Leave Management for Hospitality Teams: A Complete Guide

by Deputy Team, 11 minutes read
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Key takeaways

  • Manual leave tracking across casual and part-time hospitality workers leads to roster gaps, payroll errors, and compliance risk under the Fair Work Act.

  • Understanding National Employment Standards (NES) leave entitlements and the Hospitality Industry (General) Award helps you stay on top of your obligations.

  • A centralised leave management system like Deputy lets your team request, approve, and track leave from their phones, with real-time roster updates.

  • Blackout periods, leave balance tracking, and shift swap tools help you maintain coverage during peak trading periods.

Contents

If you manage a hospitality team in Australia, you already know the headache of juggling leave requests across a mix of casual, part-time, and full-time workers. One missed request can leave you short-staffed on a Friday night, and tracking accruals on a spreadsheet is a recipe for payroll errors. With hospitality activity increasing by 28% by late 2025, demand on your roster is only growing. This guide walks you through how to simplify leave management for your hospitality team, from Fair Work obligations to practical tools that keep your roster covered and your people happy.

What leave management looks like in hospitality

Leave management in hospitality is nothing like a typical office setup. Your team works irregular hours across rotating rosters, and a single absence can throw your entire service into disarray. When you're tracking leave manually, whether on paper forms, spreadsheets, or even text messages, it's easy for requests to slip through the cracks.

A hospitality manager reviewing leave requests on a tablet in a modern Australian cafe

Many hospitality managers run into the same issues each week:

  • Leave requests come in via text, email, or a quick word during a shift, with no single system of record

  • Casual workers don't always understand which leave types they're entitled to, leading to confusion and disputes

  • Roster gaps appear at the last minute when approved leave wasn't communicated to the team

  • Leave balances are calculated manually, increasing the risk of overpayment or underpayment

  • Managers spend hours rebuilding rosters instead of focusing on guests and operations

Without a proper system, you're left with burned-out managers, frustrated staff, and a real risk of falling short on your compliance obligations. With Gen Z now accounting for 64% of hospitality shift workers, your team also expects a modern, mobile-friendly experience when requesting time off.

Fair Work leave entitlements hospitality managers need to know

As a hospitality employer in Australia, your leave obligations are set out in the National Employment Standards (NES) and the Hospitality Industry (General) Award. Understanding these entitlements is the first step to managing leave effectively.

Here are the key leave types you should be across:

  • Annual leave: Full-time and part-time employees accrue four weeks of paid annual leave per year, based on their ordinary hours of work

  • Personal/carer's leave: Full-time and part-time employees get 10 days of paid personal/carer's leave per year, which accumulates and carries over

  • Compassionate leave: Two days of paid compassionate leave per occasion for full-time and part-time employees; casuals get two days unpaid

  • Community service leave: Unpaid leave for voluntary emergency activities (for example, bushfire or flood response), plus paid leave for jury service

  • Long service leave: Governed by state and territory legislation, typically available after seven to 10 years of continuous service

Keep in mind that the Hospitality Industry (General) Award may provide additional conditions or specific rules around how leave is taken. For instance, the Award sets out provisions for when an employer can direct an employee to take annual leave if their balance becomes excessive.

A word of caution: this article provides general guidance, not legal advice. Always check the Fair Work website or consult a qualified adviser for your specific situation.

How to handle leave requests without roster chaos

The biggest challenge with leave in hospitality isn't the leave itself. It's the ripple effect on your roster. When a barista calls in sick or a chef requests a week off during the holidays, you need a process that catches it early and gives you time to find cover.

Follow these steps to manage leave requests reliably:

  1. Set clear expectations. Let your team know how far in advance they need to request leave, and what the process looks like. A consistent policy reduces last-minute surprises.

  2. Use a single channel for all requests. When requests come in through one system, nothing gets lost. Deputy's leave request feature lets team members submit requests directly from their phone, with all the details you need in one place.

  3. Review requests against your roster. Before approving, check who else is on shift that day. Are you covered for the role? Is it a peak period?

  4. Communicate decisions quickly. Don't leave your team waiting. A fast response builds trust and gives everyone time to plan.

  5. Update your roster immediately. Once leave is approved, your roster should reflect the change right away so the rest of your team can see who's available.

When you centralise your leave requests, you can also spot patterns. Having a clear shift swap policy alongside your leave process gives your team another way to manage coverage. If three people always request the same long weekend, you can plan ahead rather than scramble.

Managing leave for casual and part-time workers

Casual and part-time workers make up the backbone of most Australian hospitality teams. But managing their leave entitlements can be more complex than it looks.

Casual employees don't accrue paid annual or personal leave under the NES. However, they are entitled to:

  • Two days of unpaid carer's leave per occasion

  • Two days of unpaid compassionate leave per occasion

  • Community service leave (unpaid, except for jury service)

  • Unpaid family and domestic violence leave

It's also worth noting that long-term casuals may have conversion rights to permanent employment, which could affect their leave entitlements going forward.

Part-time employees accrue leave on a pro-rata basis. If someone works 20 hours a week instead of 38, their annual leave accrual is proportional. This can get tricky to track manually, especially if their hours change from week to week.

Deputy helps you manage this by tracking leave accruals automatically based on hours worked, so you don't have to recalculate balances every pay period. You can set up customisable accrual rules that match the Hospitality Industry (General) Award, reducing the risk of manual errors.

How Deputy helps you stay on top of leave

If you're still managing leave with spreadsheets, paper forms, or a combination of emails and texts, you're spending far more time on admin than you need to. Deputy brings your entire leave workflow into one place, designed for the way hospitality teams actually work.

Hospitality shift workers in uniforms checking their phones for roster updates in a restaurant kitchen

Managing leave from your phone means your team can submit requests and you can respond without being tied to a desktop. Deputy supports this with:

  • Mobile leave requests: Your team can request leave from the Deputy app on iOS or Android, with all the details attached. No more chasing up half-written texts.

  • Instant manager notifications: When a leave request comes in, you get notified straight away so you can review and respond before it affects your roster.

  • Roster-integrated leave view: Approved leave appears directly on your roster, so you can see gaps at a glance and find cover.

  • Shift swaps and availability: Team members can swap shifts or flag their unavailability directly in the app, reducing the back-and-forth.

  • Leave balances at your fingertips: Both managers and team members can check leave balances in the app, cutting down on questions and manual lookups.

With Deputy, everything happens in real time and managers get everything they need in one place. It saves us time, reduces confusion, and gives our team a much better experience.

Rob Crawford, financial director at Coach Services Limited, says the switch to Deputy made a real difference for the team.

For a hospitality team, this kind of visibility is critical. When 82.91% of hospitality shift workers report positive sentiment, keeping your team's experience smooth, including how they manage their leave, directly supports retention and morale.

See how Deputy can take the stress out of leave management for your hospitality team.

Tracking leave balances and accruals

One of the most error-prone parts of leave management is keeping balances accurate. In hospitality, where hours fluctuate week to week, it's easy for accruals to drift out of sync with what your payroll system shows.

Track the following for each employee:

  • Annual leave accruals for full-time and part-time employees, calculated based on ordinary hours

  • Personal/carer's leave accruals, which accumulate year on year with no cap under the NES

  • Leave taken, including partial days and leave loaded into timesheets

  • Leave balances that reflect the most recent pay period, not last month's spreadsheet

Deputy's Leave Management+ feature handles accrual calculations automatically, applying rules you configure to match your Award obligations. You can set accrual caps, define leave types, and track balance history so there's a clear audit trail for every employee.

This matters because incorrect leave balances can lead to underpayments, which are a serious issue under Australian workplace law. Keeping your records accurate helps reduce that risk. Deputy's award interpretation tools can also help you stay across the Hospitality Industry (General) Award requirements when calculating leave and pay.

How to approve or deny leave requests fairly

Saying yes or no to leave shouldn't feel like a guessing game. A fair, transparent process protects you and your team, and helps avoid the perception of favouritism.

When you're assessing a leave request, consider:

  • Roster coverage: Will approving this request leave you short-staffed for the shift? Can someone else cover?

  • Timing: Is it a peak period, a public holiday, or a regular weekday?

  • Notice given: Did the team member follow your leave policy and give reasonable notice?

  • Fairness: Has the same person had multiple requests approved recently while others have been waiting?

  • Entitlement: Is the employee entitled to this type of leave under the NES or the Hospitality Industry (General) Award?

Under the Fair Work Act, you can refuse a leave request on reasonable business grounds, but you need to be able to explain your reasoning. Blanket denials without justification can lead to disputes.

Deputy lets you approve or decline leave requests directly from the app, with a full view of your roster so you can make informed decisions. Managers can also enter leave on behalf of team members when needed, for example, if a casual worker calls in and can't access the app.

Blocking time off during peak periods

Every hospitality business has its peak seasons. Whether it's the Christmas rush, Easter long weekend, or Melbourne Cup day, there are times when you simply can't afford to be short-staffed.

Blackout periods let you block future leave requests for specific dates, so your team knows in advance when time off isn't available. This is much better than dealing with a flood of requests and having to say no to most of them after the fact.

A hotel front desk manager viewing a digital roster and leave calendar on a computer screen

Use blackout periods effectively by following these steps:

  1. Identify your peak dates early. Look at last year's trading data and upcoming events to map out your busiest periods.

  2. Communicate blackout dates well in advance. Give your team at least a month's notice, ideally more, so they can plan around it.

  3. Set blackout periods in Deputy. Once configured, team members won't be able to submit leave requests for those dates, which removes the awkward conversation.

  4. Be reasonable. Don't block out every weekend or public holiday for the entire year. Your team needs time off too, and excessive blackout periods can hurt retention.

This is especially important as the industry grows. With hospitality activity on the rise, your busiest periods are likely getting busier, and having a system that prevents roster surprises during those windows is essential.

Real-time roster updates when staff take leave

Approved leave should immediately reflect on your roster. If it doesn't, you risk double-booking shifts, missing gaps, or finding out too late that you're understaffed.

With Deputy, approved leave automatically appears on your roster, giving you a live view of who's available and where the gaps are. From there, you can:

  • Fill gaps quickly by offering open shifts to available team members through the app

  • Use shift swaps so team members can cover for each other without manager intervention

  • Check availability before assigning shifts, so you're not rostering someone who's already on leave

Your team can also check their own roster in real time using the Deputy mobile app, so everyone stays on the same page. That means fewer last-minute surprises about who's working and when.

For a hospitality operation where things change fast, this kind of real-time visibility makes a real difference to how smoothly your service runs.

Frequently asked questions

Can I manage leave requests from my phone with Deputy?

Yes. Deputy's mobile app lets both managers and team members handle leave requests from anywhere. Your staff can submit leave requests, and you can approve or decline them, all from your phone. The app is available on iOS and Android.

Does Deputy track leave accruals for part-time hospitality staff?

It does. Deputy calculates leave accruals based on the hours your part-time employees actually work, so balances stay accurate even when hours vary from week to week. You can configure accrual rules to align with the Hospitality Industry (General) Award.

Can I block leave requests during busy periods like Christmas or Easter?

You can. Deputy's blackout period feature lets you block future leave requests for specific dates. Once a blackout period is set, team members won't be able to submit requests for those dates, helping you maintain full roster coverage during peak trading.

How does Deputy help with Fair Work leave compliance?

Deputy supports your compliance efforts by tracking leave entitlements, accruals, and balances in one place, with a clear audit trail. While compliance remains your responsibility as an employer, Deputy's tools help you navigate the requirements of the NES and relevant Awards by keeping your records accurate and up to date. For specific legal questions, we recommend checking the Fair Work website.

What happens to my roster when I approve a leave request in Deputy?

When you approve a leave request, Deputy automatically updates your roster in real time. The approved leave appears on your roster view, making gaps visible so you can find cover or offer the shift to available team members straight away.

Simplify leave management for your hospitality team

Leave management doesn't have to be the time-consuming, error-prone process it is for so many hospitality businesses. By setting clear policies, understanding your Fair Work obligations, and using a system built for shift-based teams, you can spend less time on admin and more time running a great venue.

To get leave management under control, focus on these areas:

  • Centralise all leave requests in one system so nothing gets lost

  • Understand your obligations under the NES and the Hospitality Industry (General) Award

  • Track accruals automatically to avoid balance errors and underpayments

  • Use blackout periods to protect peak trading dates

  • Keep your roster updated in real time so you always know who's available

Deputy brings all of this together in one platform built for hospitality teams. Try Deputy for free and see how much easier leave management can be, or book a demo to see it in action.

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