দাবিত্যাগ: এটি আইনি পরামর্শ নয়। আইন ও মামলা আইন পরিবর্তন হয়। আপনার নির্দিষ্ট পরিস্থিতির জন্য সর্বদা একজন যোগ্য আইনজীবীর সাথে পরামর্শ করুন।

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Employment Law
Updated 2026-04-09

Preparation Checklist for a Workplace Grievance Meeting

How to prepare effectively for a formal workplace grievance meeting with your employer.

Overview

The ACAS Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures (2015) sets out minimum standards for grievance procedures. An employer's failure to follow the Code can result in a 25% uplift in any tribunal award. You have the right to be accompanied by a trade union representative or workplace colleague at any formal grievance meeting (Employment Relations Act 1999, s.10). Preparing thoroughly maximises the chance of resolution and protects you if the matter later proceeds to tribunal.

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Documents and Evidence

Your written grievance letter(Essential)

This sets the agenda — the employer must address the specific complaints raised

All documentary evidence supporting your grievance (emails, messages, policies)(Essential)

Copies of any relevant company policies (grievance procedure, equality policy, etc.)(Essential)

Contemporaneous notes of incidents with dates and times(Essential)

Contact details of any witnesses who support your account

Your Case and Desired Outcome

Clear statement of what you want to happen as a result of the grievance(Essential)

Be specific: an apology, a change in management, an investigation, compensation, etc.

Note of the specific policy breaches or legal rights you are relying on

Prepared answers to likely questions from the employer

Rights and Follow-up

Confirm your companion is attending (trade union rep or colleague — your right under s.10 Employment Relations Act 1999)(Essential)

Request that the meeting is recorded or that minutes are taken

Plan for follow-up: appeal rights if the outcome is unfavourable

ACAS helpline number (0300 123 1100) for free pre-meeting advice

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