Friday, July 18, 2025
It’s important to identifywho asks questions during an employment tribunal.
Questioners in the Hearing Room
Questions From Your Representative
Generally, your evidence will come from your witness statement which the tribunal will have read. Your representative (if you have one) may ask you supplemental questions in what's called examination-in-chief, and will address matters that have arisne from the Respondent's witness statements and which could not have been reasonable foreseen.
Cross-Examination: Opponent’s Representative
Next, the respondent’s representative (like a solicitor, barrister, or HR manager) will cross-examine you. These questions are often leading and test the reliability of your evidence. They may come in short, even yes/no form, and challenge your credibility or memory.
Tribunal Panel: The Judge and Lay Members
Judicial Questions During the Hearing
After your evidence, or at any time, the Employment Judge or Non-Legal Members may ask follow-up questions. These aim to clarify facts or ensure fairness. If your side is unrepresented, expect more frequent questions from the judge.
The Order of Questioning
Step-by-Step Process
1. Examination-in-Chief– by your side first; introduces your evidence.
2. Cross-Examination– challenging from the respondent’s side.
3. Re-Examination– your representative may clarify new issues.
4. Judicial and Panel Questions– follow-up queries from the judge and lay members.
5. Re-examination: if your representative thinks that an answer you gave was unclear, they will get an opportunity to ask you questions here to clarify.
Practical Tips for Answering Questions
Keep Answers Short & Honest
Answer the question asked—don’t speculate or guess. If you don’t know, it’s fine to say so. Brief, accurate answers build credibility.
Address the Tribunal, Not the Questioner
Always speak to the judge or panel. Even if someone else asks the question, direct your answer to them. Frame your feet and gaze toward the tribunal.
Pause and Clarify If Needed
If a question is confusing, ask the tribunal or opposing representative to repeat or rephrase. It’s better to clarify than misinterpret.
I will soon have a resource on witness familiarisation that addresses the process of a Final Hearing and how to assit the tribunal when giving evidence.
Click the button below to view the resources relevant to the stage your claim is at, and what is ahead of you!
Try to settle the dispute without starting a claim.
Not able to resolve your issue? Then set out your complaint by completing the ET1 and respond with an ET3
Once the claim has started get the roadmap for your case at a Case Management Hearing ("CMH").
The CMH may identify specific issues to resolve before a Final Hearing, like strike-out or employment status.
You will be ordered to exchange all relevant documents with the other side.
You will need to write a detailed account of your evidence before the Final Hearing and possibly any Preliminary Hearing, and send it to the other side.
This is when your case is decided by the tribunal.
If you win, this stage decides compensation or reinstatement
You may be able to challenge the outcome — but only on limited grounds.
Click here for my free tribunal guide.


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