Back in the early 2000s when we took holidays we were paid our hourly rate x 8hours.
At some point probably between 2005-2010 this was then shifted to a 12 week average. Since overtime is not optional where i work & you regularly do 55-60 hour weeks you could actually get paid more over a weeks holiday than a standard working week. We were paid weekly and i would check the holiday pay and 99.9% of the time my workings was within £0.02 +/- of what the company paid me for the holiday rate.
All good so far.
A few years ago we shifted to monthly pay and i no longer checked whether the company had paid me correctly due to the extra work involved. We've recently been paid (a 4 week month which contained holidays/bank holidays in each of those 4 weeks) and i'm sure they've not paid me an average, not least because the daily rate they've paid me is the exact same in each of the 4 weeks. Since my working week varies from week-to-week how can this even be possible?
The person who used to do the pay now has an assistant. I spoke with this assistant who confirmed that they pay an average but they were far from confident in explaining this. They said 12 weeks, 13 weeks, some months are different to other months, sometimes they use X-amount, other times they use Y-amount. I would've thought the formula would be the same throughout?
The month in question contained 2 full weeks as holiday and the other 2 weeks contained some bank holidays in each. I got paid the same daily rate for each of those days. In the past when we were paid weekly, week 1's daily average would've been one amount, week 2 would've been an amount slightly different to week 1, week 3 slightly different to week 2 & 1 etc.
Just to check i'm doing it right (like i said, when we were paid weekly i was always within £0.02 +/- of the company, always), what i have always done is take the gross pay for each week for the 12 weeks prior to the week containing my holiday, divide this by 12 to give a weekly average. Divide this weekly average by 5 to give a daily average and it is this end figure that pretty much matched the company 99.9% of the time (when we were paid weekly).
Just wondering the situation regards holiday pay, especially monthly -vs- weekly, as i don't want to go saying how i think they've got it wrong if i'm the one who has.
At some point probably between 2005-2010 this was then shifted to a 12 week average. Since overtime is not optional where i work & you regularly do 55-60 hour weeks you could actually get paid more over a weeks holiday than a standard working week. We were paid weekly and i would check the holiday pay and 99.9% of the time my workings was within £0.02 +/- of what the company paid me for the holiday rate.
All good so far.
A few years ago we shifted to monthly pay and i no longer checked whether the company had paid me correctly due to the extra work involved. We've recently been paid (a 4 week month which contained holidays/bank holidays in each of those 4 weeks) and i'm sure they've not paid me an average, not least because the daily rate they've paid me is the exact same in each of the 4 weeks. Since my working week varies from week-to-week how can this even be possible?
The person who used to do the pay now has an assistant. I spoke with this assistant who confirmed that they pay an average but they were far from confident in explaining this. They said 12 weeks, 13 weeks, some months are different to other months, sometimes they use X-amount, other times they use Y-amount. I would've thought the formula would be the same throughout?
The month in question contained 2 full weeks as holiday and the other 2 weeks contained some bank holidays in each. I got paid the same daily rate for each of those days. In the past when we were paid weekly, week 1's daily average would've been one amount, week 2 would've been an amount slightly different to week 1, week 3 slightly different to week 2 & 1 etc.
Just to check i'm doing it right (like i said, when we were paid weekly i was always within £0.02 +/- of the company, always), what i have always done is take the gross pay for each week for the 12 weeks prior to the week containing my holiday, divide this by 12 to give a weekly average. Divide this weekly average by 5 to give a daily average and it is this end figure that pretty much matched the company 99.9% of the time (when we were paid weekly).
Just wondering the situation regards holiday pay, especially monthly -vs- weekly, as i don't want to go saying how i think they've got it wrong if i'm the one who has.
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