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Part of the absence management cluster
For the wider process around sickness, fit notes, return-to-work meetings, trigger reviews, reasonable adjustments and records, see the Absence Management UK guide. For policy wording across leave types, use the time-off policy templates hub.
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Quick answer

A return-to-work interview is not legally required in the UK, but ACAS strongly recommends one after every period of sickness absence. The interview is a private, supportive conversation · not a disciplinary · that confirms the employee is fit to return, agrees any reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010, and records details for absence-management records. Use the 9-clause policy template below as a starting point.

What is a return-to-work interview?

A return-to-work interview · sometimes called a return-to-work meeting · is a short, structured conversation between a returning employee and their line manager held shortly after the employee returns from sickness absence. ACAS describes it as "often just an informal chat between an employee and their line manager".

The purpose is fivefold:

The interview is not a disciplinary, and managers should not approach it that way. If genuine misconduct concerns arise (for example, suspected dishonest sickness reporting), they go through a separate disciplinary procedure.

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Not a statutory requirement

There is no UK legislation that requires an employer to hold a return-to-work interview. ACAS confirms this directly: "It's not a legal requirement to have a return to work meeting." The right to hold one · and the practical case for doing so · sits inside an employer's general absence-management framework.

That said, several pieces of UK employment law shape how the interview should be conducted:

Legal source Why it matters for return-to-work interviews
Equality Act 2010 If the absence relates to a disability, the employer must consider reasonable adjustments. The return-to-work meeting is the natural place to discuss them.
Employment Rights Act 1996, s.98 Persistent or long-term absence can be a fair reason for capability dismissal · but only if the employer has followed a fair procedure including consultation. Documented return-to-work interviews evidence that consultation.
UK GDPR & Data Protection Act 2018 Health information is special category personal data. Notes from the meeting must be stored securely, kept on a strict need-to-know basis, and only retained for as long as needed.
Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 The employer's general duty of care includes assessing whether returning to work is safe given the recent illness. The meeting is the opportunity to do this in writing.
ACAS Code of Practice Not law, but employment tribunals consider ACAS guidance when judging the fairness of any subsequent absence-related decision.

Why have a written policy

A short written policy turns a habit into a system. Without one, line managers do interviews differently, some skip them when they're busy, and the records you might one day need at tribunal don't exist. With one:

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Consistency
Every employee gets the same treatment, reducing discrimination risk.
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Fairness
Documented procedure that any tribunal would expect to see.
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Early intervention
Reasonable adjustments and phased returns get caught quickly.
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Pattern detection
Recurring absences flag before they hit a capability threshold.

9-clause policy template

This is a working template · copy it, adapt it to your business, and have your usual employment-law adviser sign it off before you publish. Replace placeholders in square brackets. Or just download the Word version at the top of this article.

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Clause 1: Purpose and scope

This policy sets out [Company Name]'s approach to managing return-to-work interviews after sickness absence. It applies to all employees from their first day of employment. The policy supports our wider Sickness Absence Policy and is read alongside it.

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Clause 2: When an interview is held

A return-to-work interview will be held with every employee after every period of sickness absence, including a single day. The meeting will normally take place on the employee's first day back at work, or as soon as practicable thereafter. For absences of [4] or more weeks (long-term absence under GOV.UK guidance), a pre-return discussion may also take place by telephone or video before the employee returns.

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Clause 3: Who conducts the interview

The interview is normally conducted by the employee's direct line manager. For longer-term absences, those involving disability, occupational health referrals, or sensitive personal circumstances, [HR / People Lead] may attend or conduct the meeting in place of the line manager. Where a line manager is unavailable, a deputy manager will conduct the meeting on their return.

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Clause 4: How the interview is conducted

The meeting is informal, supportive in tone, and confidential. It is not a disciplinary meeting. It will be held in private (face-to-face or by video call), without interruption, and is expected to last 15-30 minutes for short absences and longer for longer absences. The employee may bring a colleague or trade union representative if they wish, but this is not required.

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Clause 5: Topics covered

The manager will normally discuss: whether the employee feels well enough to return; the reason for the absence; any recommendations on a fit note or from a doctor; any reasonable adjustments needed; any work updates the employee missed; and what (if anything) the employee would like colleagues to know about the absence. The manager will not press for medical detail beyond what the employee chooses to share.

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Clause 6: Reasonable adjustments and phased return

Where the employee may have a disability under the Equality Act 2010, or where a fit note recommends adjustments, the manager will discuss reasonable adjustments and any phased return. This may include reduced hours, a graduated return to full duties, changes to the workstation, or a referral to occupational health. Any agreed changes will be confirmed in writing within five working days.

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Clause 7: Recording the meeting

The manager will complete a brief return-to-work record covering: dates of absence, reason given, any agreed adjustments, agreed follow-up actions, and a copy of the fit note where applicable. The employee will be given a copy and asked to confirm the record is accurate. Records are stored confidentially in line with our Data Protection Policy and are accessed only on a need-to-know basis.

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Clause 8: Trigger points

The Sickness Absence Policy sets out trigger points which, when reached, trigger a more formal absence review. Reaching a trigger point is not in itself a disciplinary matter. Reasonable adjustments-related absence, pregnancy-related absence, and absence covered by other statutory leave (such as time off for dependants) will not count towards trigger points.

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Clause 9: Policy review and contact

This policy is reviewed annually, or sooner where there is a relevant legal or business change. Questions about this policy should be raised with [HR / People Lead]. Employees who feel their return to work has not been handled fairly may raise this through the Grievance Procedure.

Sample questions to ask

Keep these conversational · the goal is a real chat, not a tick-box exercise. Pick the ones that fit the situation rather than running through every question every time. The printable PDF form covers all eight stages with space to write notes alongside.

Stage Sample questions
Welcome How are you feeling? Are you happy to be back?
Reason for absence Are you able to share what was going on? Is everything resolved, or is it ongoing?
Fitness to return Do you feel fully fit to return to your normal duties? Did your GP / fit note suggest any adjustments?
Reasonable adjustments Is there anything we can change at work that would help you stay well? A different start time, fewer hours for a week or two, time off for follow-up appointments?
Underlying causes Was anything at work a factor? Are workload, deadlines, or relationships contributing? Do you feel comfortable raising any concerns?
Confidentiality What would you like colleagues to know about your absence? Anything you would prefer I keep just between us?
Catch-up Here's what changed while you were away. Any questions?
Close Is there anything else you'd like to raise? When would you like a follow-up chat · in a week, a month?
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Avoid these

Do not press for medical detail the employee does not volunteer. Do not link the meeting to disciplinary outcomes. Do not start the meeting with "you've had a lot of time off recently". The interview should put the employee at ease · if it feels like an interrogation, employees come back too soon next time to avoid it, which makes absence worse, not better.

What to record (and what to keep confidential)

The records you keep matter. Too little and you have no evidence of fair process if absence ever escalates to capability. Too much, or shared with the wrong people, and you risk a UK GDPR breach.

Record
What to write down
  • Dates of absence and total days
  • Reason given by the employee
  • Whether a fit note was provided
  • Any agreed reasonable adjustments
  • Phased return arrangements and dates
  • Any follow-up referral (e.g. occupational health)
  • Date of next review meeting if applicable
Keep confidential
What stays between manager and HR
  • Specific medical diagnosis or symptoms
  • Personal circumstances (relationship breakdown, bereavement)
  • Mental health detail beyond what is needed for adjustments
  • Any third-party information disclosed by the employee
  • What the employee asked to keep private

Health information is special category personal data under UK GDPR, requiring an additional lawful basis under Article 9 (typically Article 9(2)(b) · employment law obligations). Storing it requires explicit safeguards: restricted access, secure storage, retention limits, and the rights individuals have under the ICO's employment information guidance apply.

Trigger points and the absence review

Most UK SMEs combine the return-to-work interview policy with absence trigger points · thresholds that, when reached, escalate from a return-to-work chat to a more formal absence review. ACAS notes there are no legal rules about how or when absence should be reviewed, but trigger points must be applied flexibly and never used as automatic disciplinary triggers.

A typical SME framework looks like this:

Trigger What happens
Any single absence Standard return-to-work interview with line manager
3 separate absences in a 6-month rolling period First absence review meeting; HR informed; written summary issued
5 separate absences in a 12-month rolling period Second formal review; informal warning may be considered; occupational health referral discussed
Continuous absence of 4+ weeks Pre-return phased plan; occupational health referral; risk-assessed return
Continuous absence of 8+ weeks Long-term absence review; capability process considered with HR

The key word is review, not punish. ACAS warns that "if employees view the system as a way to punish them, this could cause more absence" · employees come back when they're still ill to avoid hitting the trigger.

Disability and reasonable adjustments

The single most important sensitivity in any return-to-work meeting is disability. Under the Equality Act 2010, an employer who knows (or should reasonably know) an employee has a disability is under a duty to consider reasonable adjustments to remove substantial disadvantage at work.

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Adjust the trigger framework for disability-related absence

ACAS guidance is unambiguous: counting disability-related absence the same way as ordinary sickness can amount to disability discrimination. Common adjustments include not counting disability-related absence towards triggers, increasing trigger thresholds for disabled employees, or applying reasonable adjustments to the absence policy itself.

Adjustments often discussed in return-to-work meetings include:

If the employee may have a disability and the manager isn't sure, an occupational health referral with the employee's consent is usually the next step. The OH report should advise on adjustments rather than diagnose.

Common mistakes to avoid

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Mistake 1: Skipping the meeting because it's "just one day"

Single-day absences add up. Skipping the chat means recurring patterns aren't caught early, and applying the policy inconsistently weakens any later capability case. The 5-minute version is fine for a single-day absence · just have it.

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Mistake 2: Treating it as a disciplinary

The meeting is supportive. If there are conduct concerns, those go through a separate procedure with the right disciplinary protections. Mixing the two is a procedural-fairness problem and risks an unfair-dismissal claim.

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Mistake 3: Counting disability-related absence the same as ordinary sickness

This is one of the most common discrimination issues at tribunal. Disability-related absence often warrants different treatment · either not counting towards trigger points or applying higher thresholds.

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Mistake 4: Letting line managers wing it without training

A 30-minute training session covering the policy, sample questions, when to escalate, and what to record removes most of the risk. ACAS offers training and tailored support if you don't have an in-house HR team.

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Tip: Track every type of absence in one place

The return-to-work policy works much better when the data is in one place. Tracking sickness, holiday, and statutory leave (like time off for dependants and unpaid parental leave) in one tool makes patterns easy to spot. See our statutory sick pay employer guide for the wider sickness absence framework this sits inside.

Frequently asked questions

Are return-to-work interviews a legal requirement in the UK?

No. ACAS confirms that return-to-work interviews are not a legal requirement. They are widely recommended best practice because they help an employer support a returning employee, identify reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010, and spot patterns of absence early. Most UK employers run them after every period of sickness absence, including a single day.

When should a return-to-work interview be held?

ACAS guidance recommends holding the meeting as soon as possible after the employee returns · ideally on their first day back, before they get pulled back into the routine. Some employers run a brief pre-return call for longer absences to plan a phased return or any reasonable adjustments. The meeting should be private, confidential, and uninterrupted.

Who should conduct the return-to-work interview?

Usually the employee’s direct line manager, because they are best placed to discuss the work itself and any adjustments. For sensitive cases (long-term illness, mental health, disability) HR may be involved. The interview should be supportive in tone, not investigative or disciplinary · if there are conduct concerns, those go through a separate disciplinary procedure.

Should every absence trigger a return-to-work interview?

Most UK employers hold one after every period of sickness absence, even a single day. ACAS supports this approach, noting that consistency reduces the perception that interviews are punitive and helps catch issues early. Some smaller firms only hold them after two or more days off, or when they hit a trigger point under the absence policy. Whichever approach you take, set it out clearly in the policy and apply it consistently.

What questions should I ask in a return-to-work interview?

Cover: whether the employee feels fit to return; the reason for the absence (without prying); any fit note recommendations; whether work or personal factors contributed; whether reasonable adjustments would help; what they would like colleagues to know about the absence; and what work updates they need. Keep it conversational, not a checklist tick-off.

What records should we keep from a return-to-work interview?

Keep brief notes covering: dates of absence, reason given, any health information shared (with consent), fit note details, agreed adjustments, agreed phased return, and follow-up actions. These records are special category personal data under UK GDPR if they include health information, so keep them confidential and store them securely. Share with HR only on a need-to-know basis.

About this guide

Written by the Book Time Off editorial team. We build leave management software for UK SMEs and write practical guides on UK employment law, holiday entitlement, and HR best practice. All content is reviewed against current GOV.UK and ACAS guidance and updated as the rules change.

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Not legal advice

This guide is for general information and is not legal advice. The sample policy is a starting point and should be reviewed by your usual employment-law adviser before publication. For free guidance on a specific situation, contact the Acas helpline on 0300 123 1100.