Gender Pay Gap

Gender Pay Gap Report 2024/25

In the UK, the government requires public, private and voluntary sector organisations with 250 or more employees to report on their gender pay gaps annually. The reports show the difference between the average earnings of men and women, expressed relative to men’s earnings. 

Employers must report six different measures, based on a snapshot of pay data on a date set out by the Government Equalities Office:

  • median gender pay gap – the difference between the median hourly rate of pay of male full-pay relevant employees and that of female full-pay relevant employees
  • mean gender pay gap – the difference between the mean hourly rate of pay of male full-pay relevant employees and that of female full-pay relevant employees
  • median bonus gap – the difference between the median bonus pay paid to male relevant employees and that paid to female relevant employees
  • mean bonus gap – the difference between the mean bonus pay paid to male relevant employees and that paid to female relevant employees
  • bonus proportions – the proportions of male and female relevant employees who were paid bonus pay during the relevant period
  • quartile pay bands – the proportions of male and female full-pay relevant employees in the lower, lower-middle, upper-middle and upper quartile pay bands.

If an organisation reports a gender pay gap, it does not mean women are paid less than men for doing the same job. Equal pay looks at the difference in men’s and women’s pay for the same or similar work. It’s possible to have a gender pay gap and to pay men and women fairly, but it does show that, on average, men occupy higher-paying roles than women.

This report covers the 2024/25 reporting cycle, using a snapshot date of 5 April 2024.

Gender Pay Gap

Difference in the hourly rate of pay (mean)                       13.2%                  down 2.8 points vs 2023     

Difference in the hourly rate of pay (median)                    7.4%                    up 0.2 points vs 2023

Gender Bonus Gap

Difference in bonus pay (mean)                                              21.6%                  down 30.4 points vs 2023

Difference in bonus pay (median)                                           80.1%                  up 8.3 points vs 2023     

% male employees who receive a bonus                             22.1%                  down 0.4 points vs 2023

% female employees who receive a bonus                         18.5%                  up 1.8 points vs 2023     

Gender Pay Quartiles

Each pay quartile represents a quarter (25%) of our total workforce, ranked by pay

 

2023

2024

Lower quartile (% women)

58.1%

52.8%

Lower-mid quartile (% women)

49.4%

51.4%

Upper-mid quartile (% women)

38.4%

37%

Upper quartile (% women)

18.1%

19.5%

There has been a small increase in the proportion of women in upper quartile roles. The small decrease in upper-mid roles is due to individuals being promoted internally from these roles. 

There has also been a decrease in the proportion of women in lower quartile roles.

Commentary

  • Drivers, Drivers Mate, Engineers, Multi Skilled Operatives and Logistics Supervisors all have an over-representation of men. This impacts our mean gender pay gap
  • There has been an increase in the number of women in Top Management roles. 

Actions

We continue to work proactively to reduce our gender pay gap and to increase the number of women in under-represented roles through:

  • Re-writing job descriptions to ensure only the essential criteria are listed and that the language is gender neutral
  • Advertising vacancies in a variety of places, including proactively showcasing existing female employees in these roles
  • Improving our maternity and family friendly benefits to improve our attractivity
  • Offering a wide variety of training and leadership programmes to encourage all employees to develop their skills and aspire to more senior roles within the organisation.

Declaration

We confirm that our data is accurate and has been calculated according to the requirements of the Equality Act 2010 (Gender Pay Gap Information) Regulations 2017.

Mark Franklin
CEO, Elis UK Ltd
02/04/2025