Termination

Chile
Grounds
There is a rigid and detailed statutory regime for termination in Chile regulating termination with or without cause, voluntary resignations and mutual agreements, among others.
Termination with no cause is subject to restrictions. Companies have full ability to terminate employments with no cause (ie, at will) only in the case of top managers and personnel in the sole trust of the company. For other employees, the company must show termination grounds (eg, economic needs). All employees who have been employed for at least 1 year are entitled to severance in the case of termination at will or on grounds of company needs. In the latter case, if the company is not in the position to demonstrate such economic needs, the termination will still be valid but, in case of lawsuits, a surcharge over the applicable severance payments may be imposed by the court in addition to the severance that must be paid as a result of the termination.
The law contains provisions on for-cause terminations due to, for example, lack of probity, serious breaches of an employee’s obligations under the employment agreement, non-attendance at work or aggression against the employer, and regulates voluntary resignation and termination by mutual agreement. These causes of termination do not entitle the employee to severance pay.
Employees subject to termination laws
All employees.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
Among others, pregnant women; mothers for up to 1 year and 12 weeks after birth of a child; union leaders; and employees whose children, spouse or civil partners have died cannot be terminated without prior court approval. Likewise, there may be restrictions applicable to terminating employees who are on sick leave.
Third-party approval for termination
No 3rd-party approval is required, except for the cases referred to above (see “Restricted or Prohibited Terminations”).
Mass layoff rules
There are no specific rules regarding mass layoffs.
Notice
30 days' notice for unilateral termination of managers and other specified employees (ie, termination with no cause – see “Grounds”). 30 days' notice for termination of any employee based on redundancy (ie, termination on grounds of company needs – see “Grounds”).
Notice is required for standard for-cause removal reasons. The notice must be handed over to the employee at the time of termination of the employment agreement or within the following 3 business days.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
The company has the statutory right to pay in lieu of notice.
There are no garden leave rules in Chile and, in principle, any anticipated contractual clause on that matter would be considered void.
Severance
If the employee has worked in a position uninterrupted for more than 1 year and is terminated with no cause (ie, at will) or on the grounds of company needs, severance pay is equal to 30 days' remuneration for every year worked and fraction of a year over 6 months spent in the service of the same employer, capped at 330 days and at a maximum monthly remuneration of UF90 (approximately USD3,380). Employment contracts may specify more generous severance terms.