UK: 15,000 Bolt drivers win legal claim to be classed as employees & in line for compensation over £200 million
"Thousands of UK Bolt drivers win legal claim to be classed as employees", 8 November 2024
Thousands of Bolt drivers have won their legal claim to be classed as employees and could be in line for compensation of more than £200m.
An employment tribunal ruled that 15,000 Bolt drivers were not self-employed contractors who ran their own businesses.
Lawyers from Leigh Day, representing the drivers, believe the compensation owed to their clients could be worth more than £200m.
The ruling follows a three-week hearing at the tribunal in September, and means the drivers are entitled to workers’ rights and protection under employment law.
Leigh Day said it affected all the 100,000-plus drivers who take on work through the Bolt private hire hailing app in the UK. The law firm had said the drivers could argue they should be classed as workers, with all the employment rights and protection that classification included...
A Bolt spokesperson said: “Drivers are at the heart of what we do, and we have always supported the overwhelming majority’s choice to remain self-employed independent contractors, protecting their flexibility, personal control and earning potential.
“We will continue to engage with drivers as we carefully review our options, including grounds for appeal, ensuring that we are helping drivers to succeed as entrepreneurs and grow on their own terms.”
The legal claim from Bolt drivers came after the UK supreme court determined in 2021 that Uber drivers were not self-employed but were workers entitled to rights including holiday pay, a guaranteed minimum wage and breaks.