Introduction
A Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) inspection can happen with little notice. For many growing employers, the challenge is not deliberate non-compliance, but inconsistent documentation, payroll mismatches, or outdated policies. This guide explains what to expect, what inspectors review, and how to prepare properly.
What a WRC Inspection Is
A WRC inspection is a statutory compliance review carried out by an Inspector to examine whether employment legislation is being adhered to. Inspections may be announced or unannounced and can involve reviewing records, interviewing employees, and requesting additional documentation.
Why Businesses Are Selected
Businesses may be selected due to complaints, random selection, or risk indicators such as payroll inconsistencies. Growing SMEs are often selected because rapid expansion can lead to documentation gaps.
Risk Indicators That Often Trigger Deeper Review
While inspections may be random or complaint-driven, certain factors often result in a more detailed review once an Inspector is on site:
High proportion of part-time or variable hour employees
Significant Sunday trading
Large levels of overtime
High staff turnover
Gratuities or service charge distribution
Accommodation provided to employees
Commission-based pay structures
Recent rapid growth in employee numbers
Where payroll complexity increases, the likelihood of inconsistencies also increases. Inspectors typically focus on whether records are consistent and whether entitlements are applied uniformly.
Announced vs Unannounced Inspections
Announced inspections typically involve advance notice and a request for documentation. Unannounced inspections involve an Inspector attending the workplace without prior warning. In both cases, cooperation and timely production of records is expected.
What Happens on the Day
The Inspector will present identification, outline the purpose of the visit, and request access to records. They may interview management and a sample of employees. Records may be copied or retained electronically via a secure link. The key is to ensure documentation is organised and consistent.
Full Inspection Record Checklist - Employers should be able to produce:
Contracts and Main Statements of Terms
Full name and address and PPS number of all employees
Payroll records and payslips
Working time records
Annual leave and public holiday records
Statutory Sick Pay records
Premium and allowance records
Commission and bonus documentation
Tips and gratuities policies and statements
Accommodation or benefit-in-kind documentation
Employment permits and right-to-work records
Young worker documentation (if applicable)
Wage and Entitlement Compliance Areas
Grievance, Disciplinary and Bullying and Harassment Polices
Inspectors review compliance with minimum wage, Sunday premiums, public holidays, annual leave accrual, Statutory Sick Pay, overtime, premiums, allowances, commissions, bonuses, and gratuities. Payments must align with legislation and be accurately reflected in payroll records.
Working Time and Rest Period Compliance
Inspectors examine daily and weekly rest periods, maximum weekly working hours, breaks, night work compliance, and accurate recording of start and finish times. Rosters must match payroll and time records.
Benefits in Kind and Deductions
If accommodation or meals are provided, employers must ensure they are treated correctly in line with legislation. Deductions must be lawful, transparent, and documented. Training costs, uniform deductions, and overpayments should be clearly supported by agreement.
Where accommodation or meals are provided to employees, Inspectors will assess whether the arrangement is properly documented and lawfully applied. There should be a written agreement in place outlining the nature of the benefit and any associated deductions. Any deduction must be authorised and must not reduce pay below statutory minimum wage thresholds. Payroll records should reflect the arrangement transparently. This area is frequently misunderstood, particularly in businesses operating shift patterns or residential care environments and should be reviewed carefully to ensure compliance.
Employment Permits and Right to Work
Employers must retain copies of employment permits and evidence of right to work. Expiry dates should be monitored and records kept up to date. Where an Inspector reviews the previous twelve months of records, this often includes employees who have since left the organisation. Employers should ensure that documentation for former employees remains complete and accessible. This includes employment permits where applicable, final payroll calculations, reconciliation of annual leave and public holiday balances, and payment of any outstanding commission or bonuses. Former employee records are commonly included in inspection samples, particularly where turnover has been high.
Young Workers (Under 18s)
Where employees are under 18, employers must comply with specific limits on hours, night work restrictions, and rest entitlements. Records should clearly demonstrate compliance.
Variable Hours and Rapid Growth Risk
Growing SMEs frequently encounter compliance gaps during periods of expansion. Contracts may not be updated to reflect actual working patterns, overtime may become routine without formal documentation, and Statutory Sick Pay tracking may not be fully integrated into payroll systems. Inconsistent application of entitlements by different managers can also create risk. A structured annual compliance review can significantly reduce exposure by identifying gaps before they become inspection issues.
Payroll Cross-Checks Inspectors Conduct
Inspectors often reconcile rosters against time records, payroll summaries against payslips, and bank transfers against gross pay calculations. Inconsistencies frequently lead to deeper examination.
Employee Interviews
Employees may be asked about their hours, breaks, pay rates, Sunday premiums, sick pay, and how gratuities are distributed. Their answers should align with documented records.
Common Compliance Gaps in Growing SMEs
Common issues include outdated contracts, missing SSP records, unclear gratuity policies, incorrect Sunday premium calculations, and inconsistent working time records.
After the Inspection
Following the inspection, the employer may receive a request for additional documentation, a requirement to rectify issues, or formal notices where non-compliance is identified. Early remediation is critical.
Frequently Asked Questions About WRC Inspections
A WRC inspection may be conducted without prior notice, and Inspectors are entitled to attend the workplace unannounced. While employers are required to retain records for a minimum of three years, in practice many inspections focus primarily on the previous twelve months, although the review may extend further if inconsistencies are identified. Former employees within the review period are often included in document requests. If issues are identified, employers may be required to rectify breaches, repay underpayments or provide further documentation. The duration of an inspection varies depending on the size and complexity of the business and may involve follow-up correspondence after the initial visit.
WRC Inspection Checklist for Employers
Below is a practical inspection readiness checklist covering the areas most commonly reviewed during inspections. Employers should ensure documentation is complete for the previous twelve months, including former employees where applicable.
Core Documentation
Contracts and Statements of Terms issued and signed
Payroll summaries and payslips retained
Working time records complete and accurate
Annual leave and public holiday records available
Statutory Sick Pay records documented
Payroll and Entitlements
National Minimum Wage compliance confirmed
Sunday premiums applied correctly
Overtime and allowances documented
Commission and bonus calculations traceable
Tips and gratuities policy in place
Compliance Records
Employment permits valid and on file
Under 18 records compliant where relevant
Accommodation or meal arrangements documented
WRC Compliance Review Support
Preparing properly for a WRC inspection reduces operational disruption and financial risk. Curragh HR conducts structured WRC Readiness Reviews designed to examine payroll integrity, working time compliance, Statutory Sick Pay application, gratuities transparency, permit documentation and record consistency. The objective is to identify and address potential exposure before an inspection occurs. Employers who take proactive steps are typically in a stronger position to respond calmly and confidently should an Inspector attend.
If you would like to discuss your inspection readiness, please don’t hesitate to contact us below.
WRC Inspections in Ireland: What Employers Need to Know (Complete 2026 Guide)