British Gas owner and Holland & Barrett fined for paying less than minimum wage

Nearly 500 companies have been fined by the government for failing to pay employees the legally mandated minimum wage.
Among the 491 employers identified by the Department for Business and Trade (DBT) for underpaying staff over several years are Centrica, owner of British Gas, Holland & Barrett, and EG Group.
These breaches of labour law have resulted in a combined fine of ยฃ10.2 million for the implicated firms. The underpayments involved wages falling short of either the national minimum wage or the national living wage, the latter applying for those aged 21 and over.
In total, around 42,000 people have been repaid by their employers after being left out of pocket, the DBT said.
EG Group short-changed its workers the most, according to the governmentโs latest investigation of pay between 2018 and 2023.
The company, which was co-founded by the billionaire Issa Brothers, but who have since stepped back from leading the firm, failed to pay ยฃ824,384 to 3,317 workers.
This meant individual employees were underpaid about ยฃ250 on average.

The company has significantly reduced the size of its UK operations over the past year, selling its UK petrol forecourts business and Cooplands bakeries. It still runs Starbucks franchise stores across the UK.
Another in the top 10 was Centrica, which owns British Gas, having failed to pay ยฃ167,815 to 356 workers โ amounting to about ยฃ460 on average.
High street retailers Go Outdoors and Holland & Barrett were also identified by the DBT in its latest naming round.
Go Outdoors was number seven on the list, owing ยฃ240,106 to 2,058 workers.
Holland & Barrett was ninth, having failed to pay ยฃ153,079 to 2,551 employees.
The national living wage was ยฃ11.44 in the year to the end of March, and has risen to ยฃ12.21 since April.
The minimum wage for 18-20-year-olds rose to ยฃ10 this year, and for apprentices and those aged under 18 it rose to ยฃ7.55.
The DBT released a list of more than 500 employers in June that underpaid workers between 2015 and 2022, including Pizza Express, Lidl and British Airways.
Business Secretary Peter Kyle said: โEvery worker deserves a fair dayโs pay for a fair dayโs work, and this government will not tolerate rogue employers who short-change their staff.

โI know that no employer wants to end up on one of these lists. But our Plan to Make Work Pay cracks down on those not playing by the rules.โ
A spokeswoman for Holland & Barrett said: โHolland & Barrett has been named by the government under the National Minimum Wage Naming Scheme, following a historic issue dating back to 2015โ2021 which was fully resolved in 2022.
โThis was not a case of deliberate underpayment. The issue stemmed from legacy practices such as requiring team members to wear specific shoes, unpaid training completed at home, and time spent preparing for shifts at our Burton distribution site.
โAll arrears โ totalling around ยฃ150,000 across the six-year period โ were repaid in full once identified, and we acted swiftly to upgrade processes and systems.
โWhile we respect the transparency of the scheme, we are disappointed that naming has occurred over three years after the matter was settled.โ
EG Group, Centrica and Go Outdoors have been contacted for comment.