TL;DR: Employers in most countries must provide paid sick leave — entitlements vary from statutory sick pay in the UK (employer-funded up to a ceiling) to 10 days' mandatory paid sick leave in Australia. Getting documentation and process right protects your business and supports your employees.
Managing employee absence due to illness is one of the most practically challenging aspects of employment. Employers must navigate statutory sick pay obligations, documentation requirements, return-to-work processes, and the risk of disability discrimination if absence becomes prolonged. In all seven jurisdictions covered by this guide, the law sets a floor below which sick leave provision cannot fall.
The major issues for employers are: how much paid sick leave employees are entitled to, who bears the cost, what documentation can be required, and how long absence can continue before capability dismissal becomes a consideration. Across countries, the answers differ significantly — but the underlying principle of protecting workers' health and income during illness is universal.
Understanding your obligations before an employee calls in sick — not after — is the mark of a well-prepared employer.
Sick leave entitlements take different forms in different countries:
Employer-funded sick pay: In the UK, Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) is paid by the employer (though it was historically recoverable from the government for small employers — this scheme is no longer broadly available). SSP is a flat weekly rate (£116.75/week in 2024/25) paid from the fourth consecutive day of absence.
State-funded sick pay: In Sweden, sick pay is funded primarily through the social insurance system (Försäkringskassan) after an employer-paid first day. France operates a similar model with social security (CPAM) covering the bulk of sick pay after a waiting period.
Employer-mandated accrued leave: In Australia and New Zealand, employees accrue a fixed entitlement to paid personal/carer's leave annually (10 days/year in Australia under the National Employment Standards). This is paid at the employee's ordinary rate.
At-will or market-driven: In the United States, there is no federal mandatory paid sick leave law, though several states and cities have enacted their own requirements. Many US employers offer sick leave as a benefit to remain competitive.
Most jurisdictions impose a "waiting period" — days at the start of sickness absence for which no pay is due:
Employers have the right to require evidence of illness, but this must be proportionate and comply with data protection rules:
Medical certificates contain sensitive health information. Store them securely, limit access, and do not retain them longer than necessary under GDPR and equivalent laws.
When absence extends beyond a few weeks, additional considerations apply. In most jurisdictions:
Use our free tool: Employment Checker
Try it free →| Country | Annual Entitlement | Who Pays | Waiting Days | Medical Certificate | Key Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | SSP up to 28 weeks | Employer | 3 days | Day 8+ (fit note) | gov.uk/statutory-sick-pay |
| 🇫🇷 France | Up to 3 years | Social security + employer top-up | 3 days (carence) | Within 48 hours | ameli.fr |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Up to 364 days | Employer day 1–14, then Försäkringskassan | 1 day (karensdag) | Day 8+ | forsakringskassan.se |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | 10 days/year (accruing) | Employer | None | On request | fairwork.gov.au/leave/sick-carers-leave |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | 10 days/year | Employer | None | On request | employment.govt.nz/leave-and-holidays/sick-leave |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | 10 days fed (varies by province) | Employer (varies) | None (federal) | Employer may require | canada.ca/en/employment-social-development |
| 🇺🇸 USA | No federal minimum (state/city varies) | Varies | Varies | Employer may require | dol.gov/general/topic/workhours/sickleave |
Prepare your sick leave documentation and policies using our tools:
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.
Q: Can I contact an employee while they are on sick leave?
A: You can maintain reasonable contact to check on wellbeing, discuss adjustments, and plan for their return. However, excessive contact that causes stress or pressure to return prematurely can amount to harassment or constructive dismissal. A brief, empathetic check-in call is generally appropriate; multiple daily messages are not.
Q: Can I ask what illness the employee has?
A: You can ask, but employees are not legally obliged to disclose their diagnosis in most jurisdictions. You can ask for a medical certificate confirming they are unfit for work. If you need more detail to consider reasonable adjustments, you should seek the employee's consent to obtain an occupational health report or GP report under relevant data protection rules.
Q: What is the "Bradford Factor" and can I use it?
A: The Bradford Factor is a formula used to measure the impact of short, frequent absences on the business. It is a management tool, not a legal standard. Using it as an automatic trigger for disciplinary action — rather than as one input among many — can be problematic, particularly where absences are disability-related. Any absence management policy should include a consideration of the reasons for absence before taking action.
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