Labour Commissioner

Where employees are represented by a trade union, the employer must consult with the union before effecting redundancies. The 2025 amendments have tightened the timing requirements: employers are expected to initiate consultations at the earliest practicable stage. Where required by the Act, the Labour Commissioner must also be notified, particularly in cases of mass redundancy. Notice periods in Uganda vary by contract and length of service, and employers must provide the minimum statutory notice or pay in lieu.

Employer Compliance Checklist

  1. Assess eligibility. Confirm whether each affected employee has completed six months of continuous service and whether the termination ground falls within Part IX.
  2. Consult. Engage the employee (and union, if applicable) in a genuine consultation process. Record dates, attendees and outcomes.
  3. Apply fair selection criteria. Where multiple employees hold similar roles, use objective, non‑discriminatory criteria (e.g., last‑in‑first‑out, performance scores, skills assessments).
  4. Issue written notice. Provide the employee with written notice of termination stating the effective date and the reason.
  5. Prepare a computation statement. Set out the proposed severance amount, the basis for the calculation and any other terminal benefits (outstanding leave, gratuity, pension contributions).
  6. Negotiate and document agreement. Conduct the Section 89 negotiation, record the agreed amount and have both parties sign a written severance agreement.
  7. Make payment. Pay the agreed severance on or before the last day of employment, or as agreed in the severance agreement.
  8. Notify the Labour Officer / Labour Commissioner. File any required notifications, particularly for mass redundancies.
  9. Retain records. Keep copies of all notices, computation statements, meeting minutes, signed agreements and payment receipts for at least five years.

Remedies, Claims and Where to Get Help

An employee who believes they have been denied lawful severance has several avenues of recourse under Ugandan law.

The first step is to file a complaint with the nearest Labour Officer. Labour Officers are empowered to mediate and conciliate disputes between employers and employees. If conciliation fails, the matter can be referred to the Industrial Court, which has jurisdiction over employment disputes including unfair dismissal in Uganda and unpaid terminal benefits.

Section 91 of the Employment Act provides that an employer who fails to pay a severance allowance commits an offence. The penalties include fines and, in persistent cases, the possibility of court orders directing payment. The 2025 amendments have enhanced enforcement mechanisms, making non‑compliance a higher‑risk proposition for employers.

How Employers Avoid Disputes

  • Negotiate before termination takes effect. Conclude the Section 89 negotiation and obtain a signed agreement before the employee’s last working day.
  • Use a neutral calculation method. Where no CBA or contract formula exists, propose a market‑benchmark figure supported by a transparent computation.
  • Offer a written settlement. A signed settlement agreement that includes a release of claims reduces the likelihood of subsequent Labour Officer or Industrial Court proceedings.
  • Seek legal advice early. Complex cases, mass redundancies, insolvency scenarios, constructive dismissal allegations, benefit from early engagement with an employment lawyer in Uganda.

Practical Examples and Employer Templates

Employers preparing for a severance scenario should consider building the following documents into their standard termination toolkit:

  • Termination letter template. A clear letter stating the employee’s name, role, reason for termination, effective date, notice period served (or payment in lieu) and a reference to the enclosed severance computation statement.
  • Severance computation sheet. A table showing: basic monthly salary, length of continuous service (start date to termination date), agreed multiplier or benchmark, total severance amount, any deductions (tax, outstanding advances) and net amount payable.
  • Meeting‑notes checklist. A pro‑forma record for consultation meetings: date, attendees, issues discussed, employee’s or union representative’s response, agreed next steps.
  • Signed severance agreement. A short agreement documenting the negotiated amount, payment date and a mutual release of claims, signed by both parties.

Employers are encouraged to have all template documents reviewed by qualified legal counsel before first use, to ensure compliance with the Employment Act and any applicable CBA.

Conclusion: Action Checklist for Employers

Determining who is entitled to severance pay in Uganda requires employers to assess three things in sequence: whether the employee has completed six months of continuous service, whether the termination ground is a qualifying event under Part IX of the Employment Act, and whether any exclusion (summary dismissal, refusal of re‑employment, voluntary resignation) applies. The severance pay calculation in Uganda is not formulaic, Section 89 mandates negotiation, but market norms and well‑drafted contracts can provide a practical framework.

The 2025 amendments have raised the stakes: broader qualifying grounds, stricter consultation obligations and enhanced remedies mean that employers who cut corners face real financial and reputational risk. The action checklist is straightforward:

  • Audit all employment contracts and CBAs for severance clauses.
  • Build a standard termination toolkit (letter, computation sheet, meeting record, settlement agreement).
  • Train HR teams on the six‑month test, qualifying events and Section 89 negotiation obligations.
  • Engage an employment lawyer before initiating any mass redundancy or contested termination.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mbanza Martin Kalemera at Birungyi Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. The Employment Act, 2006, Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development (MGLSD)
  2. ULII, Consolidated Employment Act
  3. Parliament of Uganda, The Employment Act, 2006
  4. Kampala Associated Advocates (KAA), Key Employment Law Amendments 2026
  5. MMAKS Advocates, Employment Amendment Act 2025: What Every Employer Needs to Know
  6. ULII, Section 89 (Severance Calculation)
  7. WageIndicator, Uganda Notice and Severance
  8. Playroll, Uganda Compliance Hub
  9. CXC Global, End of Employment in Uganda

FAQs

Who is entitled to severance pay in Uganda?
Under Section 87 of the Employment Act, 2006 (as amended), any employee who has completed at least six months of continuous service with the same employer is entitled to a severance allowance when their employment ends for a qualifying reason, such as redundancy, employer insolvency, business closure, or employee incapacity. The Employment (Amendment) Act 2025 has broadened the qualifying grounds.
Section 89 of the Employment Act provides that the amount is negotiated between the employer and the employee or the employee’s representative (e.g., a trade union). There is no fixed statutory formula. In practice, employers commonly offer between one and four weeks’ basic salary per completed year of service, though this is a market benchmark rather than a legal requirement.
Generally, no. Severance pay is designed for involuntary terminations. However, if the employment contract or a collective bargaining agreement expressly provides for a severance payment upon resignation, that contractual provision applies. Employers should review their contracts to confirm. Note that constructive dismissal, where an employee resigns due to the employer’s unreasonable conduct, may be reclassified as a termination by the employer, potentially triggering severance.
The test measures whether the employee has completed at least six months of unbroken service with the same employer. Probation periods and time spent on successive fixed‑term contracts count toward the threshold. Genuine breaks in employment may restart the clock, but artificial breaks designed to avoid severance obligations are likely to be challenged.
The employee can file a complaint with a Labour Officer, who will attempt conciliation. If that fails, the matter may be referred to the Industrial Court. Under Section 91 of the Employment Act, failure to pay a severance allowance is an offence, and the employer may face fines and court orders directing payment.
Where employees are represented by a trade union, the employer must consult the union before effecting redundancies. The 2025 amendments require this consultation to begin at the earliest practicable stage. In mass redundancy situations, the Labour Commissioner must also be notified. Employers should document all notifications and retain copies for their records.
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Who Is Entitled to Severance Pay in Uganda? Eligibility, Six‑month Test & 2026 Updates

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