Hi, so recently I was sent an email at work advising me that the period in which I can now purchase additional holiday is now open, I promptly logged into the intranet and went to do this and when I clicked the link it took me to a screen that said:
So I contacted the department responsible to get some clarification, they responded by telling me:
I asked for a breakdown of how they came to this figure and they said this:
So normally I would just accept this, but I work a 44.5 hour week and I assume that this national living wage is worked out on a 37.5 hour week as these things generally are. My issue is, if I worked a standard 37.5 hour week on my current salary, my hourly wage would rise to about £9.62, which would put me well above the threshold even though I would not actually be earning any more money per week/month/year. I tried to explain this to them and they just responded by saying they have to adhere to government guidelines. To me, this seems unfair and it feels like my company is hiding behind this like some kind of loophole to exclude me from buying extra holiday. If the national living wage is £7.50@37.5 hours a week it works out at an annual salary of £14,625 which I am well above so I feel penalised based on my hourly rate rather than my actual income.
Have I misunderstood what they are saying or is there anything I can do about this?
Unfortunately, you are not eligible to buy additional holiday. The reason for this could be because your salary will fall below the National Living Wage, or perhaps you already have the maximum number of days allowed.
I’m sorry to hear that you haven’t been made eligible for the scheme.
Our workings show that if you were to buy a day’s holiday, your salary would drop below a standard set to reflect the National Living Wage. As this scheme is a salary sacrifice scheme, we have to ensure that people’s wages would still meet the minimum requirement once all other deductions have been taken, which includes schemes such as pensions.
Our workings show that if you were to buy a day’s holiday, your salary would drop below a standard set to reflect the National Living Wage. As this scheme is a salary sacrifice scheme, we have to ensure that people’s wages would still meet the minimum requirement once all other deductions have been taken, which includes schemes such as pensions.
We have your actual salary down as £18,778 per year, making your daily rate £72.22, and your hourly rate £8.11.
With your pension deduction of £137.84 a month, your current hourly rate after the salary sacrifice is £8.06.
After purchasing a day’s holiday your hourly rate would be £8.02.
The minimum requirement we need for the new hourly rate is £8.05. I’m sorry to tell you that you missed out by the small margin, however we have to put these boundaries in place to take into account the increase in the National Living Wage that is due to take place in April.
With your pension deduction of £137.84 a month, your current hourly rate after the salary sacrifice is £8.06.
After purchasing a day’s holiday your hourly rate would be £8.02.
The minimum requirement we need for the new hourly rate is £8.05. I’m sorry to tell you that you missed out by the small margin, however we have to put these boundaries in place to take into account the increase in the National Living Wage that is due to take place in April.
Have I misunderstood what they are saying or is there anything I can do about this?
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