MmowWScribe Blog › employee-termination-checklist-guide
BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Employee Termination Checklist: Employer Guide

TS行政書士
監修: 澤井隆行行政書士(総務省登録・国家資格)MmowWの全コンテンツは、国家資格を持つ法令遵守の専門家が監修しています。
Complete your employee termination process correctly. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps employers prepare termination letters, final pay calculations, and offboarding documents across 7 countries. The end of an employment relationship requires careful management. Whether the termination is the result of resignation, redundancy, retirement, dismissal for cause, or the expiry of a fixed-term contract, the employer must take a series of practical and legal steps to close out the relationship correctly.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Terminating an employee involves far more than telling them to leave. Notice, final pay, return of property, system access removal, reference provision, and legal formalities all must be handled correctly — and documented — to avoid legal and financial exposure.

What You Need to Know

The end of an employment relationship requires careful management. Whether the termination is the result of resignation, redundancy, retirement, dismissal for cause, or the expiry of a fixed-term contract, the employer must take a series of practical and legal steps to close out the relationship correctly.

Mistakes at termination are expensive. Underpaying final wages creates debt claims. Failing to revoke system access creates security risks. Not providing required reference letters or documentation breaches obligations in some jurisdictions. Not deducting amounts owed by the employee (subject to legal constraints) leaves money on the table. And getting the legal formalities wrong — particularly for dismissals — can turn a departure into a tribunal or court claim.

This guide provides a comprehensive checklist framework for employers managing employee exits across the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

Pre-Termination Decisions

Before any communication with the employee, the employer should:

For dismissal: Confirm the process followed was fair and procedurally compliant. Check qualifying period, potentially fair reason, procedure followed, and right of appeal offered. Consult a solicitor or attorney if any doubt.

For redundancy: Confirm the selection was fair, consultation was completed, alternative roles were considered, and the calculation of redundancy pay is correct.

For resignation: Confirm you have a written resignation. Decide whether to accept immediately, require the full notice period, place the employee on garden leave, or make a payment in lieu of notice.

Notice and Payment in Lieu

Every employee leaving — whether dismissed or resigning — is entitled to their contractual or statutory notice period (whichever is greater). Notice can be:

Statutory minimum notice periods:

Final Pay Calculation

Final pay must include:

Deductions must be lawful — in the UK, deductions from wages are only permitted if contractually authorised or agreed in writing. Retaining an employee's final wages in lieu of undisclosed debts is generally unlawful without clear contractual authority.

Administrative Exit Process

The administrative checklist includes:

On the last day or immediately before:

After departure:

Reference Letters and Certificates

France: Employers must provide a certificat de travail (certificate of employment) on the last day of employment — this is a legal requirement. The document confirms dates of employment and job title.

UK: There is no general legal obligation to provide a reference, but you should not provide a misleading or inaccurate reference as this can give rise to a claim. Many employers have a policy of providing only a "bare-bones" factual reference.

Australia/NZ/Canada: No general statutory requirement but best practice and often contractual.

Use our free tool: Employment Checker

Try it free →

Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Statutory Notice Min Final Pay Deadline Mandatory Exit Document Accrued Leave Payout Key Source
🇬🇧 UK 1 week/year (max 12 wks) Next pay date P45 Yes (check contract) gov.uk/notice-period
🇫🇷 France 1–3 months (CBA) Last day (or within 5 days) Certificat de travail Yes travail-emploi.gouv.fr
🇸🇪 Sweden 1–6 months (LAS) Next pay date Employment certificate Yes arbetsdomstolen.se
🇦🇺 Australia 1–5 weeks (NES) Next scheduled pay date None mandatory Yes (all accrued leave) fairwork.gov.au/ending-employment
🇳🇿 New Zealand 1 week minimum On final day or next pay date None mandatory Yes (annual + other leave) employment.govt.nz/ending-employment
🇨🇦 Canada Statutory or common law notice Varies by province Record of Employment Varies by province canada.ca/en/employment-social-development
🇺🇸 USA At-will: none required Next scheduled payday (state law) COBRA notice Varies by state dol.gov/general/topic/wages/paymentsfor

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Not revoking system access promptly. Departing employees — especially those dismissed — retain access to systems until it is actively revoked. This creates data security and confidentiality risks. System access should be revoked on or before the last day, and ideally at the moment the termination meeting ends.
  2. Underpaying or miscalculating final wages. Errors in final pay are among the most common causes of post-employment disputes. Use a checklist for every element (salary, accrued leave, PILON, expenses) and double-check the calculation before issuing.
  3. Failing to issue the P45 promptly (UK). Employers must issue a P45 on the last day of employment or as soon as possible thereafter. Failing to do so delays the employee's tax position with their next employer.
  4. Not providing the certificat de travail on the last day (France). This is a firm legal obligation. Failure to provide it — or delay in providing it — entitles the employee to damages, and employers can also be fined.
  5. Having the line manager handle the termination meeting alone. Termination meetings should ideally be attended by two members of management (or HR and line manager). Having a witness is important in case the employee disputes what was said, and it ensures the meeting is conducted professionally.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

Prepare your termination documentation and final pay calculations:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I deduct training costs from a departing employee's final wages?

A: Only if there is a clear written agreement — signed before the training took place — that sets out the repayment terms. Even then, deductions must not cause pay to fall below minimum wage, and the clause must be reasonable. Courts and tribunals can strike down training repayment clauses that are disproportionate or amount to a penalty clause.

Q: What is the difference between PILON and garden leave?

A: Payment in lieu of notice (PILON) terminates the employment immediately and pays the employee a lump sum equivalent to their notice pay. Garden leave continues the employment contract (the employee remains employed, on the payroll, and subject to their employment obligations including confidentiality) for the notice period, but requires them not to attend work. Garden leave is useful for enforcing post-employment restraints; PILON ends the employment immediately. Your contract must specify whether you can exercise PILON.

Q: How long must I keep an employee's personnel file after they leave?

A: Retention periods vary by jurisdiction and by the type of record. In the UK, payroll records must be kept for 6 years for HMRC purposes. Personnel files should be kept for at least the period during which a former employee could bring a claim (typically up to 3 years under the Limitation Act). In Australia, the Fair Work Act requires certain records to be kept for 7 years. Review and delete records in accordance with your data protection obligations when the retention period expires.

Loved for Safety. MmowW Scrib🐮 — Document preparation made simple across 7 countries.

Free tools to help you get started:

TS
Takayuki Sawai
Gyoseishoshi
Licensed compliance professional helping businesses navigate regulatory requirements worldwide through MmowW.

Ready for complete document preparation?

MmowW Scribe prepares your formation documents, compliance filings, and business paperwork across 7 countries.

Start 14-Day Free Trial →

No credit card required. From $149/month.

Loved for Safety.

Important disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For legal questions, consult a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction.
Loved for Safety.

法律の壁で立ち止まらないで!

愛ちゃん🐣が24時間AIで法令Q&Aに回答します

無料で試す