Tasmania Act
Long Service Leave Act 1976 (Tas)
Long Service Leave Act 1976 sets long service leave rules in Tasmania.
Plain-English explainers, not legal advice. Use the linked official source for section-level detail, and get advice for your situation.
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Quick read
- Long Service Leave Act 1976 matters because long service leave liabilities can quietly build for years.
- For small businesses, the real risk is discovering the obligation during a sale, termination, payroll review or employee dispute without clean records of service and ordinary pay.
Likely relevant if
- Employers with long-serving staff in Tasmania
- Businesses buying or selling a business with transferring employees
- Payroll and HR teams calculating leave accruals and termination payments
Check first
- Track continuous service, ordinary pay and leave balances accurately.
- Check pro-rata payment rules before ending employment.
- Handle transfer-of-business and related-employer situations carefully.
What happens if you get it wrong
Penalties & enforcement
Failures can lead to underpayment claims, penalties, payroll remediation, sale adjustments and employee disputes.
Enforced by WorkSafe Tasmania
When this shows up in real life
Employee reaches a service milestone
Check the local entitlement rules, ordinary pay calculation and whether any award or transitional provision affects the result.
Selling the business
Review accrued leave liabilities and make sure the sale agreement deals with employee transfers and adjustments.
Terminating employment
Check whether pro-rata long service leave is payable before finalising the termination payment.
Plain-English glossary
- Continuous service
- The period of service counted for long service leave, which can include some interruptions depending on the law.
- Pro-rata entitlement
- A partial payment that may arise on termination after a qualifying period in some circumstances.
- Ordinary pay
- The pay basis used to calculate leave or payment in lieu, which can be technical for variable-hour workers.
Common questions
Does the national Fair Work system replace this?
Not usually. Long service leave is commonly still governed by state or territory law, with transitional and award issues depending on the employee.
Why does this matter in a business sale?
Employee service can transfer or affect liabilities. Buyers and sellers should check accrued leave, employee records and adjustment clauses.