Learn How to File a Grievance Step by Step
Understanding What a Grievance Is and Why You Might File One A grievance is a formal complaint about something you believe is unfair, incorrect, or violates...
Understanding What a Grievance Is and Why You Might File One
A grievance is a formal complaint about something you believe is unfair, incorrect, or violates a rule or agreement that applies to you. Grievances exist in many settings: workplace disputes, school conflicts, insurance claim denials, housing issues, and government program decisions. The purpose of filing a grievance is to create an official record of your complaint and trigger a review process where someone examines what happened and decides whether to take corrective action.
Grievances differ from informal complaints. When you mention a problem to a supervisor or manager in passing, that's not a formal grievance. A filed grievance becomes part of an official system with documented procedures, timelines, and response requirements. Once filed, the organization receiving your grievance must follow specific steps outlined in their policies.
Common reasons people file grievances include wage or payment disputes, wrongful discipline or termination, denial of benefits, policy violations by an employer or agency, discrimination or harassment, denial of services, or billing errors. The key element is that you believe something violated a rule, law, policy, or contractual agreement that should protect you.
Understanding the difference between a grievance and other complaint methods matters. Some organizations have ombudsman offices, appeals processes, or regulatory bodies that handle complaints differently than grievance procedures. Knowing which process applies to your situation prevents you from filing through the wrong channel and experiencing unnecessary delays.
Practical Takeaway: Before filing a grievance, write down exactly what happened, when it happened, who was involved, and which rule or policy you believe was violated. This clarity helps you determine whether a grievance is the right next step and prepares you for the filing process.
Locating Your Organization's Grievance Procedure and Policy
Every organization that offers grievance procedures should have written policies explaining how the process works. Finding this information is your first essential step. In workplace settings, grievance procedures typically appear in employee handbooks, human resources policies, or collective bargaining agreements if you are represented by a union. Schools usually include grievance information in student or faculty handbooks. Government agencies publish their grievance procedures in administrative regulations or on their official websites.
Start by asking directly for the grievance policy. Contact your human resources department, union representative, school administrator, or the customer service line of the organization involved. Request a copy of the formal grievance procedure in writing. Many organizations also post these procedures on their websites or intranets. If you cannot find the policy online, email or call and request they send it to you. Document that you made this request and when you received a response, as this creates a record if the organization later claims you did not follow proper procedures.
Pay particular attention to these elements in the grievance policy: the time limits for filing (often 10 to 30 days from when the problem occurred), which person or department receives grievances, what information must be included, whether informal resolution is required first, and what happens at each step of the process. Some policies require you to attempt to resolve the issue with your immediate supervisor before filing a formal grievance. Others allow you to skip that step if you reasonably believe it would be ineffective or unsafe.
Different organizations have different processes. A unionized workplace may have a three-step grievance process (informal discussion, formal filing, arbitration). A school might require you to speak with a teacher first, then an administrator, then file with the district office. A government benefit agency might have an appeal process with specific hearing procedures. Understanding your organization's specific steps prevents mistakes that could result in your grievance being rejected.
Practical Takeaway: Create a folder (physical or digital) containing your organization's grievance policy, the name and contact information of the person who receives grievances, and any forms required to file. Having this information organized before you need it saves time and reduces stress.
Preparing Your Grievance: Documenting Facts and Gathering Evidence
The strength of your grievance depends on the quality of your documentation. Before you write anything official, gather all evidence supporting your complaint. This includes emails, text messages, letters, photographs, receipts, schedules, performance reviews, written warnings, policy documents, or any other materials related to your grievance. If someone witnessed what happened, note their names and contact information. These details become the foundation of your case.
Create a timeline of events. Write down the exact dates when things happened, what occurred, who was present, and what was said or done. Be specific: "On March 15, my supervisor told me I could not take my scheduled vacation" is more useful than "My supervisor said I could not take time off." Include what you did in response and any conversation you had about the problem. Precise dates and details make your grievance credible and help whoever reviews it understand the sequence of events.
Separate facts from opinions and emotions. A fact is something that happened that others could have witnessed or verified: "I worked 45 hours the week of June 1 and was not paid for 5 hours." An opinion is your interpretation: "My manager does not value my work." Both may be true, but grievances carry more weight when they focus on specific facts you can support with evidence. Save emotional language for conversations with friends or family, not your formal grievance document.
Write down any conversations you had trying to resolve the problem informally. If you spoke with your supervisor, manager, or a representative of the organization and explained your concern, note when that happened, what you said, and how they responded. If they promised to fix the problem but did not, that is important information. If they refused to address it, that supports your decision to file formally. This documentation shows you made a good-faith effort to resolve the issue before escalating it.
Practical Takeaway: Use a simple spreadsheet or document to list each piece of evidence you have: the type of evidence, the date it occurred or was created, what it shows, and where you have stored it. Before filing your grievance, review this list to make sure you have everything organized and nothing important is missing.
Writing Your Grievance: Structure, Language, and Required Information
Your grievance document needs to communicate your complaint clearly and persuasively. Most organizations provide a grievance form with specific sections to complete. If no form exists, you will write a letter. Either way, follow this structure: begin with a clear statement of what you are grieving, explain what happened using specific facts and dates, describe how this violates a rule or policy, and state what resolution you are requesting.
Open your grievance with a straightforward summary sentence: "I am filing a grievance regarding unpaid wages for overtime work performed in June" or "I am grieving my suspension on September 10, which I believe violated the progressive discipline policy." This sentence helps whoever reads your grievance understand your complaint immediately. Avoid burying your main point in details.
In the body of your grievance, describe what happened in chronological order. Use specific dates, times, and names. For example: "On June 3, I informed my supervisor that I had worked 8 hours of overtime that week. On June 10, I received my paycheck and confirmed that I was not paid for these 8 hours. On June 15, I submitted a written request to payroll asking them to correct this error. As of today, the error has not been corrected." This narrative shows exactly what occurred and gives your grievance credibility.
Next, explain which policy, rule, agreement, or law you believe was violated. Reference specific sections if possible: "According to Section 4.2 of the employee handbook, all overtime hours must be compensated at time-and-a-half. By not paying me for 8 hours of overtime, the company violated this policy." This shows you understand the rules and did not file a grievance based on a misunderstanding. If you are unsure of the exact policy reference, describe the rule as you understand it: "Company policy requires that all employees be informed of disciplinary action before it is implemented. I was suspended without warning."
End by stating what resolution you want. Be specific and reasonable: "I request that I be paid for 8 hours of overtime at the rate of $22.50 per hour, totaling $180, plus interest from the date the payment should have been made" or "I request that my suspension be removed from my personnel record and that I be paid for the time I was suspended." If you want multiple things resolved, list them. A reasonable resolution request makes your grievance more likely to succeed.
Practical Takeaway: Before submitting your grievance, read it
Related Guides
More guides on the way
Browse our full collection of free guides on topics that matter.
Browse All Guides โ