Grounds
Decided unilaterally by the employer: redundancy of the job position based on economic, organizational, productivity or technological reasons, on individual or on a collective basis; or disciplinary dismissal, including based on performance.
Other termination grounds: employee resignation; constructive dismissal; mutual agreement; grounds legally agreed upon in the contract; expiration of a fixed-term contract; employee's retirement; force majeure; death or permanent disability.
Employees subject to termination laws
All.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
Some employees are protected against unfair dismissal (eg, pregnant employees, employees enjoying reduced working time to take care of a child, employee representatives or employees who have filed a claim against the company may also receive protection based on retaliation grounds). Protected employees may be terminated, but only for fair cause, or they will be entitled to re-instatement and back wages.
Third-party approval for termination/termination documents
Third-party approval is not required for terminations. Termination documents in accordance with employment legislation are required.
Mass layoff rules
Collective dismissal rules are triggered in the event that the number of affected employees exceeds the legal thresholds (eg, 10 terminations in a 90-day period in companies with fewer than 100 employees).
Strict information and consultation rules apply, which require involving both the employees' representatives and the labor authority. However, there is no need to obtain approval for termination.
Terminations may be challenged by the employees, the employees’ legal representatives and, in exceptional cases, by the administration.
From July 1, 2023, companies will have to give 6 months' notice to the administration before closing a workplace which involves the dismissal of 50 or more employees.
Notice
15 days' notice in case of redundancy of common employees, unless otherwise agreed in the applicable CBA. Senior managers are entitled to a minimum 3 months' notice.
Not required in case of disciplinary dismissal.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
If the 15 days' notice is not honored, payment in lieu of notice is required.
Garden leave is not expressly regulated, although employers sometimes use garden leave, which may result in certain issues given the employee's right to work.
Severance
Fair individual redundancy: 20 days of salary pay per year of service, up to 12 months. For collective layoffs, this is usually increased through collective consultations.
Fair disciplinary dismissal: no severance.