Here’s a concise update on recent developments around employment tribunals.
Core update
- Trading between tribunal delays and staffing pressures remain a notable theme in the UK Employment Tribunals system, with reports highlighting judge shortages and rising new claims contributing to longer waiting times in several regions. This has been discussed by practitioner groups and law firms as of early 2026, noting that London and surrounding areas face the most acute backlogs. [source summaries from legal briefing outlets and practitioner blogs, April 2026]
Key points for claimants and employers
- Waiting times: In many regions, hearings can be measured in years rather than weeks, with longer lead times particularly in London and the South East. This is driven by a combination of increased case volumes and limited tribunal judicial capacity. [source summaries from practitioner groups, April 2026]
- New claims volumes: Post-pandemic levels of new single claims remain high, with discrimination-related matters forming a significant portion of cases. This shift has implications for case management and allocation timelines. [source summaries from practitioner groups, April 2026]
- ACAS early conciliation: Notifications to ACAS continue at historically high levels as part of the pre-claim process, with typical timelines from notification to conciliator allocation around several weeks, though volumes may influence processing times. [source summaries from practitioner groups, April 2026]
What this could mean for stakeholders
- For individuals: Expect potential longer waits to have claims heard; consider early mediation options where feasible and keep in touch with the tribunal for any updates on allocation.
- For employers: Plan for extended resolution timelines in disputes, and consider early dispute resolution strategies (ACAS conciliation, internal investigations) to reduce tribunal load and potential costs.
- For policymakers and practitioners: Ongoing commentary points to the need for adequate judge recruitment, resource allocation, and potential reforms to help reduce backlogs.
If you’d like, I can:
- Narrow this to a specific region (e.g., London, Midlands) and summarize current interim waiting times.
- Pull the latest official tribunal announcements or recent practitioner analyses from 2026 and present a compact fact sheet.
- Create a quick comparison table of typical timelines by region and case type, with brief notes on factors driving delays.
Would you like me to tailor this to a particular region or produce a concise timeline table? If you prefer, I can also point you to recent practitioner analyses or official updates for deeper reading.