Menopause Workplace Policy: What UK Employers Need to Know in 2026

MARKABLE Research Team · May 2026 · 6 min read · Last updated: June 2026

Menopause workplace policies are moving from optional to expected. The UK is on track to mandate employer action plans for menopause support by 2027, making it the first major economy to formalise menopause workplace protections at a national level. Here is what a comprehensive policy should include and how to build one.

The regulatory landscape is shifting

In 2024, the UK government accepted recommendations from the Women and Equalities Committee to require employers with more than 250 employees to implement menopause action plans. The mandate, expected to take effect by 2027, would formalise what many leading organisations have already adopted voluntarily.

250+

UK employers with 250+ employees will be required to have menopause action plans by 2027

Source: UK Women and Equalities Committee report, 2024

The regulatory environment continues to evolve:

Legal note: Even without the forthcoming menopause-specific mandate, employers already face liability under existing discrimination laws. The Equality Act 2010 covers sex discrimination, age discrimination, and disability discrimination, all of which may apply to menopause-related workplace issues. Proactive policies reduce legal exposure significantly.

What a good menopause workplace policy includes

Based on guidance from the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD), the British Menopause Society, and leading corporate programmes, an effective policy covers five areas:

1. Recognition and awareness

2. Environmental adjustments

3. Flexible working arrangements

4. Manager training

5. Health and wellness support

76%

of women say they would find a workplace menopause policy helpful

Source: CIPD survey, Menopause and the Workplace, 2023

Legal considerations for UK employers

The UK legal framework provides robust protections that are relevant to menopause in the workplace:

Risk mitigation: Proactive policies reduce legal exposure. Organisations with documented menopause support programmes are better positioned to demonstrate good faith in any employment dispute related to menopausal symptoms.

How to get started

Building a menopause workplace policy does not require a massive initiative. Most successful programmes start small:

  1. Assess the current state. Survey employees (anonymously) to understand awareness, needs, and existing gaps. Even basic data creates a foundation for action.
  2. Draft a simple policy. Start with a one-page document covering recognition, adjustments, and support resources. Perfection is not the goal; acknowledgement is.
  3. Train managers first. A 60-minute training session for people managers has an outsized impact. Most managers want to be supportive but do not know how.
  4. Communicate broadly. Make the policy visible. Include it in onboarding, benefits communications, and wellness programme materials.
  5. Measure and iterate. Track utilisation, gather feedback, and refine. The best policies evolve based on real employee experience.

The bottom line

Menopause workplace policies are no longer a "nice to have." The UK is leading internationally with forthcoming mandatory action plans for larger employers. Employment tribunal rulings are establishing clear precedents. And the workforce data makes the business case straightforward. The employers who act now will be ahead of compliance requirements and better positioned to retain experienced talent.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What should a menopause workplace policy include?

A comprehensive policy should address awareness and training for line managers, reasonable adjustments for employees experiencing symptoms, clear and accessible documentation, and a regular review cycle. The aim is practical support rather than a single fixed template.

Are employers legally required to support menopause?

In the UK, employers with more than 250 employees are expected to implement menopause action plans by 2027. In the US there is no federal menopause-specific law, but the EEOC has clarified that menopause symptoms may qualify as a disability under the ADA when they substantially limit major life activities.

Can employers face liability without menopause-specific laws?

Yes. Even without dedicated legislation, employers may face liability under existing discrimination laws. UK employment tribunals have ruled in favour of employees disciplined or dismissed due to menopause symptoms, citing sex, age, and disability discrimination protections.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. Regulatory information is current as of publication but may change. MARKABLE is a general wellness product for personal awareness and self-monitoring. It is not a medical device and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult qualified legal and HR professionals for specific policy guidance.