Employment law: England & Wales vs Northern Ireland
Where employment rights diverge between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and how the Industrial Tribunal route compares to the Employment Tribunal.
Overview
Employment law applies broadly across Great Britain (England, Wales, Scotland) under the Employment Rights Act 1996 and Equality Act 2010 framework. Northern Ireland has separate primary legislation — the Employment Rights (Northern Ireland) Order 1996 and (for discrimination) a series of NI-specific Orders. The forum is also different: NI uses the Industrial Tribunal and Fair Employment Tribunal, not the Employment Tribunal. Some rights diverge — for example, NI's Fair Employment and Treatment (Northern Ireland) Order 1998 protects against religious-belief and political-opinion discrimination, which the Equality Act 2010 does not.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Great Britain (England, Wales, Scotland)
Pros
- Single unified Employment Tribunal across GB
- ACAS Early Conciliation pauses the limitation clock
- Equality Act 2010 9 protected characteristics
Cons
- No protection from religious-belief or political-opinion discrimination (unless tied to religion or belief)
- Tribunal backlogs in some regions
Best For
Employees based in GB; cross-border employers with both GB and NI staff (case-by-case)
Northern Ireland
Pros
- Religious-belief and political-opinion discrimination protected under FETO 1998
- Labour Relations Agency conciliation (NI equivalent of ACAS)
- Some NI-specific protections in family leave and sick pay
Cons
- Separate procedural code — Industrial Tribunals Rules of Procedure (NI)
- Smaller pool of specialist solicitors
Best For
Employees based in NI; FETO claims about religion or political opinion
Key Differences
Our Recommendation
Forum is determined by where the employee 'ordinarily worked' (Lawson v Serco principles). For cross-border cases or employees who worked partly in GB and partly in NI, take advice early. The FETO 1998 protections in NI are a meaningful difference — claims about religious or political-opinion discrimination should be brought in NI.