90 day trial periods - when a dismissal can still be challenged
A valid 90 day trial period can prevent a Personal Grievance (PG) for unjustified dismissal.
However, the legal requirements are strict. Small drafting or timing errors often invalidate a trial clause and can reopen an unfair dismissal claim.
Key point: The trial term must be agreed and signed before the employee starts work.
Notice of termination must be given during the trial period (even if the final day of employment is later).
What a 90 day trial period does
Trial periods are governed by section 67A of the Employment Relations Act 2000.
If the trial is valid, an employee cannot bring a PG or legal proceedings about dismissal.
The employer must still meet minimum legal obligations (pay, leave, good faith, health and safety, and prohibited conduct rules).
Common 90 day trial mistakes that can make the trial invalid
These are common failure points we see in practice:
- Signed too late: the employee started work (even briefly) before the agreement with the trial clause was signed.
- Trial clause missing or unclear: the written agreement does not clearly state the trial period, the employer's ability to dismiss during it, and the bar on a dismissal PG.
- Duration problems: the clause is not an exact period in days, or is more than 90 days (for example, using "three months").
- Not a new employee: the employee has previously worked for the employer (trial periods generally cannot be re-used).
- Unclear start date: the clause does not clearly identify when the trial begins (often an issue with induction or training periods).
- Bad record keeping: the employer cannot later prove the agreement was provided, explained, and signed in time.
Reality check: Trial periods remove a core protection (the ability to challenge a dismissal).
That is why the ERA and courts tend to interpret trial clauses strictly.
Trial dismissal notice mistakes
Even with a correctly drafted clause, employers often get the notice process wrong.
Notice must be issued within the trial period and must comply with the agreement's requirements.
The biggest trap: timing
Notice must be given during the trial period.
The last day of employment can fall after the trial ends, as long as notice was delivered in time.
- Late notice: notice is given outside the trial period (sometimes by only a day or two).
- Wrong form: the agreement requires written notice, but the employer tries to terminate verbally or by an informal text.
- Unclear basis: the termination letter does not clearly state it is a trial period termination or fails to reference the relevant clause.
- Payment in lieu mistakes: the employer pays in lieu of notice where the agreement does not allow it, or pays the wrong amount.
- Immediate termination: the letter says employment ends immediately despite a contractual notice period.
What rights and claims still exist even if the trial is valid?
A trial period only removes dismissal challenge rights, and only if it is valid.
Depending on the facts, other claims can still exist, including:
- Discrimination and harassment (and other prohibited conduct issues).
- Wage arrears and holiday pay (including incorrect final pay).
- Disadvantage claims (unjustified actions short of dismissal), depending on the situation.
- Protected disclosure / retaliation risks (fact dependent and often evidence heavy).
Act quickly: A PG generally must be raised within 90 days of the relevant action (or when it came to your notice).
If you were dismissed on a trial, get the documents reviewed early.
Trial period vs probation period
A probationary period is different. Employers generally must still have good reasons and follow a fair process to dismiss during probation.
A trial period (if valid) can limit dismissal challenge rights, but only for dismissal and only if the statutory requirements are met.