SSP Calculator — New 2026 Rules
Calculate Statutory Sick Pay under the Employment Rights Act 2025 changes. From April 2026, SSP is payable from day 1 with no lower earnings limit.
What changed with SSP in April 2026?
The Employment Rights Act 2025 made three significant changes to Statutory Sick Pay:
- No more waiting days. Previously, employers didn't pay SSP for the first 3 qualifying days of absence. From April 2026, SSP is payable from the first day the employee is off sick.
- No lower earnings limit. Previously, employees needed to earn at least £123 per week to qualify for SSP. This threshold has been removed entirely.
- Day-1 right. SSP now applies from the first day of employment — there's no minimum service requirement.
Who qualifies for SSP?
Under the new rules, an employee qualifies for SSP if they are:
- An employee (not self-employed)
- Off sick for at least 1 day (previously 4+ days including waiting days)
- Earning any amount (the £123/week lower earnings limit has been removed)
How much is SSP?
The SSP rate for the 2026/27 tax year is £123.25 per week. This is divided by the number of qualifying days in the employee's working week. For a standard 5-day worker, the daily rate is £24.65.
How long is SSP payable?
SSP is payable for up to 28 weeks in a single period of sickness. If an employee has two periods of sickness separated by 8 weeks or less, these are "linked" and count toward the same 28-week maximum.
What should employers do?
- Update payroll systems to remove the 3-day waiting period
- Remove any lower earnings threshold checks from SSP calculations
- Update employee handbooks and sick pay policies
- Brief line managers on the new rules
- Consider the impact on occupational sick pay schemes that reference SSP eligibility
Sources:
Employment Rights Act 2025, Section 8 (SSP reform).
ACAS guidance on Statutory Sick Pay.
HMRC SSP rates for 2026/27.
Last updated: April 2026.