Hiring someone creates a stack of paperwork fast. Offer letters, contracts, payroll setup, IT access requests. And somewhere in that pile sits the written statement of employment — a legal requirement in the UK that is, oddly, one of the documents most likely to be issued late or left out entirely.
In the US, there's no single federal equivalent, but several states require written notice of key employment terms at or before the start of employment. New York, California, and Washington, among others, mandate written wage notices that confirm pay rate, pay frequency, and work schedule. Some states go further. California, for instance, requires employers to provide a written notice of employment terms to non-exempt employees that covers wage rates, designated paydays, and the employer's legal name and address.
This article explains what a written statement must include under UK law, what the US equivalents look like, and provides a template you can adapt for either context.
What a written statement of employment actually is
It's the document that sets out the core terms of someone's job in writing. Not a full employment contract, though the two are often combined into the same document. The written statement is the legal floor: the minimum information an employee or worker is entitled to receive.
In the US, requirements vary by state. There's no federal law mandating a written statement of employment terms, but federal law does require employers to keep records of wages, hours, and working conditions under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Where state laws exist, the timing and content requirements differ: New York requires wage notices at hire and annually, while other states trigger the requirement only at the start of employment.
Under the Employment Rights Act 1996, UK employers must provide a written statement to every employee and worker from day one. That changed in 2020. Previously, employers had two months from the start date to issue it. The obligation now covers workers as well as employees, which catches a wider range of working arrangements than many employers realize.
What the written statement of employment needs to cover
A written statement isn't a formality you can fill in later. It's a legal document with specific content requirements, and what you include (and when) determines whether you're compliant. The rules differ depending on where you're based, but the principle is the same: employees are entitled to the key terms of their job in writing before they start.
US state-level requirements
For US employers, the closest equivalent varies by state. New York's Wage Theft Prevention Act requires a written notice at hire that includes the employee's rate of pay, overtime rate if applicable, designated payday, the employer's official name, and work location. California has similar requirements under its Labor Code. Washington State requires written notice of wage rates and payday information.
Even where state law doesn't require a full written statement, issuing one is good practice. It sets clear expectations, reduces disputes, and creates a paper trail if terms are ever questioned. The US Department of Labor publishes guidance on federal record keeping obligations that apply alongside any state requirements.
UK requirements
The law splits the required information into two categories. Some must appear in a single main document, sometimes called the principal statement. The rest can be provided in separate documents, such as a staff handbook.
The principal statement must include:
- Employer name and employee name
- Job title, or a brief description of the work
- Start date, and whether any previous employment counts toward continuous service
- Pay rate and how often it's paid
- Working hours and days, including whether they can vary
- Holiday entitlement, including public holidays
- Work location, or locations if the employee is expected to work in multiple places
- Any probationary period, including its length and conditions
- Any mandatory training
Details that can sit in a separate document include sick pay entitlement, notice periods, pension arrangements, and disciplinary and grievance procedures. The employee must still be told where to find those.
Written statement template
Use the template below as a starting point. Review it against your specific circumstances, and take legal advice if you're unsure whether it covers everything required for your situation.
WRITTEN STATEMENT OF EMPLOYMENT PARTICULARS
Employer: [Company name]
Employee: [Full name]
Date of issue: [Date]
1. Job title
Your job title is [job title]. Your duties are as set out in your job description, a copy of which is provided with this statement.
2. Start date
Your employment begins on [start date]. [No previous employment counts toward continuous service with the company. / Employment with [previous employer] from [date] counts as continuous employment with this company.]
3. Pay
Your salary is [amount] per [hour / week / year], paid [weekly / monthly] by [bank transfer / cash] on [payment date or day].
4. Working hours
Your normal working hours are [hours] per [week / day], from [start time] to [end time], [Monday to Friday / specify days]. [These hours are fixed. / Your hours may vary as required by the business.]
5. Holiday
You are entitled to [number] days' paid holiday per year, [including / excluding] public holidays. The holiday year runs from [date] to [date].
6. Place of work
Your normal place of work is [address]. [You may be required to work at other locations from time to time.]
7. Probationary period
Your employment is subject to a probationary period of [length]. During the probationary period, the notice period on either side is [length].
8. Notice
After completing your probationary period, the notice required to end your employment is [length] from the employer and [length] from you.
9. Sick pay
Details of sick pay entitlement are set out in the [employee handbook / sickness absence policy], a copy of which is available from [location].
10. Pension
Details of any workplace pension scheme are provided separately.
11. Disciplinary and grievance
The company's disciplinary and grievance procedures are set out in the [employee handbook / disciplinary policy], available from [location].
The mistakes that cause problems for employers later
Issuing the written statement late is the most common problem in the UK. The obligation is from day one, not day two, and not at the end of the first week. An employment tribunal can award compensation if a statement was never issued or was materially incomplete, even if the employment relationship itself was uncontested.
US employers face equivalent risks, though the mechanism differs. In New York, failure to provide the required wage notice at hire can result in penalties of up to $50 per day, capped at $5,000 per employee. California employers who fail to provide required written notices face similar exposure under the Labor Code. And in any state, the absence of a written record makes disputes about pay rates, working hours, or job scope significantly harder to resolve in the employer's favor.
Vague job descriptions are a close second issue in both jurisdictions. "General duties as required" might feel flexible, but it creates ambiguity that's hard to resolve if someone disputes what they were hired to do. A brief, accurate description is far more useful.
Keep a signed copy. It sounds obvious, but many employers don't. When a dispute arises about what was agreed, a dated, signed document is considerably more useful than an email thread. This applies in the UK and the US equally.
Written statements and employment contracts. What's the difference?
A written statement of particulars is a legal minimum. Many employers go further and issue a full employment contract, which covers the same required ground but with more specific terms: confidentiality clauses, intellectual property provisions, post-termination restrictions, and so on.
In the US, most private-sector employment is at-will, meaning either party can end the relationship at any time without cause, unless a contract says otherwise. A written offer letter or employment agreement doesn't automatically override at-will status, but it can create binding obligations around pay, notice periods, or severance if the language isn't carefully drafted. For that reason, US employers often keep offer letters deliberately brief and rely on a separate employee handbook for policy detail.
There's no rule that says you can't combine a written statement with a full contract. Many organizations do. What matters is that everything required by law is there, clearly worded, and handed over on or before the first day.
GOV.UK has current guidance on UK requirements. US employers should check their relevant state labor authority, particularly if your last review was before any recent state legislative changes.
Onboarding generates a lot of email
A single new hire can produce dozens of email threads before they've even started — the offer confirmation, equipment requests, IT setup, payroll forms, and the statement itself going back and forth for signatures. Multiply that across several hires at once and the inbox becomes a project in its own right.
Research published in the Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology found that email load consistently predicts strain and reduced performance, particularly when people are managing multiple concurrent threads. Onboarding is a good example of exactly that situation.
Fyxer organizes incoming email by priority and prepares draft replies based on context, so the routine correspondence gets handled without taking over the day.
If you're tidying up your HR documentation more broadly, it's worth having consistent templates for related documents: disciplinary outcome letters, equality monitoring forms, and written statements that share the same structure and level of care are easier to maintain and less likely to be missing something.
Written statement of employment FAQs
What's the difference between a written statement and an employment contract?
A written statement is the legal minimum — the core terms required by law. A full contract goes further, covering things like confidentiality, post-termination restrictions, and intellectual property. The two are often combined into one document.
Does a written statement apply to part-time or temporary workers?
In the UK, yes. The 2020 changes extended the requirement to workers as well as employees, which includes many part-time and zero-hours arrangements. In the US, requirements depend on the state and the worker's classification.
Can a written statement be issued electronically?
In the UK, yes, provided the employee can access and retain a copy. In the US, electronic delivery is generally acceptable where permitted, but some states specify delivery requirements. Hard copies are the safer option if you're unsure.



