Probation is one of those workplace concepts that sounds simpler than it is.
In both Australia and New Zealand, there is a widespread belief (among employers and employees alike) that:
- Being on probation means you have fewer rights
- Dismissal during this period is a relatively clean exercise
- The whole arrangement sits comfortably outside the reach of employment law.
On all three counts, this is wrong.
The legal frameworks governing probation periods in Australia and New Zealand are nuanced, jurisdiction-specific, and – importantly – not interchangeable.
A process that is perfectly lawful in Sydney can expose an Auckland employer to a personal grievance claim. What constitutes a fair dismissal in Wellington may not pass scrutiny under the Fair Work Act in Melbourne.
This guide breaks it all down – the legal frameworks, the employee rights that apply from day one, the critical distinction between trial periods and probation periods in New Zealand, the protections that persist regardless of probation status, and the practical tools you need to manage these periods compliantly.
There are also ready-to-use templates at the end, because knowing the law only gets you halfway there. ⬇️

Probation Periods in Australia: The Legal Framework
Let's start with a misconception that costs Australian employers significant financial and reputational damage every year: probation is not a legal concept under the Fair Work Act 2009. The Act does not use the word. What it does use is the Minimum Employment Period (MEP).
The MEP is the threshold that determines whether an employee can bring an unfair dismissal claim. It sits at:
- 6 months for employees working for businesses with 15 or more employees
- 12 months for employees working for small business employers (fewer than 15 employees)
Probation is a contractual concept – a clause you write into an employment agreement. The Minimum Employment Period is a statutory concept, a threshold that exists regardless of what the contract says.
Watch out for thisIf you set a 6-month probation period and then extend it to 8 months, your employee may have crossed the MEP threshold. From that point, they can bring an unfair dismissal claim if dismissed, even though they are technically still 'on probation'. The label in the contract does not override the statute. |
What the Fair Work Act actually governs
The Fair Work Act 2009 is administered by the Fair Work Commission (FWC) and the Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO). It applies to the vast majority of private sector employees across Australia, including:
- All employees in Victoria, the Northern Territory, and the ACT
- Private sector employees in NSW, Queensland, South Australia, and Tasmania
- Employees of constitutional corporations in Western Australia (most Pty Ltd companies)
- Commonwealth employees and employees of Commonwealth authorities

Some state and territory public sector employees fall outside the national system and are covered by state-specific legislation instead.
➡️ In NSW, for example, local government employees are covered by the Industrial Relations Act 1996 (NSW) – which has its own interpretation of what constitutes a reasonable probationary period, as clarified in Shrestha v City of Ryde Council [2024] NSWIRComm 1005.
Employee entitlements during probation: what cannot be taken away
Here is what probationary employees in Australia are entitled to from the moment they start work, and none of this can be contracted away:
- Fair wages and on-time payment, in accordance with any applicable Modern Award or Enterprise Agreement
- Accrual of paid annual leave (full-time and part-time employees)
- Accrual of personal/carer's leave and compassionate leave
- Unpaid carer's leave and compassionate leave (casual employees)
- A safe and healthy workplace – Work Health and Safety obligations apply from day one
- Protection from workplace bullying and harassment
- Receipt of the Fair Work Information Statement (and Casual Employment Information Statement where applicable)
The one area where probationary employees tend to have reduced entitlements is redundancy pay. Under the National Employment Standards (NES), redundancy pay generally does not apply until an employee has 12 months of continuous service. Discretionary benefits such as bonuses may also be subject to separate contract terms.
General Protections: the protections that apply from day one, full stop
Even where the MEP has not been reached and an unfair dismissal claim is not yet available, Part 3-1 of the Fair Work Act (the General Protections provisions) apply from the first moment of employment.
Under the General Protections framework, it is unlawful for an employer to take adverse action (including dismissal) against an employee because they:
- Exercised a workplace right: this includes querying their pay, making a complaint about working conditions, taking sick leave, or raising a workplace safety concern
- Were involved in making a complaint or inquiry about their employment
- Are a member (or not a member) of a union
- Are pregnant, have a disability, or belong to another protected category
- Made (or propose to make) a workers' compensation claim
The 13 protected attributes under the Fair Work Act include race, sex, age, disability, pregnancy, religion, national extraction, social origin, sexual orientation, and family responsibilities. A dismissal motivated (even partially) by any of these attributes can give rise to a General Protections claim, regardless of whether the employee is on probation or not.
Key deadlinesAny application to the Fair Work Commission – whether for unfair dismissal or a General Protections claim involving dismissal – must be lodged within 21 days of the date of dismissal. The clock starts the day after the employee is informed of the dismissal, not from the date of final payment or any letter received later. |
Termination during probation: what employers must still do
The practical reality of dismissal during probation in Australia is this: if an employee has not yet reached the MEP, an unfair dismissal claim is generally not available to them. However, this does not make dismissal consequence-free. The employer must:
- Provide proper notice (or payment in lieu). Under the NES, employees with less than one year of service are entitled to at least one week's notice. Check whether any applicable Modern Award or Enterprise Agreement sets a higher standard, whichever is greater applies.
- Not dismiss for a prohibited reason (see General Protections above)
- Not dismiss due to temporary absence caused by illness or injury
- Comply with anti-discrimination law at both federal and state/territory level
Best practice (and the most effective risk management strategy) is to document performance concerns, provide clear and specific feedback, and give the employee a genuine opportunity to respond before making a dismissal decision.
Even when an unfair dismissal claim is not available, a poorly documented dismissal can still generate a General Protections claim, and those carry no statutory compensation cap.
Extending a probation period
A probation period can be extended only where the employment contract expressly permits it and specifies the maximum duration of any extension. Any extension must be communicated in writing and agreed upon with the employee. Silence is not agreement.
The major risk of extending probation past the MEP threshold: once the employee has served 6 months (or 12 months with a small business employer) and is then dismissed, they can bring an unfair dismissal claim. The probation label in the contract becomes irrelevant at that point.
Small business employers: the different rules
If your business has fewer than 15 employees at the time of dismissal (this includes regular and systematic casual employees of associated entities), you qualify as a small business employer under the Fair Work Act. This means:
- The MEP threshold extends to 12 months rather than 6
- Once an employee passes the 12-month mark, the Small Business Fair Dismissal Code applies
- General Protections still apply from day one, this is non-negotiable regardless of business size

Probation periods in New Zealand: a different framework
New Zealand's approach to probation diverges from Australia's in ways that are easy to miss if you are applying Australian frameworks to a Kiwi context. The most important difference is a legal distinction that Australia simply does not have: the separation between a probation period and a trial period.
Employment law in New Zealand is primarily governed by the Employment Relations Act 2000 (ERA 2000), administered through the Employment Relations Authority and the Employment Court. The ERA places good faith at the centre of all employment relationships, as a substantive legal obligation.
Probation periods vs trial periods
This is the piece of New Zealand employment law that trips up employers most frequently, particularly those who are familiar with the Australian system. These two terms are not interchangeable. They carry materially different legal implications.
|
|
Probation period |
Trial period (90-day) |
|
Who can use it? |
Any employer, for new or existing employees in new roles |
Any employer, extended to all employers from 23 December 2023 |
|
Can it apply to existing employees? |
Yes, including internal role changes |
No, first time working for that employer only |
|
Maximum duration |
No set maximum (must be stated in contract) |
90 calendar days |
|
Can employee raise unjustified dismissal grievance? |
Yes, full personal grievance rights apply |
No, this right is removed for the trial period |
|
Fair process required on dismissal? |
Yes, full consultation process required |
Shorter process, must give notice and reasons |
|
Must be in written agreement? |
Yes, before work commences |
Yes, before work commences (invalid if added later) |
Major law change – December 2023Since 23 December 2023, all employers in New Zealand can use 90-day trial periods, regardless of business size. Previously, only employers with fewer than 20 employees could do so. This change came via the Employment Relations (Trial Periods) Amendment Act 2023. Immigration New Zealand has not extended this change to migrants employed on Accredited Employer Work Visas (AEWVs) – trial periods remain unavailable for these workers. |
The good faith obligation
Good faith is a substantive legal requirement embedded throughout the ERA 2000 and it applies during probation from the very first day. Under the Act, both parties must:
- Be active and constructive in maintaining a productive employment relationship
- Be responsive and communicative
- Not mislead or deceive each other
- Proactively share information that is, or is likely to be, relevant to the employment relationship
➡️ This means that good faith governs how you structure a probation period, how you communicate concerns, and how you conduct any dismissal process. A probation clause in a contract does not override good faith, it operates within it.
It is also worth noting: you cannot force an employee onto a probation period. If an employment agreement contains a probation clause that the employee did not knowingly agree to, that clause can be deemed invalid. The employment continues, but the probation period does not.
Employee entitlements during probation in New Zealand
Probationary employees in New Zealand have the same minimum legal entitlements as permanent employees. These include:
- Payment at the agreed rate, not a penny less than the contractual wage
- The same working conditions and hours as those stated in the employment agreement
- Annual leave entitlements under the Holidays Act 2003 (accrued from the first day, accessible after 12 months)
- Sick leave (from 6 months of employment under the Holidays Act 2003)
- Bereavement leave, parental leave, and domestic violence leave
- All 11 public holidays, and an alternative paid day off if they are required to work on one
- A safe workplace under the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015
- Protection from discrimination under the Human Rights Act 1993
One important note on annual leave: although leave accrues from day one, most probationary employees will not yet have access to annual leave because it becomes available after 12 months of continuous employment. During a 3-6 month probation period, sick leave also has not yet kicked in – it becomes available after 6 months of employment.
Dismissal during a probation period in New Zealand
In New Zealand, dismissing an employee during a probation period requires a full fair process. There is no statutory 'free window' equivalent to the Australian Minimum Employment Period.
The probation period gives employers some operational flexibility (it allows for a somewhat streamlined process) but it does not remove the requirement for procedural fairness.
Before dismissing an employee on a probation period, the employer must:
Here's that section in full:
Before dismissing an employee on a probation period, the employer must:
- Raise specific concerns in writing. The employee must know precisely what the issue is and have the opportunity to respond.
- Provide a genuine opportunity to respond. The employer must genuinely consider the employee's response before making a decision.
- Offer support and training where appropriate. Probation is partly an assessment tool, but it is also an onboarding phase. Employers who dismiss without providing adequate support risk a personal grievance claim.
- Give proper notice. The notice period specified in the employment agreement applies. If no notice period is stated, reasonable notice is required.
- Provide written confirmation of dismissal, including the reasons.
Employees on a probation period can raise a personal grievance for unjustified dismissal if they believe the process was not followed.
This is categorically different from a trial period, where this right is removed. If you dismiss an employee on a probation period without following fair process, you are exposed to an ERA claim that can include compensation for humiliation, loss of dignity, and injury to feelings – as well as lost wages.
Trial period dismissals: the (shorter) process that still applies
Even on a 90-day trial period (where the unjustified dismissal personal grievance is not available) the employer cannot simply hand someone their notice without any process at all. The employee must be:
- Informed that they are being dismissed (before the trial period ends)
- Given the notice period required in their employment agreement
- Provided with reasons for the decision, if they ask

Employees on a trial period can still raise personal grievances on other grounds, including discrimination, sexual harassment, racial harassment, and duress. A trial period protects only against the specific claim of unjustified dismissal, nothing else.
A common and costly mistake: the trial period clause must be signed and in place before the employee starts work. If it was added to the agreement after day one even by one day) it is invalid, and the employee defaults to full probationary period rights, including the right to claim unjustified dismissal.
Personal grievances: what they cover and the 90-day window
In New Zealand, an employee has 90 days from the act or omission giving rise to the grievance to raise it with their employer.
This does not mean lodging a claim with the Employment Relations Authority, it means raising it informally with the employer. Grievances that are not raised within 90 days may be declined by the ERA, except in exceptional circumstances.
Personal grievances can be raised on the following grounds (all of which remain available during probation and trial periods):
- Unjustified dismissal (probation period only, not during a valid trial period)
- Unjustifiable disadvantage – where employment conditions are worsened without justification
- Discrimination on any of the grounds protected under the Human Rights Act 1993
- Sexual harassment
- Racial harassment
- Duress relating to union membership or activity
Australia vs New Zealand: the Differences for HR
If you are an HR manager operating across both countries, or transitioning between them, these are the critical distinctions to keep front of mind:
|
Issue |
Australia |
New Zealand |
|
Governing law |
Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) |
Employment Relations Act 2000 |
|
'Probation' in statute? |
No, contractual only |
Yes, defined under ERA 2000 |
|
Equivalent to a 'trial period'? |
No separate concept |
Yes, max 90 days, with different rules |
|
Unfair dismissal access |
After MEP: 6 months (most) / 12 months (small businesses) |
Available from day one (except on valid trial period) |
|
Fair process on dismissal required? |
Best practice; GP law applies regardless |
Yes, legally required for probation dismissals |
|
Claim type if dismissed unfairly |
General Protections claim (FWC) |
Personal grievance (Employment Relations Authority) |
|
Claim deadline |
21 days from dismissal |
90 days from the act/omission |
|
Anti-discrimination protection |
From day one (13 protected attributes) |
From day one (Human Rights Act 1993) |
|
Good faith obligation? |
Implied; General Protections back it up |
Explicit statutory requirement under ERA 2000 |
The five probation mistakes HR managers make in both countries
1. Treating 'probation' as a blank cheque for dismissal
In Australia, dismissal during the MEP without a prohibited reason is technically low-risk from an unfair dismissal standpoint. But it is never consequence-free.
General Protections claims have no compensation cap. In New Zealand, probation-period dismissals always require a fair process, the only tool that removes the unjustified dismissal right is a valid trial period.
2. Failing to put the probation clause in writing before day one
In New Zealand, any trial period that is not in the written employment agreement before the employee starts work is invalid.
In Australia, the terms of probation – including duration, extension rights, and notice obligations – must be clearly documented. Verbal agreements, after-the-fact addenda, and assumed terms are all risks.
3. Extending probation past the MEP threshold (Australia)
Once an employee in Australia has served the Minimum Employment Period, they can bring an unfair dismissal claim regardless of whether their contract still describes them as 'on probation'. Extending probation is not a way to delay legal exposure, it often creates more of it.
4. Skipping the feedback loop
In both countries, employers who dismiss probationary employees without documented feedback, specific performance concerns, and a genuine opportunity to respond are exposed.
In New Zealand, this is a direct route to a personal grievance.
In Australia, a poorly documented dismissal can turn a performance-based termination into a General Protections claim if the employee has recently exercised any workplace right.
5. Applying one country's rules to the other
This is the big one for trans-Tasman HR teams.
New Zealand's trial period has no equivalent in Australia. Australia's Minimum Employment Period has no equivalent in New Zealand. The good faith obligation in New Zealand is more explicit and more rigorously enforced than its Australian counterpart.
These systems require separate processes, separate documentation, and separate legal knowledge.
HR Templates for Probation: Ready to Use
Template 1: Probation clause for Australian employment contracts
Australian probation clause (adapt to your award and circumstances)Probationary Period Your employment commences with a probationary period of [3/6] months, beginning on your start date of [DATE]. During this period, your performance, conduct, and suitability for the role will be assessed. Your manager will meet with you at [30 days / 60 days / end of period] to discuss your progress. Either party may terminate this agreement during the probationary period by providing [NOTICE PERIOD] written notice, or payment in lieu of notice, in accordance with the National Employment Standards. Your employer may extend this probationary period by a further [X weeks/months] if more time is needed to assess your suitability, provided the total probationary period does not exceed [MAXIMUM]. Any extension will be communicated to you in writing before the expiry of the original period. This probationary period does not affect your entitlements under the Fair Work Act 2009 or the National Employment Standards. |
Template 2: 90-day trial period clause for New Zealand employment contracts
New Zealand trial period clause (must be signed before work commences)Trial Period In accordance with section 67A of the Employment Relations Act 2000, your employment is subject to a trial period of 90 calendar days, commencing on [START DATE]. During this trial period, either party may terminate this agreement by providing written notice of [NOTICE PERIOD]. The employee agrees that, in the event of dismissal during the trial period, they will not bring a personal grievance on the grounds of unjustified dismissal. All other rights and obligations under this agreement and the Employment Relations Act 2000 remain in full effect during the trial period, including protections against discrimination, harassment, and other personal grievance grounds. This trial period clause is agreed to by both parties in good faith prior to the commencement of employment. Employee signature: ________________________ Date: ______________ Employer signature: ________________________ Date: ______________ |
Template 3: Probation check-in record (for both countries)
Probation review meeting recordEmployee name: _________________________________ Manager name: _________________________________ Date of meeting: ________________________________ Meeting number: ☐ 30-day ☐ 60-day ☐ End of probation ☐ Other: _______ Areas discussed: • Performance against agreed objectives: ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ • Conduct and workplace behaviour: ___________________________________________________ • Cultural fit and team integration: ___________________________________________________ • Areas for development or concern: ___________________________________________________ • Support, training, or resources provided: ___________________________________________________ Employee response / comments: ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Agreed next steps: ___________________________________________________ Outcome: ☐ Progressing well ☐ Concerns noted — see above ☐ Probation extension ☐ Probation passed — employment confirmed ☐ Termination (process initiated) Employee signature: _______________________ Date: ______________ Manager signature: _______________________ Date: ______________ Copy to: ☐ Employee ☐ HR file ☐ Manager |
Template 4: End of probation confirmation letter
Probation confirmation letter (adapt for AU or NZ)[DATE] Dear [EMPLOYEE NAME], Re: Confirmation of employment — end of probationary period I am pleased to confirm that you have successfully completed your probationary period, which concluded on [DATE]. Your performance, conduct, and contribution during this period have demonstrated that you are well-suited to your role as [JOB TITLE]. We are pleased to confirm your ongoing employment on a [permanent full-time / permanent part-time / other] basis. Your terms and conditions of employment remain as set out in your employment agreement, with the following updates [if any]: [DETAILS OR 'None at this time']. We look forward to your continued contribution to the team. Yours sincerely, [NAME] [TITLE] [COMPANY] |
The Cost of Getting Probation Wrong
Probation is a legitimate and genuinely useful HR tool. Used well, it gives both parties clarity, structure, and a shared framework for what success looks like in those critical first months. Used carelessly – applied as a blank cheque for dismissal, treated as a documentation-free zone, or confused across jurisdictions – it becomes a significant liability
The law in both Australia and New Zealand is clear: probationary employees have rights. Not fewer rights than permanent employees – the same rights, with a narrower range of mechanisms available to enforce them.
Understand the framework, document your process, give genuine feedback, and treat probation as the two-way assessment it was designed to be. 👏
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