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Blog by Flexzo

Short-Term Teaching Contracts Explained

Published On: April 24, 2026

Short-term teaching contracts are more common than many education professionals realise, and they carry more legal protection than is often assumed. Understanding what your contract means for your pay, rights, and future employment is essential before you sign anything.

What Short-Term Contracts Look Like in Education

The term “short-term contract” in teaching covers several distinct arrangements. They are not interchangeable, and the differences matter.

A fixed-term contract runs for a specified period or until a defined event, such as the return of a permanent member of staff. The end date or trigger is stated in the contract from the outset. Fixed-term contracts are the most common form of short-term employment in schools, typically used for maternity cover, extended sick leave cover, or time-limited project roles.

A temporary or short-notice contract is used for more immediate cover needs, often where the duration is genuinely uncertain. Settings may bring a teacher in on this basis when they are unsure how long a vacancy or absence will last.

Day-to-day supply sits separately from both. A supply teacher working daily or on a short-notice basis is typically employed by an agency rather than the setting directly, and the legal protections differ as a result. This article focuses primarily on contracts where the setting is your employer, though the agency supply picture is worth understanding alongside it.

Our article on permanent vs temporary teaching jobs covers those distinctions in more detail.

Your Legal Rights on a Short-Term Contract

This is where many education professionals are surprised. Fixed-term employees in the UK are protected by the Fixed-term Employees (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations 2002, which establish that you cannot be treated less favourably than a comparable permanent employee unless the employer can show objective justification for doing so.

The equal treatment principle is broad. GOV.UK guidance on fixed-term contracts confirms it covers pay rates, pension access, sick pay, parental leave, and training and career development. The pro-rata principle applies where appropriate, but the underlying entitlement is parity with permanent colleagues.

Pension Access on Fixed-Term Contracts

One of the most significant practical differences between a fixed-term contract with a setting and an agency supply arrangement is pension access. The National Education Union’s guidance on fixed-term contracts confirms that teachers employed on fixed-term contracts in maintained schools automatically contribute to the Teachers’ Pension Scheme unless they choose to opt out — the same arrangement as permanent staff. Agency supply teachers cannot access the TPS through their agency.

What Your Rights Cover

The rights you hold on a fixed-term teaching contract include:

  • Equal pay at the appropriate STPCD point for your experience
  • Access to the Teachers’ Pension Scheme (in maintained schools)
  • Statutory sick pay and maternity, paternity and adoption pay
  • Access to training and career development on the same basis as permanent colleagues
  • The right not to be selected for redundancy unfairly because of your fixed-term status
  • The right to be informed of permanent vacancies within the setting
  • A written statement explaining any less favourable treatment, if requested, within 21 days

The Four-Year Rule

One of the most important and least understood aspects of short-term contracts in education is the four-year rule.

Under the Fixed-term Employees Regulations, if you have been continuously employed by the same employer on one or more fixed-term contracts for four years or more, your contract automatically becomes permanent in law unless the employer can demonstrate objective justification for continuing to offer fixed-term arrangements. This applies even if successive contracts have been for apparently distinct purposes.

In practice this means that a teacher who has been on a series of maternity cover contracts, time-limited appointments, or rolling fixed-term arrangements at the same school for four or more consecutive years has legal grounds to request that their status is confirmed as permanent. That request must be responded to in writing within 21 days.

This provision exists specifically to prevent the use of fixed-term contracts from becoming an indefinite alternative to permanent employment. Settings cannot simply roll short-term contracts forward indefinitely to avoid giving staff permanent status.

When Contracts End

The non-renewal of a fixed-term contract is treated in law as a dismissal. Where the contract expires at its agreed end date, notice is not normally required. If terminated early or where there is no specified end date, notice must be given in line with the contract terms. Teachers covered by the Burgundy Book have specific notice periods that apply.

After two years of continuous service with the same employer, you have the same redundancy rights as a permanent employee and may be entitled to a redundancy payment if the contract is not renewed.

What to Check Before Accepting a Short-Term Contract

Before signing a short-term teaching contract, take time to work through the following. Each point has real implications for your rights, pay, and employment status.

  • 1
    Who is your employer? Is it the educational setting directly, or an agency? The answer determines which legal protections apply, whether TPS access is available, and how your pay is calculated. This is the single most important question to clarify before you start.
  • 2
    What is the stated reason for the fixed-term arrangement? A contract that does not specify why it is temporary is a weaker document. The reason matters if you ever need to challenge less favourable treatment or make a case for conversion to permanent status.
  • 3
    What notice provisions apply if the contract ends early? If a permanent teacher returns sooner than expected, or funding ends, you need to know what protection you have and how much notice your employer is required to give.
  • 4
    How long have you worked for the same employer on successive contracts? If you are approaching the four-year threshold, your position may already be stronger than you realise. It is worth understanding this before the next renewal conversation rather than after.

Finding Short-Term Roles

Short-term teaching contracts can be found directly through educational settings, through local authority supply pools, and through platforms that connect education professionals with settings without an agency intermediary.

Flexzo Teach operates as a collaborative staff bank, connecting education professionals directly with settings across mainstream, specialist, and alternative provision. There are no agency margins, and the booking is made directly between you and the setting. You can also explore the full range of what the platform offers on the platform features page before registering.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Fixed-term employees are entitled to paid annual leave on the same basis as permanent staff, calculated pro-rata. This includes entitlement to holiday pay covering school closure periods where the contract runs across them.

Not without risk. The four-year rule means that continuous employment on fixed-term contracts converts to permanent status in law after four years unless the employer can justify continued fixed-term use on objective grounds.

Get in Touch

If you have questions about short-term teaching contracts or want to understand how Flexzo Teach can support your next placement, the team is happy to help.

Visit our contact page or register as an educator to get started.

Flexzo Teach: A Collaborative Staff Bank

Flexzo Teach is a collaborative staff bank connecting education professionals directly with settings across short-term, long-term, and permanent roles. Built by Healsgood with compliance and safeguarding built in from the ground up, no agency margin sits between what a setting pays and what you receive.

You can explore the for educators section or find out more about the platform before registering.