Understanding the Nine Protected Characteristics: What Every Employer Needs to Know

by | Dec 8, 2025

The Equality Act 2010 sets out clear protections for workers across the UK. At the heart of the legislation are nine protected characteristics, each designed to prevent unfair treatment and ensure that everyone can work safely and confidently. For employers, understanding these characteristics is essential. Not only does it build a fair and respectful culture, but it also prevents costly and time-consuming tribunal claims.

Here is a straightforward look at each characteristic and how employers can unintentionally step into difficult territory.

 

Age

Age discrimination affects workers of all ages, whether it is assuming older employees are ‘slowing down’ or overlooking younger staff for progression because they are seen as inexperienced. Problems often arise through throwaway comments, biased recruitment decisions, or applying policies that indirectly disadvantage certain age groups. Employers should ensure decisions are based on skill and performance, not stereotypes.

 

Sex

Sex discrimination happens when someone is treated less favourably because they are male or female. Issues often arise around pay, promotion, job allocation, or even workplace banter. Employers can find themselves in trouble if assumptions are made about someone’s role or abilities because of their sex, or if workplace culture allows inappropriate or derogatory comments to go unchallenged.

 

Sexual Orientation

This protection covers heterosexual, gay, lesbian, and bisexual employees. Problems commonly arise from insensitive jokes, assumptions about someone’s personal life, or exclusion from social or work opportunities. Even comments made in ‘banter’ can amount to harassment. Creating an inclusive environment and tackling inappropriate behaviour early is key.

Gay Couple 

 

Gender Reassignment

This applies to anyone who is transitioning, has transitioned, or is considering transitioning. Employers can face claims if they fail to update records appropriately, misuse pronouns, or treat the employee differently because of their transition. A lack of clear policies or training can also create problems, leaving employees feeling unsupported or unsafe.

 

Marriage and Civil Partnership

Employees who are married or in a civil partnership are protected against discrimination. This often comes up in relation to job benefits, assumptions about availability, or preferential treatment linked to a manager’s personal views. Making sure policies and benefits apply fairly across all relationship types is essential.

 

Pregnancy and Maternity

This is one of the most commonly breached areas. Employers can get into serious difficulty if they reduce hours, take away responsibilities, fail to carry out risk assessments, or make negative comments about pregnancy related sickness. Dismissals or redundancy decisions connected to pregnancy or maternity leave are automatically unfair, leaving employers particularly vulnerable if processes are not followed correctly.

 

 

Race

Race discrimination covers colour, nationality, ethnicity, and national origin. Problems tend to arise from biased recruitment processes, lack of equal opportunities, or failing to address racist language or behaviour in the workplace. Even subtle or indirect behaviours can be discriminatory, and employers must be proactive in promoting a zero-tolerance approach to racism in any form.

 

Religion or Belief

This protects individuals with religious beliefs, philosophical beliefs, or no beliefs at all. Common issues include refusing reasonable requests for religious observance, forcing participation in certain activities, or allowing insensitive comments about someone’s beliefs. Employers must balance business needs with fair and respectful treatment of personal beliefs.

 

Disability

Disability discrimination is one of the most misunderstood areas. It covers physical and mental impairments that have a substantial, long-term impact on daily life. Employers often get into trouble when they fail to make reasonable adjustments, dismiss concerns as performance issues, or treat disability related absence as misconduct. A supportive and well-structured approach is vital to avoid claims.

 

Understanding these nine protected characteristics is not just a compliance exercise. It is about building a workplace where people feel valued, respected, and able to perform at their best. If you are unsure whether your policies or practices are compliant, or if you need help navigating a sensitive situation, ECHR can guide you through every step with practical, expert advice.

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