Employment Tribunal procedure and ET1 issue discipline
The ET1 looks like a form. In practice, it can shape the case. It should not expect a litigant in person to know employment law, but it should help them separate the workplace story from the tribunal issues.
Publication snapshot
- The ET1 is not a lawyer’s pleading, but it performs a case-defining function once a workplace dispute becomes tribunal proceedings.
- A workplace story may be true and important, but the Tribunal still needs issues: claims, dates, people, facts, documents, remedy and time limits.
- Wrong legal labels should not automatically defeat a litigant in person’s claim where the facts are clear. Missing facts create a different problem.
- The strongest reform point is front-end design: the form should remain accessible, while helping claimants organise the information the Tribunal and respondent actually need.
Why this matters
An Employment Tribunal claim does not usually begin with a lawyer’s pleading. It begins with a worker, employee, former employee or representative trying to explain what happened at work, why it was wrong, who was responsible, what was lost and what outcome is being sought.
That explanation is placed into a form. The problem is that the consequences of that form can be far greater than many claimants realise.
The ET1 is not just an administrative document. It is the gateway through which a workplace dispute first becomes a tribunal case. It starts the proceedings, identifies the respondent, records the Acas early conciliation position, asks what type of claim is being brought, and captures the first structured account of the dispute.
The core issue
The ET1 should not punish ordinary people for not speaking legal language. But it should help them explain the facts in a way the Tribunal can manage and the respondent can answer.
The form that becomes the case
The ET1 is not a High Court pleading. It is not expected to read like Particulars of Claim drafted by counsel. But it still performs a pleading-like, case-defining function.
It tells the Tribunal what the case appears to be. It tells the respondent what case it has to answer. It gives the system its first chance to understand whether the dispute is about unpaid wages, holiday pay, notice pay, redundancy pay, unfair dismissal, discrimination, harassment, whistleblowing, victimisation, reasonable adjustments, breach of contract, or a mixture of claims.
That first translation matters because it shapes everything that follows: the ET3 response, initial consideration, preliminary hearings, case-management orders, disclosure, witness evidence, hearing length, settlement risk and remedy.
The claimant explains what happened, who was involved, what was lost and why the treatment is challenged.
The story becomes a tribunal document with respondents, claim types, dates, remedy and adjustment needs.
The Tribunal and respondent then need to understand what issues are live and what evidence will matter.
A workplace story is not a tribunal issue
Most people do not experience workplace harm as a legal category. They experience it as a story: I complained, I was ignored, my pay was wrong, my manager treated me differently, I raised a concern, I was pushed out, I was dismissed, I was bullied, nobody listened.
That story may be true. It may be important. It may contain one legal claim. It may contain several. But the Tribunal cannot manage a case only as a story.
The Tribunal has to identify issues. What claim is being made? What happened? When did it happen? Who did it? What legal right is said to have been breached? What facts are relied on? What remedy is being sought? Is the claim in time? Has Acas early conciliation been completed? What does the respondent admit or deny? What evidence will matter?
This is where many cases begin to lose shape. The claimant may think they have explained the unfairness. The respondent may say it still does not know the case it has to meet. The Tribunal may then have to decide whether the ET1 contains a claim, what that claim is, whether further information is needed, whether amendment is required and whether parts of the case are arguable at all.
The background, sequence, workplace relationships, grievance history, dismissal, pay dispute or alleged treatment.
The claim type, act complained of, dates, respondent, protected characteristic, disclosure, detriment or sum claimed.
Contracts, payslips, messages, grievance documents, meeting notes, witness evidence, medical evidence or payroll records.
Compensation, wages, holiday pay, notice pay, redundancy pay, declaration, recommendation or another tribunal remedy.
Acas does not translate the claim
Before most Employment Tribunal claims, a prospective claimant must notify Acas and is offered early conciliation. That step matters. It may resolve disputes before they reach the Tribunal. It may clarify positions. It may reduce the number of claims that need to proceed.
But Acas does not decide whether the claim is legally valid. It does not prepare the ET1. It does not represent the claimant or respondent. It does not tell a party how to plead the case. It does not decide whether the dispute is really an unpaid-wages claim, a discrimination claim, a whistleblowing claim, a dismissal claim, or a mixed case.
The Acas certificate gets the claimant through an important procedural gate. It does not translate the workplace story into tribunal issues. That task still begins with the ET1.
The respondent needs a clear case too
Clarity is not only for the Tribunal. It is also for the respondent.
Once the claim is accepted and sent, the respondent usually has a limited period to respond. It has to work out what is admitted, what is denied, what documents matter, who the witnesses are, whether a time-limit point is taken, whether jurisdiction is disputed, whether further information is needed, and whether the case should be defended, settled, narrowed or challenged.
That cannot be done fairly if the case is unclear. A respondent should not be ambushed at the final hearing by a claim that was not fairly raised in the ET1. Nor should a respondent have to guess whether a long narrative contains a discrimination claim, whistleblowing claim, unfair dismissal claim, wages claim, or simply background.
Fairness cuts both ways. A claimant is entitled to have the ET1 read fairly, as a whole and without undue technicality. A respondent is entitled to know the case it has to meet. That is not procedural pedantry. It is natural justice.
The ET1 should not become a technical trap for a litigant in person using ordinary language.
The respondent should know what allegation is being made, when, by whom, and on what factual basis.
The Tribunal needs enough structure to manage time limits, evidence, hearing length and remedy.
Wrong labels are not missing facts
This is the key distinction. A claimant may use the wrong legal label. That should not automatically defeat the claim. Employment Tribunals are used by litigants in person. The process cannot sensibly require ordinary workers to know every statutory label before they can access justice.
If the pleaded facts clearly identify the substance of the claim, the Tribunal may need to read the case according to what is actually being alleged, not according to imperfect terminology. A claimant might call something bullying when the facts may point to harassment. They might describe being forced to resign without using the phrase constructive dismissal. They might describe being punished after raising safety concerns without knowing the phrase protected disclosure.
Wrong labels can often be clarified. Missing facts are different. If the ET1 does not contain the essential factual basis of the claim, later material cannot simply be treated as if it had been there all along.
A witness statement is not normally a new ET1. A schedule of loss is not normally a new claim form. Correspondence is not normally an amendment. A list of issues is not a pleading. Oral submissions at a hearing do not silently add a new claim.
The facts are in the ET1, but the claimant has used ordinary language or the wrong legal category.
The factual basis, act, date, disclosure, protected characteristic, respondent or time period was not fairly raised.
The Tribunal should read a litigant in person’s ET1 fairly, in substance and as a whole.
The Tribunal cannot invent a case or deprive the respondent of the right to know the allegation.
Different claims need different structure
Some claims need numbers before they need long narrative. Unpaid wages, holiday pay, notice pay, redundancy pay and other contractual or statutory payment claims can still matter greatly. A few hundred pounds can be critical. Final wages may be rent. Holiday pay may be food. Notice pay may be the difference between stability and debt.
The point is not that monetary claims are lesser. The point is that many monetary claims need front-end clarity about different things: the period claimed, the amount unpaid, the rate of pay, the supporting contract or payslip, the holiday record, the bank record, whether status is admitted, whether calculation is disputed and what the respondent says in answer.
Open-track claims need different discipline. Discrimination, harassment, victimisation, reasonable-adjustment and whistleblowing claims may turn on facts that are not obvious from documents alone. They may require the Tribunal to understand who did what, when, why, with what knowledge, against what background, and with what impact.
That is not because claimants should be expected to plead like employment barristers. It is because these claims can quickly become unmanageable if the issues are not separated early.
Pay period, amount, rate, payslips, bank records, contract, holiday records, deductions and calculation dispute.
The acts complained of, dates, people involved, alleged less favourable treatment and reason why it is said to be discriminatory.
Unwanted conduct, protected characteristic, protected act, detriment, purpose or effect and surrounding context.
What information was disclosed, to whom, when, what wrongdoing it was said to show, and what treatment followed.
Amendment is not a safety net for everything
Amendment is often where the consequences of an unclear ET1 become visible. A claimant may later say: “I always meant to bring that claim.” The respondent may say: “That was never in the ET1.” The Tribunal then has to decide whether the point was already fairly raised, whether it is merely clarification, whether it is relabelling existing facts, or whether it is a new factual complaint.
That distinction matters. If the facts were already there and only the label was wrong, the issue may be capable of clarification or amendment without major unfairness. If the facts were not there, the problem is different.
Adding a new protected disclosure may require new evidence. Adding a new detriment may require new witnesses. Adding a new protected characteristic may change the legal and factual enquiry. Adding a new respondent may raise Acas, limitation and notice issues. Adding a new time period may expand the case. Adding a new claim late may disrupt a hearing.
Amendment is possible. It is not guaranteed. That is why it is dangerous to assume that anything missing from the ET1 can simply be fixed later.
Better front-end design
This is not claimant blame. Unclear ET1s are not usually a sign of bad faith. They are often a sign of people trying to use a legal system without legal training.
Employment law uses technical categories. Ordinary people use ordinary language. A claimant may know exactly what happened but not know whether the law calls it unfair dismissal, constructive dismissal, unauthorised deduction, disability discrimination, victimisation, harassment, protected disclosure detriment, breach of contract, redundancy pay, notice pay or holiday pay.
A better ET1 gateway would not need to be hostile. It would not need to demand legal drafting. It would not need to reject more claims. It would help people organise the information the Tribunal already needs.
The form should help claimants separate three things: the story, the issues and the structure. What happened in chronological order? What type of problem is it? When did it happen? Who was involved? What is the act or omission complained about? Why is it said to be unlawful? What documents may show it? What outcome is sought?
What happened, in what order, from employment start to the key workplace events and any dismissal or resignation.
Pay, holiday pay, dismissal, discrimination, harassment, whistleblowing, victimisation, disability, contract or another route.
Dates, people, acts, documents, sums claimed, remedy sought, adjustment needs and time-limit points.
Official procedural source spine
Source anchors
These sources support the article’s framework on the ET1, Acas early conciliation, claim submission, respondent response, preliminary hearings, document sharing and hearing preparation. They do not replace case-specific legal advice.
Official claim form source for starting an Employment Tribunal claim as an individual claimant.
Open ET1 source 02 Claim route GOV.UK: make a claimOfficial public guidance on claim submission, time limits, Acas certificate numbers, reasonable adjustments and fees.
Open claim guide 03 Early conciliation Acas: early conciliationOfficial Acas guidance on early conciliation, including what Acas can and cannot do before tribunal proceedings.
Open Acas guide 04 After claim GOV.UK: after you make a claimOfficial guidance on respondent replies, preliminary hearings, document sharing, witnesses, settlement and withdrawal.
Open after-claim guide 05 Hearing route GOV.UK: going to a tribunal hearingOfficial public guidance on hearing notice, phone, video or in-person hearings, evidence, questions and decisions.
Open hearing guide 06 Rules and guidance Judiciary: Employment Tribunal rules and legislationJudicial source page for Employment Tribunal rules, legislation, practice directions and Presidential Guidance.
Open rules sourceUse these anchors to verify the procedural framework. Detailed points about amendment, strike-out, deposit orders, rejection, initial consideration, lists of issues and relabelling should be checked against the current Employment Tribunal Rules, Presidential Guidance and case law before publication.
Closing point
The ET1 should not expect a litigant in person to know employment law. But it should help them separate the story from the issues. Access to justice does not begin at the final hearing. It begins before the list of issues, before witness statements, before the respondent’s evidence. It begins with the form.
ET1 and tribunal route assessment
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Legal Lens can turn an ET1 draft, ET3 response, Acas certificate, list of issues, amendment concern, pay dispute, discrimination complaint or whistleblowing chronology into a structured issue map, evidence schedule or next-step note.
Separate wages, holiday pay, dismissal, discrimination, harassment, whistleblowing, victimisation and mixed issues.
Identify dates, people, acts complained of, protected characteristics, disclosures, detriments, losses and remedy sought.
Prepare a clearer ET1, amendment note, preliminary-hearing plan, document request or issue-list response.
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