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UK vs US Holiday Entitlement 2026
The UK statutory floor is 5.6 weeks (28 days). The US has no federal statutory minimum. The cultural and legal gap is the widest among developed economies. Office workers see roughly 30-32% more paid time off in the UK.
Updated 18 May 2026. As of May 2026.
UK: 28 days statutory. US: zero days statutory.
The US is the only OECD country without a federal statutory paid leave minimum. Paid holiday is purely contractual, varying enormously by employer and sector. The UK floor protects workers against under-provision.
The Legal Framework Gap
UK paid leave is established by the Working Time Regulations 1998, a statutory instrument with the force of primary legislation for these purposes. The 5.6-week minimum applies to every UK worker without exception. Employers cannot lawfully offer less; the minimum is enforceable through Employment Tribunals.
US federal labour law contains no equivalent. The Fair Labor Standards Act (the main federal employment statute) covers minimum wage, overtime, child labour, and recordkeeping. It does not require employers to provide paid vacation, paid sick leave, or paid public holidays. Employers can lawfully offer zero paid time off, and many low-paying sectors do exactly that.
The result is enormous variation in US practice. A management consultant at a top US firm might get 25 days of PTO plus 10 federal holidays. A fast food worker at a non-union chain might get zero paid time off, plus no paid sick leave, plus the requirement to work federal holidays for normal pay. Both arrangements are fully legal under US federal law. The gap between top and bottom is much wider than in the UK or EU.
US Practice by Sector
| US Sector | Avg PTO (entry) | Avg PTO (10+ yrs) | Federal Holidays Paid? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tech (large) | 15-20 days | 25-30 days | Yes (10 days) |
| Finance | 15 days | 25 days | Yes (10 days) |
| Healthcare professionals | 15-20 days | 25 days | Variable (shift-pattern) |
| Federal government | 13 days (rising to 26 at 15 years) | 26 days | Yes (11 days) |
| Manufacturing (union) | 10-15 days | 20-25 days | Yes (10 days) |
| Retail (non-union hourly) | 5-10 days | 10-15 days | Often no |
| Hospitality (non-union) | 0-5 days | 5-10 days | Often no |
| Service economy lowest tier | 0 days | 0 days | No |
Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics National Compensation Survey (2024), SHRM employee benefits reports, Mercer total compensation surveys.
Federal Holidays in the US
The US has 11 federal holidays (New Year's Day, MLK Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Juneteenth, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day or Indigenous Peoples Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas Day). Juneteenth was added as the 11th federal holiday in 2021. The number compares to the UK's 8 bank holidays in England and Wales.
However, federal holidays in the US are days when federal government offices close and federal employees get paid time off. They are not statutory holidays for private sector workers. A private sector employer can lawfully require workers to work on federal holidays for normal pay. In office-based sectors most employers do close and pay for the day; in retail and hospitality most do not.
This is a key cultural difference. In the UK, a bank holiday closes most non-essential offices and many retailers reduce hours; workers expect time off. In the US, federal holidays close federal offices and many large employers; retail, hospitality, and many service businesses operate normally. The Monday-after-substitution rule applies only inconsistently in the US; many employers do not substitute weekend holidays.
The Unused PTO Problem
The US Travel Association's annual State of American Vacation report has tracked PTO usage since 2014. The consistent finding: roughly 55% of US workers do not use all their paid time off, leaving an average of 9 days unused per year across the workforce. Total unused PTO across the US workforce is roughly 768 million days per year.
Reasons cited by surveyed workers include: fear of falling behind on work (47%), nobody else can do the work (40%), too expensive to take vacation (27%), and pressure from managers not to take leave (12%). The cultural norm of presenteeism is stronger in the US than in the UK or EU. The lack of statutory protection contributes: workers feel that PTO is a privilege rather than a right, and treating it like a right risks employer disapproval.
Many US employers operate use-it-or-lose-it PTO policies that explicitly forfeit unused leave at year end. This is lawful under federal law and most state laws (with the exception of California, which prohibits it). The combination of cultural pressure not to take leave and use-it-or-lose-it policies means substantial paid time off is forfeited each year. The UK's carry-over rules and tribunal-enforceable right to take leave produce very different worker behaviour.
UK Workers Posted to the US (and Vice Versa)
UK workers temporarily posted to the US for work assignments typically retain their UK contractual rights, including holiday entitlement, because the UK contract continues to apply. Multinational employers often default to the higher of the home and host country's standards for postings, so a UK worker on a US assignment usually keeps the UK 5.6 weeks (or higher contractual figure) regardless of the US norm.
US workers posted to the UK get the higher protection. A US worker on a US contract who is posted to the UK for more than 13 weeks generally becomes a UK worker for WTR purposes and gains the 5.6-week entitlement. Many US firms operating in the UK align their UK office policies with the UK norm (25 days plus 8 bank holidays for office workers) rather than the US norm.
For UK workers permanently relocating to the US (moving to a US contract), the loss of the statutory floor is one of the larger benefit changes. A UK office worker with 30 days plus 8 bank holidays = 38 days who relocates to a US contract with 15 days PTO plus 10 federal holidays = 25 days loses 13 days per year. Salary differentials in the US often more than compensate, but the lifestyle change is real.
Worked Comparison
UK office worker, 25 days + 8 BH = 33 days
Annual: 33 paid days off. Working days per year: 227
Average UK office worker takes 95-100% of their entitlement (Office for National Statistics data). The protective rules ensure leave is actually used.
US office worker (large tech), 18 days PTO + 10 federal = 28 days
Annual: 28 paid days off available. Working days per year: 232
Average US tech worker takes 14-16 days (78-89% utilisation). The unused 4-6 days are typically forfeited or carried over within a cap. UK worker has 5-10 more actual days off per year.
US retail hourly worker, 5 days PTO + 0 federal paid = 5 days
Annual: 5 paid days off. Federal holidays worked at normal rate.
Comparable UK retail worker on statutory minimum: 28 days inclusive of bank holidays. UK worker has 23 more paid days off per year, a structural difference reflecting the statutory floor.
UK NHS nurse Band 5, 10+ years: 33 days + 8 BH = 41 days
Annual: 41 paid days off. Working days: ~219
Comparable US registered nurse: 20-25 days PTO including unpaid leave for federal holidays worked on shift pattern. UK NHS nurse has roughly 15-20 more paid days off.
Not legal advice. US holiday rules vary by employer, state, and sector; the absence of a federal floor means individual contracts are decisive. For UK queries, contact ACAS on 0300 123 1100. For US queries, consult the US Department of Labor or a US employment lawyer.