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Free template

Disciplinary letters that keep a fair process fair.

By the time a disciplinary letter is being written, something has already gone wrong. The letter's job is to keep the process calm, clear and defensible. This disciplinary letter template set covers the invitation, the outcome and the appeal stages for UK practices. See what each letter must do below, then request the full versions free.

All three stages covered Plain, non-inflammatory wording Free full versions by email
Two dogs with their owner outside a UK veterinary practice
Each stage, its own letter
Fair and documented
01What makes it different

Nobody remembers a well run disciplinary. Everybody remembers an unfair one. The letters are where fairness gets proven.

UK disciplinary practice is built on fairness: the person should know what is alleged, see the evidence, have the chance to respond with a companion present, and be able to appeal. Those principles, reflected in the Acas guidance every tribunal reads, live or die in the letters you send.

The template set gives you a letter for each stage with the required elements built in, so nothing is forgotten at the moment when you are least calm. The wording stays neutral throughout, because letters written in anger read very badly a year later.

02Where letters go wrong

Three ways disciplinary letters undo good processes.

Each of these is avoidable with a structure written before it was needed.

01

The allegation is vague

An invitation that says we have concerns about your conduct gives the person nothing to answer and a tribunal plenty to criticise. The template forces the specifics: what, when, what evidence, and what policy or standard it may have breached.

02

The stages blur together

Investigation, hearing, outcome and appeal are different steps with different letters. When one letter tries to do two jobs, the process looks prejudged. The set keeps them separate on purpose.

03

The tone poisons the record

Sarcasm, certainty before the hearing, or warmth that overpromises: tone problems become evidence problems. Neutral wording is not cold, it is protective, for both sides.

What each letter covers.

Three letters, each with its required elements built in and guidance notes alongside.

  • Invitation to a disciplinary hearing: the specific allegation, the evidence enclosed, when and where the hearing is, who will hear it, the right to be accompanied, the possible outcomes, and reasonable time to prepare.
  • Outcome letter: what was decided and why, the evidence considered, the sanction if any and how long it stays live, what improvement is expected, and the right of appeal with a deadline and named recipient.
  • Appeal invitation and outcome: acknowledging the appeal grounds, a hearer not involved in the original decision where the practice's size allows, and a final outcome recorded clearly.
  • Guidance notes on the pitfalls: suspension wording, keeping investigation separate, small practice realities when there are only two managers, and when to pause and take advice.

We send the letters by email, free. If you are in the middle of a live case, say so: a short call before the first letter goes out is worth more than any template.

03The systems

White-labelled systems, mapped to your kind of practice.

Every system carries your practice's name and branding, not ours. These are the ones that matter most here.

  • Advice on call: A live disciplinary is exactly when subscription support earns its keep: advice before each step, letters checked before they are sent.
  • Policies: The letters reference your disciplinary procedure. Host it versioned and acknowledged so nobody can claim they never saw it.
  • See It Report It: When conduct issues start as incidents, a structured record from day one makes every later step cleaner.
04Questions

Asked by practices like yours.

Can I use these letters for any role in the practice?

Yes, the structure is the same for a vet, an RVN or a receptionist. What changes is the subject matter and, for clinical roles, whether professional standards questions belong in the process. If a case touches professional registration, take advice before writing anything.

Do I have to follow the Acas Code?

Tribunals take the Acas Code of Practice on disciplinary and grievance procedures into account, and unreasonable failure to follow it can affect compensation. Treat it as the map: the letters in this set are structured around its principles.

What if my practice only has one manager?

Small practices cannot always separate investigator, hearer and appeal hearer. Do what your size genuinely allows, document why, and keep each role as separate as possible. This is one of the most common reasons practices ask us to run a process with them.

Should I send a letter I have adapted myself?

For anything beyond a straightforward first stage, have it checked first. A ten minute review before sending costs little; unpicking a flawed letter after it has been received costs a great deal more.