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    1. Home
    2. Employment, training and careers
    3. Work and families
    4. Pregnancy and maternity rights in the workplace

    Working when pregnant

    If you're pregnant and working, your employer must protect your health and safety. You might be entitled to paid time off for antenatal care. You are also protected against unfair treatment by an employer.

    Contents

    Skip table of contents
    • Pregnant employee's rights
    • Telling your employer that you're pregnant
    • Time off for antenatal care
    • Fathers-to-be and time off for antenatal appointments
    • Having a child through IVF (in vitro fertilisation)
    • Health and safety for pregnant employees
    • Risk assessment
    • If you think you're at risk
    • Pregnancy-related illness
    • Compulsory maternity leave
    • Discrimination and pregnancy

    Pregnant employee's rights

    When you're pregnant and employed, you're entitled to:

    • paid time off for antenatal care
    • maternity leave
    • maternity pay
    • protection against unfair treatment or dismissal

    Employers have certain obligations to  protect the health and safety of pregnant employees.

    • Pregnancy and maternity rights in the workplace

    Telling your employer that you're pregnant

    You must tell your employer that you are pregnant at least 15 weeks before the beginning of the week when your baby is due. If this isn’t possible because you didn’t know you were pregnant, you must tell your employer as soon as possible. You should also tell them when you want to start your Statutory Maternity Leave and Pay.

    It's a good idea to tell your employer earlier, because it will let them plan around your maternity leave and carry out their legal obligations to you. This is important if there are any health and safety issues. You cannot take paid time off for antenatal appointments until you have told your employer you are pregnant.

    Time off for antenatal care

    All pregnant employees are entitled to reasonable time off work for antenatal care. Any time off must be paid at your normal rate of pay. It is unlawful for your employer to refuse to give you reasonable time off for antenatal care or to pay you at your normal rate of pay.

    Your employer can ask for evidence of antenatal appointments from the second appointment onwards. If they ask, show your employer a medical certificate confirming you're pregnant and an appointment card or some other written evidence of your appointment.

    Antenatal care may include relaxation or parent craft classes as well as medical examinations, if recommended by your doctor. If you can, avoid taking time off work when you can reasonably arrange classes or examinations outside working hours.

    Fathers-to-be and time off for antenatal appointments

    A pregnant woman's partner and the baby's father-to-be can take unpaid time off work to accompany the expectant mother to two antenatal appointments.

    The time off is capped at six and a half hours for each appointment. There is no qualifying period for entitlement to this right.

    A “partner” includes the spouse or civil partner of the pregnant woman and a person, of either sex, in a long term relationship with her. The right applies whether the child is conceived naturally or through donor insemination.

    It also extends to those who will become parents through a surrogacy arrangement if they expect to satisfy the conditions for, and plan to, apply for a Parental Order for the child born through that arrangement.

    • Paternity rights in the workplace

    Having a child through IVF (in vitro fertilisation)

    It is unlawful sex discrimination for employers to treat a woman less favourably because she is undergoing IVF treatment or intends to become pregnant. You will be entitled to paid time off for antenatal care only after the fertilised embryo has been implanted.

    • Sex discrimination and equal pay

    Health and safety for pregnant employees

    Some workplace hazards can affect pregnancy at a very early stage or even before conception. Employers must think of the health of women of child bearing age, not just wait until you tell your employer that you're pregnant.

    Your employer, as part of their normal risk assessment must consider if any work is likely to present a particular risk to women of child bearing age. You should tell your employer that you are pregnant as early as possible so that they can identify if any further actions are needed.

    Risk assessment

    When you tell your employer that you are pregnant, your employer should review their risk assessment for your specific work and identify any changes that are necessary to protect you and your unborn baby's health. Your employer should involve you in the process and continue to review the assessment as your pregnancy progresses to see if any adjustments are necessary.

    These risks might be caused by:

    • lifting or carrying heavy loads
    • standing or sitting for long periods
    • exposure to toxic substances
    • long working hours

    Your employer must then either remove the risk or remove you from being exposed to it (for example, by offering you suitable alternative work). If neither of these is possible, your employer should suspend you from work on full pay.

    • Suspension from work on medical/health and safety grounds
    • Employers' health and safety responsibilities

    If you think you're at risk

    If you think you're at risk but your employer doesn't agree, you should first talk to your health and safety representative or a trade union official. You can also go directly to your employer to explain your concerns.

    If your employer still refuses to take action, you should talk to your doctor or call the Health and Safety Executive (NI), who provide a helpline.

    • Health and Safety Executive for Northern Ireland
    • How to resolve a problem at work

    Pregnancy-related illness

    If you're off work for a pregnancy-related illness during the four weeks before your baby is due, your maternity leave and Statutory Maternity Pay (from your employer) or Maternity Allowance (from Jobs & Benefits Office) will start automatically, no matter what you had agreed with your employer.

    Compulsory maternity leave

    Even if you've decided not to take Statutory Maternity Leave, you must take two weeks off after your baby is born, or four weeks if you work in a factory. This is called 'compulsory maternity leave'.

    Discrimination and pregnancy

    It's unlawful sex discrimination for employers to treat women less favourably because of their pregnancy or because they take maternity leave. For example, this includes:

    • trying to cut your hours without your permission
    • suddenly giving you poor staff reports
    • giving you unsuitable work
    • making you redundant because of your pregnancy (you might still be made redundant for other reasons)
    • treating days off sick due to pregnancy as a disciplinary issue

    Your employer can't change your terms and conditions of employment while you are pregnant without your agreement. If they do, they will be in breach of contract.

    • Sex discrimination and equal pay
    • Changes to employment conditions
    • Breach of employment contract  

    More useful links

    • Breastfeeding and going back to work
    • Parental leave and flexible working
    • Maternity, paternity and adoption(external link opens in a new window / tab)external link opens in a new window / tab
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    Pregnancy and maternity rights in the workplace

    • Entitlements during Statutory Maternity Leave
    • Statutory Maternity Leave
    • Statutory Maternity Leave: returning to work
    • Working when pregnant

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