Types of Workplace Bullying
Bullying includes persistent undermining, humiliation, exclusion, aggressive emails, unreasonable workload, or deliberate sabotage of your work. Single incidents rarely qualify, but a pattern of behaviour (over weeks or months) does. Bullying doesn't have to be based on a protected characteristic (race, sex, age, disability) to be wrong—but if it is, claims are stronger and reach further.
Your Legal Routes
1. Harassment claim: If bullying is based on race, sex, age, disability, sexual orientation, religion, or pregnancy, file a harassment claim at tribunal. Burden of proof is lower; you only need to show the conduct was unwanted and created a hostile environment.
2. Constructive dismissal: If bullying is so severe it breaches the implied term of trust and confidence, resign and claim constructive dismissal. You must resign "without delay" after the breach. Document everything before resigning.
3. Health & safety breach: Severe bullying affects mental health. Notify your employer in writing of health impacts. If they don't respond, report to the HSE (Health & Safety Executive). This can trigger an investigation and enforcement action.
4. Unfair dismissal: If you're dismissed after reporting bullying or raising a grievance, claim unfair dismissal. Retaliation for whistleblowing is illegal.