Considering a settlement agreement?
Settlement agreements can arise at any stage of a dispute — from the first grievance through to the tribunal door. Understanding what they involve, what you'd be giving up, and what the legal requirements are helps you make informed decisions.
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What happens
What to expect at this stage
An offer is made
Either side can propose a settlement. Your employer might offer one to avoid tribunal proceedings, or you might propose terms to resolve things without a hearing. Offers can come through direct negotiation, through ACAS (as a COT3), or as a formal settlement agreement. The format matters because it affects what's legally binding.
An offer is made
Either side can propose a settlement. Your employer might offer one to avoid tribunal proceedings, or you might propose terms to resolve things without a hearing. Offers can come through direct negotiation, through ACAS (as a COT3), or as a formal settlement agreement. The format matters because it affects what's legally binding.
Understanding what's in the agreement
A settlement agreement typically involves a financial payment in exchange for you waiving your right to bring specified employment tribunal claims. It may also cover references, confidentiality, non-derogatory clauses, and the tax treatment of the payment. Each term has implications — and what's not included can matter as much as what is.
Independent legal advice is required
For a settlement agreement to be legally binding, you must receive independent advice from a qualified legal adviser (usually a solicitor) about the terms and effect of the agreement. Your employer will typically contribute towards this cost — often between £250 and £500 plus VAT — though the amount is a matter of negotiation, not a legal requirement.
You can negotiate, accept, or decline
A settlement offer is a starting point, not a final answer. You're not obliged to accept the first offer — or any offer. Understanding the factors that inform what a reasonable settlement looks like in your circumstances helps you assess whether negotiation is worthwhile or whether proceeding with your claim is the better path.
How Yerty helps
How Yerty helps at this stage
Understand the standard terms
Know what settlement agreements typically include — waiver clauses, confidentiality, references, tax treatment — so you can read an offer with context.
See the factors that matter
Understand the general factors that inform settlement amounts — claim type, service length, tribunal award ranges — based on real employment tribunal outcomes.
Keep your case organised
All the documents, correspondence, and timeline from your dispute — accessible and structured, whether you're negotiating a settlement or preparing to proceed.
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Common questions
Questions people ask at this stage
There's no fixed formula. Relevant factors typically include the nature and strength of your claims, your length of service, your salary, the compensation a tribunal might award if the claim succeeded, the costs and risks of litigation for both sides, and the practical circumstances (such as whether you've found new employment). The independent legal adviser reviewing the agreement can help you assess whether the offer reflects your position.
Built on real cases. Reviewed by practising solicitors.
Build on real situations — giving you grounded insight in what actually happens
Reviewed by a practising SRA-regulated employment solicitor — ensuring the information on our platform is accurate and reliable
Ministry of Justice LawTech Programme — accepted into the MoJ's programme supporting innovation in access to justice
Justice Technology Association member — committed to ethical, responsible legal technology
Build on real situations - giving you grounded insight in what actually happens
Reviewed by a practising SRA-regulated employment solicitor - ensuring the information on our platform is accurate and reliable
Ministry of Justice LawTech Programme - accepted into the MoJ's programme supporting innovation in access to justice
Justice Technology Association member - committed to ethical, responsible legal technology
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