HR & People

New Starter Induction Checklist (UK Template)

Sarah Mitchell
#induction#onboarding#new starter#checklist#HR
New employee induction and onboarding checklist

A structured induction process is one of the most impactful things you can do for a new employee — and one of the most neglected. Research by the CIPD consistently shows that employees who receive a thorough induction are more productive, more engaged and significantly less likely to leave within their first year. Yet many UK businesses still rely on a handshake, a quick tour and a hope that the new starter will “pick things up as they go.”

This guide provides a complete induction framework with a day-by-day and week-by-week checklist you can adapt for your organisation. It covers legal requirements, health and safety briefings, role-specific training, IT setup and probation expectations.

Why Inductions Matter

Retention

The cost of replacing an employee is typically estimated at 6–9 months’ salary when you account for recruitment, training, lost productivity and management time. Early leavers — those who leave within the first 6 months — represent the worst return on that investment. A structured induction is the single most effective intervention for reducing early turnover.

Employers have specific legal obligations to new starters under several pieces of legislation:

Productivity

A well-inducted employee reaches full productivity significantly faster than one who is left to figure things out alone. Clear expectations, proper training and access to the right tools and systems from day one compress the learning curve.

Culture and Engagement

The first days and weeks set the tone for the entire employment relationship. An organised, welcoming induction signals that you value your people and run a professional operation. A chaotic, neglected induction sends the opposite message.

Pre-Arrival Preparation

Before the new starter walks through the door, several things should already be in place. This preparation phase is frequently overlooked, leading to embarrassing first-day experiences like no desk, no login credentials, or nobody knowing the new person was starting.

Pre-Arrival Checklist

Day One Induction Checklist

Day one should focus on making the new starter feel welcome, safe and oriented. Avoid overwhelming them with information — cover the essentials and save detailed role-specific training for later in the week.

Welcome and Administration

Health and Safety Essentials

These items are legal requirements and must be covered on day one:

Key Policies

IT and Systems

Week One Induction Checklist

After the first day’s essentials, the rest of the first week should build knowledge progressively.

Days 2–3: Role-Specific Training

Days 4–5: Broader Context

End of Week One: Check-In

Month One Induction Checklist

Weeks 2–4: Deepening Knowledge

End of Month One: Formal Review

Three-Month and Six-Month Reviews

Three-Month Review

Six-Month Review (End of Probation)

Health and Safety Induction Requirements by Sector

Different sectors have additional induction requirements:

Hospitality and Catering

Construction

Care and Healthcare

Retail

Office-Based

Common Induction Mistakes

Cramming Everything Into Day One

Overloading a new starter with hours of presentations, policy documents and system demonstrations on their first day is counterproductive. They will retain very little. Spread the content across the first month, prioritising health and safety essentials on day one.

No Follow-Up After Week One

Many inductions effectively end after the first week, with the new starter left to sink or swim. The structured reviews at one month, three months and six months are essential for catching problems early and demonstrating ongoing commitment to the employee’s development.

Skipping Health and Safety

Health and safety training on day one is not optional — it is a legal requirement. If a new employee has an accident before receiving basic safety training, the employer’s liability position is extremely weak.

Not Assigning a Buddy

A designated buddy or mentor gives the new starter someone to ask “stupid questions” without feeling they are bothering their manager. This simple step significantly accelerates integration.

Using Outdated Materials

Review your induction materials at least annually. Policies change, systems are updated, team structures evolve. An induction pack full of outdated information undermines credibility.

Digitise Your Induction Process

Tracking induction completion across multiple new starters, ensuring every checklist item is completed, and maintaining auditable training records is a significant administrative challenge — especially if you are relying on paper checklists and manual tracking.

Digital checklist and training management tools allow you to create standardised induction workflows, assign tasks to the right people, track completion in real time, and generate compliance reports that demonstrate every new starter has received the required training and information.

Learn more about how Assistant Manager can streamline your induction process with our Digital Checklists and Training & LMS features.

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