This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. Please read our policies for more information.

10 Chartered Accountants

News

Government confirms that furlough rules do not leave employers at risk of breaching minimum wage rules
03 April 2020

The Government has confirmed in its guidance for the operation of the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS) that employers will not be at risk of breaching minimum wage rules where they opt not to top-up the wages of furloughed employees.

The CJRS was announced by the Chancellor shortly before the Stay at Home rules came into effect and enables employers to apply for a grant in respect of 80 per cent of the normal wages of a ‘furloughed’ worker, plus the cost of Employer National Insurance Contributions (NICs) and employer’s minimum auto-enrolment pension contributions on this amount.

Where a furloughed employee is paid the relevant rate of the National Minimum Wage (NMW) or National Living Wage (NLW) or near to those rates, the Government has confirmed that you may still reduce their pay the 80 per cent rate, without breaching minimum wage rules.

The guidance states:

Individuals are only entitled to the National Living Wage (NLW)/National Minimum Wage (NMW) for the hours they are working.

Therefore, furloughed workers, who are not working, must be paid the lower of 80 per cent of their salary, or £2,500 even if, based on their usual working hours, this would be below NLW/NMW.

However, if workers are required to for example, complete online training courses whilst they are furloughed, then they must be paid at least the NLW/NMW for the time spent training, even if this is more than the 80 per cent of their wage that will be subsidised.

Complicating matters, the rates of the NLW and NMW change today (1 April 2020).

However, it is unclear whether this means that the value of the grant for workers on either NLW or NMW and who were furloughed in both March and April will vary in line with the increased rates.

The changes are as follows:

25 and over 21 to 24 18 to 20 Under 18 Apprentice
March 2020 £8.21 £7.70 £6.15 £4.35 £3.90
April 2020 £8.72 £8.20 £6.45 £4.55 £4.15

Other recent news

The signs of digital wallet abuse you need to look out for
05 November 2025

Digital wallet abuse is on the rise as criminal networks…
Read more

Preparing for Plan 5: The newest student loan payment structure
05 November 2025

Students who started their undergraduate and advanced learner loan courses…
Read more

The UK’s residency rules explained – Six months on from the change
05 November 2025

In April 2025, the UK’s ‘non-domicile regime’ was replaced with…
Read more

Bank and building society interest – What needs to be reported under Self Assessment?
05 November 2025

HMRC has confirmed it is changing the way it will…
Read more

Could the Autumn Budget hold big changes to the taxation of partnerships?
05 November 2025

With the November Budget just weeks away, one rumour appears…
Read more

»

Case Studies