Annual Leave in Queensland
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Commonwealth Acts of Parliament, federal regulations, and official government guidance. State-level information reflects each state's own Acts and court decisions. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
Full-time and part-time employees are entitled to 4 weeks of paid annual leave per year of service. Shift workers who regularly work Sundays and public holidays may receive 5 weeks.
Annual leave accumulates from your first day and rolls over if you don't use it. When you take leave, your employer pays you at your base rate of pay. Many awards and agreements also give you a 17.5% annual leave loading — an extra payment on top of your normal pay while on leave.
- Your employer cannot unreasonably refuse a leave request.
- An employer can direct you to take excessive leave (usually more than 8 weeks accrued) in some cases, but must follow the rules in your award.
- When you leave your job, you must be paid out all unused annual leave in your final pay.
Casual employees are not entitled to paid annual leave, but their casual loading is meant to compensate for this.
When does it apply?
- You are a full-time or part-time employee in the national system.
- Leave starts accruing from your first day of work.
- Casual employees are not eligible for paid annual leave.
What to Do If Your Australian Employer Refuses or Mismanages Your Annual Leave
- Check your pay slips for your current leave balance.
- Submit your leave request in writing as far in advance as possible.
- If your employer refuses a reasonable request, ask for the reason in writing.
- Contact the Fair Work Ombudsman on 13 13 94 if leave is being unfairly denied or not paid out when you leave.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't agree to cash out leave unless it's allowed by your award and you keep at least 4 weeks in your balance.
- Don't let excessive leave build up without a plan — your employer may be able to direct you to take it.
- Don't accept a final pay that doesn't include your accrued leave — check the amount before signing anything.
How Queensland differs from federal law
Annual leave in Queensland follows the National Employment Standards (4 weeks per year for full-time workers). Queensland also has its own Industrial Relations Act 2016 (Qld) for long service leave for state system and all Queensland workers.
- Under the Industrial Relations Act 2016 (Qld), all Queensland workers (both state and national system) are entitled to long service leave after 10 years of continuous service with the same employer, at a rate of 8.6667 weeks (2 months).
- After 7 years, a worker who is terminated (other than for serious misconduct) or who dies is entitled to a pro-rata payment for accrued long service leave.
- Queensland has a portable long service leave scheme for the contract cleaning and community services sectors under the Community Services Industry (Portable Long Service Leave) Act 2020 (Qld), administered by QLeave.
- QLeave also administers a separate long service leave scheme for building and construction workers under the Building and Construction Industry (Portable Long Service Leave) Act 1991 (Qld).
Additional Steps in Queensland
Annual leave disputes go to the Fair Work Commission (national system) or the QIRC (state system). Long service leave disputes can be taken to QCAT. Contact QLeave (qleave.qld.gov.au) for portable schemes in construction, cleaning, and community services.
Relevant Law: Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth), ss 86-94; Industrial Relations Act 2016 (Qld), Ch 2, Pt 3; Community Services Industry (Portable Long Service Leave) Act 2020 (Qld); Building and Construction Industry (Portable Long Service Leave) Act 1991 (Qld)
Common Questions
When does annual leave apply?
You are a full-time or part-time employee in the national system.Leave starts accruing from your first day of work.Casual employees are not eligible for paid annual leave.
What should I do if my employer in Australia is denying or not paying out my annual leave?
Check your pay slips for your current leave balance.Submit your leave request in writing as far in advance as possible.If your employer refuses a reasonable request, ask for the reason in writing.Contact the Fair Work Ombudsman on 13 13 94 if leave is being unfairly denied or not paid out when you leave.
What mistakes should I avoid with annual leave?
Don't agree to cash out leave unless it's allowed by your award and you keep at least 4 weeks in your balance.Don't let excessive leave build up without a plan — your employer may be able to direct you to take it.Don't accept a final pay that doesn't include your accrued leave — check the amount before signing anything.
Annual Leave in other states
Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.