Back to top

Variation of Basic Conditions

Certain rights in the BCEA are fundamental and will not be able to be varied (for example, the prohibition on employing child labour).

In collective agreements, for example Bargaining Council Agreements, employees may agree to conditions that are different to conditions in the BCEA, as long as the agreement is consistent with the purpose of the BCEA and does not give them less protection than they had under the BCEA, nor reduce an employee’s annual leave (to less than 2 weeks), nor remove maternity leave or sick leave. (See s49(1) (a)–(f) of the BCEA)

Employees may be covered by the BCEA, but have terms and conditions of employment which vary from those in the BCEA. The BCEA allows for the following ways of varying basic conditions of employment:

  • The individual employment contract between an employee and employer (although the scope for variation by this method is extremely limited)
  • Collective bargaining and agreement at a bargaining council
  • Sectoral determinations
  • The labour minister can make special exceptions

So, an employee who is covered by the BCEA has the conditions of employment as specified in the Act, unless:

  • The employee has an individual agreement (employment contract) with the employer which is more favourable than the terms of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act
  • The employee is part of a collective agreement which has been agreed with a Trade Union and the employer
  • There is a Sectoral Determination (like a Wage Determination) or a Ministerial exemption, which overrides the conditions in the BCEA.

(See: Chart: Finding out an employee’s terms and conditions of employment)

Get assistance with: