Employment action guide · Republic of Ireland

What to do if you are made redundant

Get the reason, date, notice and payment calculation in writing. Save employment records before access ends, then check statutory entitlement and income support promptly.

As of 11 July 2026Last reviewed 11 July 2026Review quarterlyPublished by Around.ie · Reviewed by Around Editorial Desk

First 48 hours

  • Ask whether the role is genuinely ending and whether the process is individual or collective.
  • Request the termination date, notice arrangements, redundancy calculation and final-pay items.
  • Save contract, payslips, leave balance, pension information and relevant correspondence lawfully.
  • Do not sign a waiver or settlement you do not understand.

Check statutory redundancy and notice

The Department of Social Protection says eligible employees generally need 104 weeks of continuous, fully insurable employment and must lose a job that no longer exists. Statutory redundancy is two weeks’ pay for each year of service plus one additional week, subject to a €600 weekly ceiling. Check current redundancy entitlements.

Contractual or collective terms can be more favourable. Notice entitlement is separate from the redundancy lump sum.

If the employer cannot pay

The Redundancy Payment Scheme can provide statutory redundancy where an employer is genuinely unable to pay. The Insolvency Payments Scheme covers specified debts where the employer is legally insolvent. These routes, representatives and limits differ. See the Redundancy Payment Scheme.

Protect income and deadlines

  1. Apply promptly for the appropriate jobseeker payment through MyWelfare or Intreo.
  2. Ask Revenue how termination payments are treated and review the final payroll record.
  3. Update the household budget and stop avoidable commitments.
  4. Use the WRC route if entitlement is disputed, noting that legal time limits apply.

Primary sources

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