Employment Relations FAQs
factsheets and publications.
       
 
find out about:
holidays on-line tool
annual holidays
general entitlements
moving to four weeks leave
records employers must keep
calculating weekly pay/earning
employees who take holidays in advance
pay-as-you-go
entitlements on an employees resignation or end of employment
regular annual closedowns
effects of unpaid leave
employees with changing work pattern
interface with other leave
public holidays
NZ public holiday dates
sick & bereavement leave
transition from 1981 Act to 2003 Act
Implementation evaluation of Holidays Act 2003
Holiday Act 2003 – payroll specification

annual holidays – employees with an irregular or changing work pattern

 
 
Get a printer-friendly fact sheet of this page.

Some employees have an irregular or changing work pattern, either because they move frequently between full and part-time work, or because they have variable work patterns.

The principle of four weeks annual holidays still applies to these employees. Where these employees work for more than 12-months, they should receive four weeks annual holidays. Because of the irregularity of these employee's working patterns it is often easiest to base the annual holidays on the amount of work done by the employee over each 12-month period.

The method currently used in most payroll systems to provide these employees with four weeks annual holidays is to express the accruing entitlement in hours, with a holiday entitlement of 4/52 of an hour accruing for each hour worked.

Where records are kept manually it is important that:

  • there is an accurate wage and time record
  • employees' holiday and leave records are correctly completed.

These records can help to accurately calculate the ordinary weekly pay and average weekly earnings for the purposes of assessing an employee's annual holiday pay. The higher of these figures is then used - see the fact sheet titled Annual holidays – calculating “ordinary weekly pay” and “average weekly earnings”.

Where the entitlements to annual holidays for these employees are expressed in hours, it would generally be appropriate to calculate hourly rates for holiday pay based on ordinary weekly pay and average weekly pay as well.
The employee and employer will also need to agree to what portion of a week is being taken as annual holidays.

Examples of wage and time records, and of holiday and leave records, are available from the Department of Labour freephone on 0800 20 90 20 during normal business hours and they can be downloaded from www.ers.dol.govt.nz/holidays_act_2003/records.html.

back to top

This page was last updated on: 19-Mar-2009 and is current.


general entitlements | moving to four weeks | records employers must keep | calculating weekly pay | taking holidays in advance of entitlement | pay-as-you-go provisions | entitlements on an employees resignation or end of employment | annual closedowns | unpaid leave | changing work pattern | interface with other leave

annual holidays | how to calculate holiday pay | special leave | public (statutory) holidays | NZ public holiday dates | FAQs

home | holidays | pay | good faith | union matters | education & training | fact sheets | publications | parental leave | employment agreements | problem solving | collective bargaining

search our FAQs | sitemap | contact us | about this site | about ers | related sites | govt.nz

©2004 copyright | disclaimer | privacy statement | comment on this website | accessibility

Department of Labour.