Linklaters has a series of Quick Guides that provide an overview of key sustainability disclosure regimes in the UK, EU and other jurisdictions. Click here to view all our Quick Guides.
This Quick Guide deals with the disclosure requirements under section 54 of the UK’s Modern Slavery Act 2015 (“MSA 2015”).
Last updated on: 5 September 2025
Modern Slavery Act 2015: modern slavery statement | |
In a nutshell | The section 54 of the MSA 2015 requires in-scope organisations to publish an annual slavery and human trafficking statement (an “MSA Statement”) setting out the steps they have taken to ensure that modern slavery and human trafficking are not taking place in any part of their business or supply chains. The MSA 2015 has relatively light compliance requirements and does not mandate the content to be included in the MSA Statement. However, it does have suggested reporting areas that are further fleshed out in non-binding government guidance. |
Mandatory or voluntary? | Mandatory |
Who does it apply to? | The requirement to produce an MSA Statement in section 54 of the MSA 2015 applies to organisations that:
The MSA 2015 can apply to overseas organisations with a presence in the UK. There is no bright line guidance on the interpretation of “carrying on a business in the UK”, although the government guidance indicates “a common-sense” approach should be applied. Organisations that do not have a “demonstrable business presence” in the UK should not be in scope. The government guidance makes clear that having a UK subsidiary will not, in itself, mean an overseas parent company is carrying on a business in the UK. |
What is required? | Compliance requirements Organisations are required to:
Where a parent and one or more subsidiaries are required to publish an MSA Statement, it is possible for the parent to report at a group level on behalf of all in-scope entities. Non-mandatory content requirements The MSA 2015 does not set out any mandatory content requirements. However, it does have suggested reporting areas that are fleshed out in the non-binding government guidance. The suggested reporting areas are:
Government guidance and reporting template The government has published a reporting template to support reporting under the regime (see below). The reporting template and the non-binding government guidance set out two tiers of disclosure:
Voluntary modern slavery statement registry Organisations are encouraged to voluntarily upload their MSA Statement to the government’s modern slavery statement registry. |
Assurance requirements | N/A |
Sanctions for non-compliance | Publication of an MSA Statement is enforceable by Secretary of State injunction. We are not aware of this power having ever been used. |
Future changes | On 24 July 2025, the UK Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights published a report summarising the conclusions from its inquiry into the UK’s current legal and voluntary framework on forced labour in international supply chains. The Committee:
For more information, see our blog post. The government has not yet indicated whether it plans to take forward any of these recommendations. |
Reporting template | On 30 July 2025, the Home Office published an optional international reporting template to help organisations meet modern slavery, forced labour and child labour reporting requirements across the UK, Australia and Canada. The template is designed to streamline compliance for multinational organisations facing overlapping obligations, reducing administrative burdens by enabling the preparation of a single report that addresses the core disclosure requirements of all three jurisdictions. Organisations must still consult and comply with the specific legislation and official guidance in each country, including any administrative requirements and reporting deadlines. Key features of the template include:
|
Legislation & guidance | |
Linklaters materials |
|