Government Consultation Now Open

Help Shape Hugh's Law Before 1 September 2026

The Government Is Now Consulting on Hugh's Law

For years, we have been fighting for parents who are forced to choose between being at their child's bedside and keeping their job. Now, for the first time, the Government is listening.

Hugh's Law is formally part of a Government consultation on new employment rights for parents of seriously ill children. This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to shape policy that will protect families in crisis.

Why This Matters

When a child is diagnosed with a serious illness, everything changes overnight. Parents drop everything to be there. But without any legal right to paid leave, thousands are forced back to work before they are ready, or pushed out of employment entirely.

The numbers tell the story.

95% of parents experience financial hardship following a child's diagnosis
88% reduce their hours or leave work altogether
79% report a serious decline in their mental health

Around 11,000 children in the UK each year face serious health conditions requiring sustained parental care. For those families, the financial shock hits immediately and the current system offers almost nothing from day one.

What the Consultation Covers

The Government is seeking views on whether parents of seriously ill children should have a legal right to paid, protected leave from the point of diagnosis. It also covers how serious illness should be defined, who should be eligible, how long leave should last, and what the level of pay should be.

This is the moment to make the case. Every response matters.

Not Sure How to Respond?

We have put together a simple guide to help you answer the consultation questions. Download it below and use it alongside the official survey.

Share Your Story

Your experience matters. If you are a parent who has lived through the financial and emotional impact of a child's serious illness, we want to hear from you. Your story could help change the law for thousands of families.

The consultation closes 1September 2026

Every voice counts.
Please share this page with anyone who has a stake in getting this right.