Employment Tribunal Odds Calculator
491,000 cases waiting. Only 7% win at hearing. Work out your real chances.
Your Estimated Tribunal Success Odds
What This Means
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How We Calculated This
In 2024/25, tribunals received 42,000 single claims. 491,000 cases now waiting. Average wait time hit 4.8 weeks just to prepare your case. Most employers spend 5-6 working weeks fighting claims. But here’s the shock: only 14% ever reach a hearing. Of those, exactly half lose.
The Brutal Reality Nobody Tells You
Think tribunals are your quick route to justice? The numbers say otherwise.
Between 2023 and 2024, the backlog jumped 23% to 49,800 open cases. That’s 450,000 people waiting across all claims. The tribunal disposed of just 32,000 single claims while receiving 42,000 new ones. The maths doesn’t work in your favour.
And if you make it to hearing? Your odds sit at roughly 50-50. But that’s before accounting for claim type, evidence quality, and whether you’ve got proper legal help. Without representation, your chances plummet. In 2023/24, only 59% of claimants had lawyers, down from 86% in 2016/17.
How This Calculator Actually Works
No magic. No guarantees. Just data from HM Courts & Tribunals Service, ACAS statistics, and Ministry of Justice reports.
We start with base success rates for each claim type. Unfair dismissal, discrimination, wage disputes all have different historical win rates. Disability discrimination averages £27,043 when successful. Sex discrimination hit a record £995,000 award in 2023/24. But averages hide the losses.
Then we factor in what matters: your evidence strength, legal representation, employment length, employer size. Small firms (under 250 staff) lose more often. Claimants with written evidence and witnesses win more. If you’re still employed, settlements happen faster because employers want you gone quietly.
The calculator adjusts your odds up or down based on 12 proven factors from government data. It’s not a crystal ball. Your actual result depends on facts we can’t see: how bad your boss acted, whether witnesses will testify, if your paperwork holds up under cross-examination.
Data Sources We Use
GOV.UK Tribunal Statistics Quarterly (2024/25), HM Courts & Tribunals Service annual reports, ACAS Early Conciliation data, Ministry of Justice employment tribunal award statistics, and published case outcome analysis from Littler law firm’s 2024 backlog research.
What We Can’t Calculate
Judge discretion. How you present at hearing. Whether your employer settles to avoid bad press. The quality of their legal team versus yours. This is based on statistical averages. Your situation will differ.
Why These Numbers Should Worry You
73% of claims settle or withdraw before hearing. Sounds good until you realise most settlements pay a fraction of potential tribunal awards.
The average unfair dismissal award in 2023/24 was £13,749. That’s up 15% from £11,914 the year before, but inflation ate most of that gain. The median award sits lower at £6,646, meaning half of winners got less than that.
Meanwhile, businesses spent an average 4.8 weeks managing each claim between July 2022 and July 2024. They’re motivated to lowball you early, knowing you might wait 18 months for a hearing slot. The backlog gives employers leverage.
Public sector workers face extra hurdles. Many public organisations refuse to negotiate settlements, forcing claims to full hearing. Your odds drop when you can’t settle strategically.
Real Cases, Real Numbers
James, 34, Manchester – Unfair Dismissal
Background: Sacked after 6 years at medium-sized logistics firm. Had written warnings but believes process was flawed. No legal representation yet.
Evidence: Email trail showing inconsistent application of absence policy. Two colleagues willing to testify.
Calculator Result: 38% success odds at hearing.
Priya, 41, Birmingham – Disability Discrimination
Background: 8 years at large retail chain. Requested reasonable adjustments for chronic condition, denied, then made redundant. Has solicitor.
Evidence: Medical reports, email requests for adjustments, witness statements from HR meetings.
Calculator Result: 62% success odds at hearing.
Tom, 52, London – Age Discrimination
Background: Passed over for promotion three times in 2 years. Younger, less experienced colleagues promoted instead. Still employed at financial services firm.
Evidence: Performance reviews (all positive), promotion criteria documents, comparative data on promotions.
Calculator Result: 44% success odds at hearing, but 78% chance of pre-hearing settlement.
Claim Types: What Actually Wins
| Claim Type | 2020/21 Claims Filed | Average Award (When Won) | Typical Success Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unfair Dismissal | 23,904 | £13,749 | Process failures, lack of fair reason |
| Disability Discrimination | 7,430 | £27,043 | Failure to make adjustments, dismissal linked to disability |
| Sex Discrimination | 5,172 | £24,630 | Pregnancy dismissal, unequal pay evidence |
| Race Discrimination | 4,175 | £27,607 | Clear comparator evidence, pattern of treatment |
| Wage Deductions | 17,816 | £8,200 (est.) | Clear contract terms, payment records |
| Whistleblowing | 3,128 | £45,000+ (varies widely) | Protected disclosure made, detriment linkage proven |
Breach of contract and wage deduction claims show higher success rates because they’re fact-based: either you were paid correctly or you weren’t. Discrimination requires proving intent or institutional bias, much harder to evidence.
The highest single award in 2023/24 was £995,000 for a sex discrimination case. But that’s an outlier. The highest unfair dismissal award was £165,000, likely involving whistleblowing or discrimination elements to bypass the statutory cap.
FAQs
What’s my actual chance of getting money from a tribunal claim?
About 73% of claims result in some form of payout, but most are settlements, not tribunal awards. Of the 14% that reach hearing, half win. So your real odds of a tribunal win are around 7%. But 40% settle through ACAS, and another 33% settle privately. Those settlements typically pay 30-60% of potential tribunal value. Your best odds are settling strategically before hearing, not rolling the dice at tribunal.
Does having a solicitor actually change my odds?
Massively. Government data shows represented claimants win significantly more often. If your employer has representation and you don’t, your odds crater. In 2023/24, only 59% of claimants had lawyers. That’s down from 86% in 2016/17, partly because legal aid is gone and no-win-no-fee firms are pickier now. But cases with mutual representation settle faster and for more money.
How long until I actually get money if I win?
Expect 12-18 months from filing to hearing, given the current backlog of 491,000 claims. Add another 2-4 weeks for the written judgment. Then enforcement if your employer doesn’t pay voluntarily, which can take months more. Settlements happen faster, often within 3-6 months through ACAS Early Conciliation. This is why employers lowball early offers; they know you need money now, not in 2027.
Can I represent myself and still win?
Legally yes. Practically, your odds drop below 30% against a represented employer. Tribunals are formal legal proceedings with strict evidence rules, procedure requirements, and cross-examination. Judges try to help unrepresented claimants, but they can’t advocate for you. If your claim is simple (wage deduction with clear contract breach), self-representation is feasible. For discrimination or complex unfair dismissal, get professional help or prepare to lose.
What if my employer offers £5,000 to settle but the calculator shows I could get £15,000?
Take the £5,000 seriously. Calculator estimates are based on if you win at hearing. But winning is not guaranteed, hearings take 18 months, and legal costs can eat awards. A settlement offer equal to 30-50% of estimated tribunal value is often worth considering, especially if you need money now. However, if your evidence is rock-solid and you’ve got no-win-no-fee representation, you have leverage to negotiate higher. Don’t accept the first offer without pushing back.
Does it matter what type of company fired me?
Absolutely. Claimants win more often against small and medium-sized employers (under 250 staff). Large corporations have better HR processes, stronger legal teams, and deeper pockets to fight claims. Public sector employers often refuse to settle at all, forcing full hearings. Tiny firms sometimes can’t afford to pay even if you win. The sweet spot for settlements is medium-sized private companies: they have money but want to avoid the hassle.
I’m still working there. Does that help or hurt my case?
Helps enormously for settlement leverage. Employers want problem employees gone quietly. If you’re still there, they’ll often pay decent money to make you leave with an NDA. Once you’ve resigned or been sacked, their incentive to settle drops. You can’t threaten to stay and make noise. However, staying makes evidence gathering harder; they’ll watch you closely, and relationships get toxic fast. Tactically, negotiate while employed if possible.
What happens if I lose at tribunal?
You get nothing, and you might have to pay the other side’s costs if your claim was judged unreasonable or vexatious. Cost awards in employment tribunals are rare but rising. In 2023/24, 31% of preliminary hearings resulted in dismissals. If you lose and can’t pay costs, it damages your credit. There’s also the emotional toll: 18 months of stress, then public judgment that you were wrong. This is why 73% settle; certainty beats gambling.
