HomeDocuments
Tenancy Agreement Commercial Lease Freelancer Contract Employment Contract Service Agreement Settlement Agreement NDA Company Constitution Shareholder Agreement Partnership Agreement Board Minutes Director's Loan Loan Agreement Licence Agreement Power of Attorney GDPR Privacy Policy Website T&Cs Data Processing Agreement Will
IndustriesToolsAnalyse ContractsPricingBlogGenerate a Document

Legal Documents for Hospitality Businesses in Ireland

The Irish hospitality sector - hotels, B&Bs, guesthouses, and event venues - manages seasonal staff, guest data, booking terms, and supplier relationships. Employment law compliance is particularly complex with variable hours, split shifts, and seasonal patterns. Guest data from booking systems, loyalty programmes, and CCTV requires GDPR compliance. Clear booking terms and conditions prevent disputes over cancellations, no-shows, and damage deposits.

Documents You Need

Common Legal Mistakes in Hospitality

No employment contracts for seasonal workers

Hospitality businesses frequently fail to provide written terms for seasonal and casual staff. The Employment (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2018 requires written core terms within 5 days for all employees, and the Organisation of Working Time Act 1997 governs rest periods and maximum working hours - both are frequently breached in hospitality.

Inadequate booking T&Cs

Without clear booking terms, you have limited recourse for no-shows, late cancellations, or damage by guests. Your T&Cs should address cancellation windows, deposit forfeiture, damage liability, check-in/check-out times, and any house rules.

Not managing guest data under GDPR

Hotels and B&Bs collect names, addresses, payment details, passport numbers (for non-EU guests), CCTV footage, and often dietary and accessibility information. Without a GDPR privacy policy and proper data handling procedures, you risk DPC enforcement and guest trust.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Fixed-term contracts are appropriate for seasonal staff, specifying the end date or the seasonal event that triggers termination. Contracts should address variable hours, split shifts, rest periods under the Organisation of Working Time Act, and the employer's auto-enrolment pension obligations since January 2026.
Cancellation policy and deadlines, deposit and payment terms, no-show charges, damage liability, check-in/check-out times, house rules, liability limitations (e.g. for lost property), group booking terms, and for online bookings, the 14-day distance selling cancellation right and its exceptions (accommodation is exempt if a specific date is booked).
Guest registration data should typically be retained for the duration of the stay plus a reasonable period for accounting and legal purposes (commonly 6-7 years for tax records). CCTV footage should be retained for no more than 30 days unless an incident requires longer retention. Marketing data requires explicit consent and should be refreshed regularly.

Related Reading

Free Tools

Employment Cost Calculator → Notice Period Calculator →
This is a self-service document generation tool. It does not constitute legal advice. For complex or high-value situations, we recommend consulting a solicitor.