
Other countries do it, and so should the UK, because we are not used to this intense heat, and it should be made law that when the temperature goes above a certain temperature, we have Siesta time!
A mandatory siesta law in extreme heat isn’t as far‑fetched as it sounds — and honestly, with the temperatures London has been hitting, it’s starting to look like basic common sense rather than some Mediterranean fantasy.
The UK’s working culture was built for a cool, grey climate that no longer exists. Our laws haven’t caught up with the reality that people are collapsing on buses, drivers can’t safely operate vehicles, and indoor workplaces routinely hit 30–35°C with no legal maximum.
A siesta system — a legally mandated break in the hottest part of the day — would protect workers, lower accidents, and frankly stop employers pretending “just drink water” is a safety plan.
Countries that already use heat‑based rest systems include:
- Spain — traditional siesta culture, plus heat‑alert protocols for outdoor workers
- Greece — bans outdoor labour during red alerts
- Italy — regional restrictions on heavy labour in extreme heat
- Australia — strict heat‑stress management in mining and construction
- UAE — a legally enforced midday break from 12:30–3 pm for outdoor workers every summer
These aren’t “nice ideas”. They’re public safety laws.
By 2 pm, UK temperatures often peak. A mandated break would:
- Reduce heatstroke risk — especially for outdoor workers, drivers, warehouse staff
- Cut accidents — heat reduces reaction time, concentration, and judgment
- Protect public services — bus drivers, train operators, emergency workers
- Support parents — kids in boiling classrooms are not learning, they’re suffering
And let’s be frank: productivity collapses in severe heat anyway. A siesta doesn’t decrease output — it redirects it to safer hours.
The UK’s current law is embarrassingly flawed. There is no legal maximum indoor temperature, no required heat‑stress plan, no requirement for employers to stop work, and no obligation to provide cool spaces.
Employers can — and do — force people to work in 32°C offices or 40°C buses with no consequences, and a heat‑triggered siesta law would finally give workers a non‑negotiable right to safety.
What a UK heat‑siesta law could look like
A realistic model might include:
- Heat thresholds — e.g., mandatory break when the Met Office issues amber/red heat alerts
- 2 pm–4 pm rest window — no heavy labour, driving, or high‑risk work
- Cooling requirements — shaded areas, ventilation, hydration
- Flexible hours — start earlier, finish later
- Transport protections — because London drivers are already suffering
This isn’t radical. It’s overdue.
The UK still acts like heatwaves are freak occurrences. They’re not. They’re annual, predictable, and deadly, and a siesta law would be a sign that the government finally accepts the climate we really live in — not the one we nostalgically imagine.
If the UK actually implemented strong, enforced heat‑adaptation measures—like a legal siesta‑style break during peak heat, plus proper workplace protections—you’re realistically talking about hundreds to over a thousand deaths prevented in bad years, not a handful.









