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Stage 5 of 8

Preparing your tribunal case?

Between submitting your claim and the hearing, preparation is where cases are won or lost. Organising your evidence, building your timeline, and understanding the procedural requirements all happen at this stage.

Organise your evidence

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What happens

What to expect at this stage

1

Gather and organise your evidence

Emails, letters, messages, policies, payslips, meeting notes — anything that supports your version of events needs to be collected, clearly labelled, and organised chronologically. The quality of your preparation at this stage directly affects how your case is presented at the hearing.

2

Prepare your witness statement

Your witness statement is your written account of what happened, in your own words. It should be clear, chronological, and focused on facts rather than opinions. The tribunal will treat it as your evidence-in-chief — it largely replaces the need for you to give oral evidence from scratch.

3

Understand disclosure obligations

Both sides are required to disclose relevant documents — including ones that don't help their case. Understanding what you must disclose, what you can request from your employer, and the consequences of non-disclosure is an important part of the process.

4

Agree the hearing bundle

The hearing bundle is the set of documents both sides will refer to at the hearing. It needs to be organised, paginated, and ideally agreed with the other side. Your employer usually prepares the bundle, but you can request documents be included and should check it carefully before the hearing.

How Yerty helps

How Yerty helps at this stage

01

Keep your documents in one place

Store and organise all your case documents, correspondence, and evidence — so everything is accessible and clearly structured as your preparation progresses.

02

Build your timeline

A clear chronological timeline of events is one of the most valuable preparation tools for any tribunal case. Map out what happened and when.

03

Track your preparation deadlines

Disclosure dates, witness statement deadlines, bundle submission dates — keep sight of what's due and when so nothing is missed.

Organise your evidence

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Common questions

Questions people ask at this stage

It varies significantly depending on the complexity of your case and the volume of evidence involved. The tribunal will set specific deadlines for disclosure, witness statements, and bundle preparation — typically giving several weeks for each step. Starting early and staying organised makes a meaningful difference.

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