Training – Whistleblowing

Legal Risk Starts on Day One

Our lawyerled Whistleblowing ELearning Course gives employees a clear, practical understanding of protected disclosures under UK law, helping them report issues responsibly and reduce the risk of claims to your business. 

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Skills Academy

What You'll Learn

Under the Employment Rights Act 1996 (Part IVA) and the Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 (PIDA), workers are legally protected when they make a protected disclosure in the public interest. 

Employers who fail to train staff properly face: 

  • Unlimited compensation in whistleblowing tribunal claims
  • Claims from day one of employment
  • Reputational damage 
  • Regulatory scrutiny 
  • Loss of employee trust 
  • Costly legal defence fees

Recent tribunal awards regularly exceed £800,000-£1.8m+. 

Build a Speak-Up Culture. Reduce Legal Risk.

Equip your workforce with the knowledge to speak up safely, report responsibly, protect your organisation, and prevent costly tribunal claims.

Why Organisations Choose Our Whistleblowing E-Learning

What This Whistleblowing Course Covers

Who This Course Is For?

Perfect for organisations needing: 

  • UK whistleblowing compliance training 
  • PIDA training 
  • Protected disclosure awareness 
  • Speak-up culture development 
  • Risk mitigation training 

Enrol Today

Book your Whistleblowing ELearning Course now and strengthen your organisation’s compliance framework.

Pricing

Ditch the long, dull, and expensive training days

When times are tough for businesses, our prices aren’t. Our prices are locked and include free UK support.

£25

per employee

Frequently asked questions

Everything you need to know about the product and billing.

Whistleblowing is the act of reporting wrongdoing in the public interest. Under the Employment Rights Act 1996, workers are protected if they make a qualifying protected disclosure. 

To qualify for legal protection: 

  • The worker must have a reasonable belief the information is true 
  • The disclosure must be in the public interest 
  • It must fall into one of the six categories of wrongdoing 

No. A grievance is typically a personal complaint affecting the individual. Whistleblowing involves wider public interest concerns, such as fraud, safety risks, or criminal conduct. 

There is no qualifying period. Protection applies from day one of employment. 

No. Compensation for whistleblowing dismissal is unlimited in UK employment tribunals. 

Yes. Individuals who victimise whistleblowers can be personally named in tribunal proceedings. 

 

It depends. If the issue affects others, creates systemic risk, or is deliberately concealed, it may qualify as a protected disclosure – particularly under developments linked to the Worker Protection (Amendment of Equality Act 2010) Act 2023. 

Yes. It is suitable for financial services, healthcare, public sector, education, charities and private organisations. 

The course takes approximately 30 minutes to complete.