Last reviewed: May 2026 | Source: CIPD Performance Management practices survey and Acas Code of Practice
Key finding: UK performance management systems operate under the Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance, with CIPD research identifying continuous feedback approaches as more effective than annual review-only frameworks, and ONS productivity data linking management capability to UK output differentials.- Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance procedures - statutory backstop
- CIPD Performance Management practices survey - the UK practitioner reference
- Employment Rights Act 1996 - underlying employment law framework
Performance management systems UK operate at the intersection of Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance procedures, the underlying Employment Rights Act 1996 framework, and the CIPD practitioner research that documents what works. CIPD Performance Management practices survey data has consistently shown that organisations using structured continuous-feedback approaches report lower voluntary attrition and higher engagement than those relying on annual review-only frameworks. ONS labour productivity statistics provide the macro backdrop, with the UK productivity puzzle remaining a central concern for HM Treasury and BEIS policy work.
- CIPD Performance Management survey: 23% lower voluntary attrition reported by employers using structured performance management versus annual review only
- Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance: statutory code (SI 2015/625) that employment tribunals must take into account - non-compliance can increase/reduce awards by 25%
- Employment Rights Act 1996 s98: statutory definition of fair dismissal, with capability as one of 5 potentially fair reasons - requires documented performance management process
- ONS Labour productivity (output per hour): UK labour productivity gap vs G7 average has persisted above 15% since 2008, with management quality identified as a structural driver
- HMRC PAYE: employer obligation to report pay changes including performance-related pay in real time, with implications for performance bonus administration
The Acas Code provides the statutory backstop for performance procedures
The Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance procedures is the operational backstop for UK performance management systems, with the underlying Employment Rights Act 1996 framework providing the statutory protection against unfair dismissal. The Code sets out the procedural standards expected from UK employers when managing performance concerns that may lead to dismissal, including investigation, hearing, decision, and appeal. The mechanism is reinforced by section 207A of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992, which permits tribunals to adjust compensation by up to 25% for unreasonable failure to follow the Code.
The Code applies broadly to performance management situations where the underlying objective is dismissal if performance does not improve. Routine performance feedback and development conversations are not within the Code's direct scope, but the overall performance framework needs to satisfy the Code's requirements at the point where formal procedures may begin. UK employers typically structure their performance management framework with a clear bridge from informal coaching to formal procedure under the Code.
CIPD research shows continuous feedback outperforms annual reviews
CIPD Performance Management practices survey data consistently shows that UK organisations using structured continuous-feedback approaches report better outcomes on engagement, retention, and productivity than those relying on annual review-only frameworks. The mechanism is straightforward: feedback delivered close to the work being done is more actionable than feedback delivered months later in an annual review. The CIPD research has tracked the practitioner shift away from forced ranking, calibration grids, and annual rating systems towards check-in cadences and goal-tracking frameworks supported by HR information systems.
The shift is not universal. Some sectors (notably professional services and financial services) continue to use formal annual review and ranking frameworks, particularly where compensation is tightly linked to ranking outcomes. The FCA Senior Managers and Certification Regime (SMCR) places specific record-keeping requirements on regulated firms that interact with the performance management framework, including documented performance assessments supporting fit-and-proper determinations.
ONS productivity data identifies a structural UK output gap
ONS labour productivity statistics show UK output per hour growth has lagged most G7 peers since the financial crisis, a gap commonly identified as the "UK productivity puzzle" in HM Treasury and BEIS analysis. The structural gap has multiple drivers (capital investment, skills mix, sector composition, management capability), with CIPD research identifying management capability as one of the more addressable drivers. The Management and Leadership Skills work by the Chartered Management Institute (CMI) has quantified the management capability deficit in UK organisations relative to international peers.
The connection between performance management practice and productivity is empirical. Organisations with structured performance management, regular feedback, and clear goal-setting frameworks tend to demonstrate higher productivity than peers without those mechanisms. The CIPD and CMI have published frameworks intended to address the UK management capability gap, with the Apprenticeship Levy providing a funding source for management development at scale.
Performance management interacts with Employment Rights Act 1996 protections
UK performance management procedures interact with the Employment Rights Act 1996 framework, particularly the protection against unfair dismissal under section 98 of the Act for employees with two or more years of qualifying service. Dismissal for capability (poor performance) is a potentially fair reason under section 98, but the employer must demonstrate that the dismissal was reasonable in all the circumstances. Reasonableness includes following a fair procedure consistent with the Acas Code, providing opportunity to improve, considering reasonable adjustments where applicable, and assessing alternative employment options where appropriate.
The two-year qualifying service requirement does not protect performance management procedures from challenges based on discrimination under the Equality Act 2010, which applies from day one. Performance management approaches that disproportionately affect protected characteristic groups (age, disability, race, sex, religion or belief, sexual orientation, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity) may face indirect discrimination challenges regardless of qualifying service.
HR information systems have transformed performance management infrastructure
HR information systems have substantially transformed UK performance management infrastructure over the past decade, enabling continuous feedback workflows, goal tracking, calibration analytics, and integration with compensation and learning systems. The shift from spreadsheet-based annual review processes to platform-based continuous workflows has changed both the operational mechanics and the data available to senior management. The CIPD People Analytics work has tracked the increasing use of platform data to identify performance patterns, attrition risks, and capability gaps at scale.
The UK GDPR framework constrains the use of HR data, with the ICO providing guidance on the principles of data minimisation, purpose limitation, and proportionality in workplace monitoring. Performance management platforms need to operate within these constraints, with documented lawful bases for processing and appropriate transparency to employees. The Information Commissioner's Office Employment Practices Code provides the practitioner reference.
Performance-related pay frameworks face increasing regulatory scrutiny
Performance-related pay frameworks face increasing regulatory scrutiny in regulated sectors, with the FCA SMCR remuneration code, the PRA Remuneration Code, and the broader Senior Managers Regime placing specific requirements on the link between performance assessment and variable remuneration. The codes require firms to assess performance over an appropriate time horizon, to consider risk and conduct alongside financial outcomes, and to apply malus and clawback provisions where post-award conduct issues emerge. The mechanism is intended to align long-term reward with long-term risk-adjusted performance.
The FCA and PRA have published thematic reviews of firm practice in this area, with continuing concerns about the alignment of performance assessment with conduct and risk outcomes. The Bank of England and the wider macro-prudential framework have emphasised the importance of remuneration structures that do not incentivise excessive risk-taking, a continued lesson from the financial crisis.
HMRC PAYE reporting provides the operational data on UK workforce
HMRC PAYE Real Time Information (RTI) reporting provides the operational backbone for UK workforce data, with the data feeding into the ONS Labour Force Survey and other labour market statistics that contextualise UK performance management practice. PAYE RTI captures every UK employee paid through PAYE on every pay date, providing near-real-time visibility of employment levels and earnings. The ONS uses PAYE data alongside the Labour Force Survey to produce the headline UK employment and earnings statistics.
For employers, PAYE RTI is the operational mechanism for reporting payroll information to HMRC, including tax, NIC, and benefits in kind. The data does not directly capture performance management outcomes, but the underlying earnings and attrition data provides indirect signal on workforce dynamics. The HMRC P11D framework captures benefits in kind separately, including performance-related awards delivered in non-cash form.
| Framework | Owner | Scope |
|---|---|---|
| Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance | Acas | Procedural standards for formal action |
| Employment Rights Act 1996 | Statute (Parliament) | Unfair dismissal protection |
| Equality Act 2010 | EHRC | Discrimination protections from day one |
| FCA SMCR Remuneration Code | FCA | Regulated firm variable pay alignment |
| ICO Employment Practices Code | ICO | UK GDPR application to employment data |
What are performance management systems UK based on?
UK performance management sits at the intersection of the Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance, the Employment Rights Act 1996 unfair dismissal framework, and the Equality Act 2010 anti-discrimination framework. CIPD research provides the practitioner reference on what works.
What is employee performance management in the UK?
Employee performance management in the UK covers goal-setting, feedback, development, assessment, and (where necessary) formal procedures up to dismissal. The framework needs to align with the Acas Code at the formal end and be free of unlawful discrimination throughout. CIPD evidence suggests continuous feedback approaches outperform annual review-only frameworks.
What is a performance management framework UK organisations typically use?
UK frameworks typically combine goal-setting (often using SMART or OKR approaches), regular check-ins or one-to-ones, formal performance assessments (annual or more frequent), development planning, and a clear procedural escalation path to formal disciplinary action where performance does not improve.
How does the performance management process UK work in formal procedures?
The formal procedural path follows the Acas Code: investigation, formal hearing, decision (with right to be accompanied), and appeal. Each stage requires documented evidence and reasonable opportunity for the employee to respond. Failure to follow the Code can result in tribunal compensation uplifts of up to 25% under section 207A of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992.
What protections does the Equality Act 2010 provide in performance management?
The Equality Act 2010 applies from day one of employment, prohibiting direct and indirect discrimination, harassment, and victimisation on protected characteristics (age, disability, race, sex, religion or belief, sexual orientation, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity). Performance management approaches that disproportionately affect protected groups may face indirect discrimination challenges.
Does HMRC PAYE reporting interact with performance management?
HMRC PAYE RTI is the operational mechanism for reporting payroll information including tax, NIC, and benefits in kind. It does not directly capture performance management outcomes but provides the operational data on UK employment and earnings that the ONS uses for labour market statistics. The P11D framework captures non-cash benefits including some performance-related awards.
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How we verified this
This article draws on the following primary UK sources:
- CIPD: Performance Management practices survey
- Acas: Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance procedures
- ONS: Labour productivity statistics
- Employment Rights Act 1996 (legislation.gov.uk)
- Equality Act 2010 (legislation.gov.uk)
- HMRC PAYE Real Time Information guidance
- Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 (legislation.gov.uk) section 207A
- FCA SMCR Remuneration Code
No secondary aggregators, no press releases from commercial providers, and no statistics without a named government or regulatory source were used.