Menopause has moved firmly into the employment law spotlight.
Under the Employment Rights Act 2025, employers with over 250 employees will be required to set out how they are supporting women at work, including how they support employees experiencing menopause.
For HR leaders, this marks a clear shift. Menopause support is no longer treated as a discretionary or informal area of wellbeing. It’s increasingly used as a measure of organisational readiness, fairness and risk management.
This guide explains what menopause action planning means in practice, why it matters now, and how employers can prepare, with confidence and credibility.
A Menopause Action Plan (MAP) is a clear, written framework that explains how your organisation supports employees experiencing menopause in day-to-day working life.
While the term “Menopause Action Plan” is widely used, it’s important to be precise:
The Employment Rights Act introduces a requirement for large employers to publish Equality Action Plans.
These plans must include the actions an employer is taking to support women in the workplace, including support during menopause.
In practice, many organisations are creating a dedicated menopause action plan as part of (or alongside) their Equality Action Plan to ensure menopause support is clear, visible and consistently applied.
A strong menopause action plan typically covers:
The aim is to support employees earlier, reduce escalation, and prevent menopause symptoms from converting to absence, performance issues, grievances or attrition.
The Employment Rights Act 2025 introduces a phased approach for Equality Action Plans:
Many employers are choosing to act before the requirement comes into force to reduce risk and improve consistency now.
Menopause frequently intersects with:
Recent employment tribunal analysis shows that claims referencing menopause have increased significantly over the past few years, reflecting how often menopause-related issues now surface in formal disputes.
As legal scrutiny increases, decisions are increasingly judged on practical questions, such as:
Menopause action planning is quickly becoming a practical test of whether an organisation took reasonable steps, not just whether it had good intentions.
Menopause is already affecting work, whether it is formally acknowledged or not.
According to UK government-referenced research:
With millions of women aged 45–60 currently in work, the impact on retention, experience and organisational knowledge is significant.
At the same time, 2 in 3 employees say they are uncomfortable raising menopause at work, meaning issues often surface late, once problems have already escalated.
A credible menopause action plan isn’t about medical expertise or over-engineering solutions. It’s about clarity, consistency and access to support.
In practice, effective plans mean:
These steps are not a legal checklist. They reflect what employers need in place to meet emerging expectations under the Employment Rights Act and to reduce employee relations and discrimination risk.
Outcome: You understand where escalation currently happens.
Outcome: Clear, consistent handling across the organisation.
Outcome: Issues are addressed before they escalate.
Menopause adjustments should be treated like any other health-related adjustment.
Common examples include:
Outcome: Adjustments are fair, consistent and defensible.
Outcome: Managers act earlier and with confidence.
Outcome: Employees know support exists and how to access it.
Outcome: Support improves over time and reflects real needs.
Without early, structured menopause support:
Menopause-related cases rarely fail because of bad intent. They fail because support wasn’t accessible early enough.
Peppy helps organisations turn menopause action planning from policy into practical, lived support.
Peppy helps employers:
Peppy doesn’t replace HR or legal processes. It strengthens them by ensuring expert support is available when it matters most.
Menopause action planning is becoming a baseline expectation.
Employers that act early aren’t just preparing for compliance, they’re protecting experience, retaining talent and creating healthier, more sustainable workplaces.
Download this guide to find out more and to share internally with your colleagues.