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The Unfair Dismissal Threshold: What Changes on 1 January 2027?
Currently, employees must have completed 2 years of service to claim unfair dismissal (with exceptions for small businesses and certain grounds).
- A 3-month probation + 3 months post-probation = 6 months of protection. Plan accordingly.
- A 6-month probation aligns with the new threshold—probation ends just as FWC protection kicks in.
- Dismissals after 6 months of service will face much stricter scrutiny.
Documenting Probation: Best Practice
Documentation is your legal shield. Here’s what to capture:
At Hire
- Written employment contract with probation length clearly stated.
- Job description and key performance indicators (KPIs).
- Induction checklist (signed-off policies, safety, systems training).
- Workplace behaviour and conduct expectations (no bullying, discrimination, harassment).
During Probation
- 30-day check-in: Informal meeting documenting early impressions, support needs, and any concerns. File notes.
- Mid-probation review (3-month for a 6-month probation): Formal feedback on performance against KPIs, strengths, areas for improvement. Written summary to the employee.
- Ongoing feedback: Verbal warnings, improvement notices, or praise for good performance. Record the date, topic, and what was discussed.
- Any misconduct or underperformance: Incident report with date, witness names, what happened, and what was communicated to the employee.
At Probation End
- Final probation review: Written assessment against the original KPIs. Pass or fail decision.
- If passing: confirmation of permanence and any post-probation expectations.
- If dismissing: written notice citing the specific performance/conduct reasons and referencing documentation from the probation period.
Probation and Modern Awards
Modern Awards don’t override probation rules, but they may set minimum standards for notice periods or redundancy. For example:
- An award might require written notice of the probation length before employment starts.
- Some awards specify no probation periods longer than 6 months.
- Dismissal during probation must still comply with the award’s consultation or notice requirements where applicable.
Common Probation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: No written probation clause in the contract. Ensure your employment contract explicitly states the probation length and conditions for passing.
What Should You Do Now?
With the unfair dismissal threshold changing in January 2027, now is the time to:
- Audit your employment contracts. Do they clearly state probation length? Are terms fair and enforceable?
- Review current probationary employees. Are you documenting progress? If dismissal is likely, start building a fair case now.
- Train your managers. They must know probation is not a free pass to dismiss—fair procedures matter from day one.
- Set realistic probation lengths. 3–6 months is standard and sufficient. Don’t extend probation as a substitute for performance management.
- Document everything. Feedback, reviews, incidents, and final decisions. It’s the difference between defending an unfair dismissal claim and losing it.
Probation is a legitimate tool for assessing new employees. Use it fairly, document thoroughly, and you’ll avoid costly FWC disputes. And as the qualifying period for unfair dismissal shrinks, good probation practices become your best legal defense.
A probation period is an agreed initial period in a permanent employee’s employment where both employer and employee can assess fit and performance. Under Australian law, there is no legal definition—it’s an agreed arrangement. Probation applies only to permanent employees (full-time and part-time), not casuals. Probationary employees have the same legal rights as permanent employees, including unfair dismissal protection (once they meet the qualifying period), but employers have slightly more flexibility in assessing suitability before confirming permanence.