An employee complaint form is a standardized document that gives your team a clear, consistent way to report workplace concerns. Whether it's a conflict with a coworker, a safety hazard, or a policy violation, having a formal process protects both your employees and your business from issues that spiral out of control.
Nearly half of employees who experience conflict at work choose to simply "let it go," according to CIPD research. That's a problem. Unaddressed complaints erode trust, tank morale, and eventually push good people out the door.
This guide gives you a free, ready-to-use employee complaint form template — plus a step-by-step process for handling complaints the right way at a small team.
Why Your Team Needs a Formal Complaint Process
"We're a small team — can't people just talk it out?" That's what most founders think when their company is five or ten people. And sometimes it works. But here's what happens without a formal process: the quiet employee who's being mistreated never speaks up, problems fester, and one day you're blindsided by a resignation — or worse, a lawsuit.
A formal complaint process isn't bureaucracy for bureaucracy's sake. It serves four critical purposes:
Legal protection. Federal laws enforced by the EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) require employers to take reasonable steps to prevent and address workplace harassment and discrimination. A documented complaint process is evidence that you did your part.
Early issue detection. Small problems caught early stay small. A complaint form creates a low-friction way for employees to flag concerns before they escalate into toxic situations that affect the entire team.
Culture of trust. When employees know there's a safe, confidential way to raise concerns, they're more likely to speak up — and more likely to believe that leadership actually cares. That trust is the foundation of healthy employee relations.
Documentation trail. If a complaint eventually leads to disciplinary action or termination, you need a paper trail showing what happened, when it was reported, and how you responded. Without documentation, it's your word against theirs.

Free Employee Complaint Form Template
Copy this template and adapt it to your company. You can keep it as a digital form in your internal documents system or print it for employees who prefer paper.
EMPLOYEE COMPLAINT FORM
Section 1: Employee Information
- Full Name: ___________________________
- Job Title: ___________________________
- Department: ___________________________
- Direct Manager: ___________________________
- Date of Complaint: ___________________________
- Email: ___________________________
- Phone: ___________________________
Section 2: Incident Details
- Date(s) of Incident: ___________________________
- Time of Incident: ___________________________
- Location: ___________________________
Please describe the incident in detail. Include what happened, what was said, and any actions taken:
Section 3: People Involved
-
Person(s) complaint is against:
- Name: ___________________________ Title: ___________________________
- Name: ___________________________ Title: ___________________________
-
Witnesses (if any):
- Name: ___________________________ Contact: ___________________________
- Name: ___________________________ Contact: ___________________________
Section 4: Previous Attempts to Resolve
Have you previously reported this issue? ☐ Yes ☐ No
If yes, to whom? ___________________________
Date of previous report: ___________________________
What was the outcome? _____________________________________________________________
Section 5: Desired Outcome
What resolution would you like to see?
Section 6: Supporting Evidence
Do you have supporting documents, emails, photos, or other evidence? ☐ Yes ☐ No
If yes, please attach or describe: _____________________________________________________________
Section 7: Acknowledgment
I confirm that the information provided is true and accurate to the best of my knowledge. I understand that filing a false complaint may result in disciplinary action.
Signature: ___________________________ Date: ___________________________
What to Include in an Employee Complaint Form
Every complaint form needs enough detail to trigger a proper investigation — but not so many fields that employees feel overwhelmed. Here's a field-by-field breakdown:
| Field | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Employee name & contact | Identifies the complainant and establishes communication channel |
| Job title & department | Helps HR understand the reporting structure and context |
| Direct manager | Reveals whether the complaint involves the employee's own supervisor |
| Date(s) of incident | Establishes timeline; critical for investigations and legal compliance |
| Location | Helps corroborate the complaint and identify environmental factors |
| Detailed description | The core of the complaint — what happened, who did what |
| Person(s) involved | Identifies the accused party for investigation |
| Witnesses | Provides additional perspectives to verify the complaint |
| Previous reports | Shows whether this is a recurring issue or pattern |
| Desired outcome | Gives HR insight into the employee's expectations |
| Supporting evidence | Strengthens the complaint with documentation |
| Signature & date | Confirms the complaint is made in good faith |
Tip: Keep a digital version of this form accessible from your company's internal knowledge base. Employees are more likely to file complaints when the form is easy to find and fill out — not buried in a shared drive folder nobody checks.

Types of Employee Complaints (With Examples)
Not all complaints are created equal. Understanding the categories helps you triage properly and respond with the right level of urgency.
Harassment and Discrimination
These are the most legally sensitive complaints. A 28-year-old marketing coordinator reports that her team lead has been making comments about her appearance during meetings. Another employee files a complaint alleging he was passed over for a promotion because of his age. Both scenarios fall under protections enforced by the EEOC and require immediate, documented investigation.
Workplace Safety
An employee in a warehouse notices that fire exits are blocked by inventory and reports it through the complaint form. Safety complaints may also involve OSHA violations, broken equipment, or inadequate protective gear. These need swift action — both for legal compliance and because someone could get hurt.
Policy Violations
A team member notices that a colleague consistently clocks in late but records a full 9-to-5 on their timesheet. Policy violations can range from attendance issues to misuse of company equipment. They're usually less urgent than harassment or safety complaints, but they still erode trust when left unaddressed.
Management and Leadership Issues
Sometimes the complaint is about a manager's behavior — favoritism, micromanagement, or creating a hostile environment. A developer at a 30-person startup filed a complaint because his manager would berate the team during standup calls. These complaints are tricky because they involve power dynamics, but they're also among the most important to investigate.
Workload and Compensation
An employee feels their workload is unreasonable compared to peers at the same level, or they discover a pay gap between themselves and a colleague doing identical work. While these may not always involve policy violations, they signal deeper issues with compensation planning and role clarity.
Interpersonal Conflicts
Two salespeople can't stop arguing over territory assignments. A shared workspace arrangement creates daily friction. These conflicts may seem minor, but unresolved interpersonal issues are one of the top drivers of turnover. Your conflict resolution process should work hand-in-hand with your complaint system.

How to Handle Employee Complaints (Step-by-Step)
Receiving a complaint form is just the beginning. Here's a seven-step process for handling it properly:
Step 1: Receive and Log the Complaint
When a complaint arrives, log it immediately. Record the date received, who submitted it, and a brief summary. Store this in a secure location — ideally your people management system or a dedicated HR folder, not a random email thread.
Step 2: Acknowledge Receipt Within 24 Hours
Contact the employee within one business day. Let them know their complaint was received, that it will be taken seriously, and give them a general timeline for next steps. You don't need to have answers yet — you just need to show you're listening.
Step 3: Assess Severity and Assign an Investigator
Not every complaint requires a full investigation. A minor scheduling disagreement might be resolved with a conversation. An allegation of harassment requires a formal, documented investigation by someone who wasn't involved in the incident.
For small teams without a dedicated HR department, the founder or operations lead typically handles complaints. If the complaint is about that person, designate an outside party — even a trusted advisor or fractional HR consultant.
Step 4: Investigate Thoroughly
Interview the complainant, the accused, and any witnesses separately. Review relevant documents, emails, or chat logs. Take detailed notes during each interview and ask open-ended questions:
- "Can you walk me through what happened?"
- "Were there other occasions when something similar occurred?"
- "Is there anyone else who might have relevant information?"
Step 5: Document Everything
Create a written summary of your investigation findings. Include who you spoke with, what they said, any evidence reviewed, and your conclusions. This documentation is essential for legal protection and should be kept in the employee's personnel file.
Step 6: Take Appropriate Action
Based on your findings, decide on the appropriate resolution. Options range from mediation and coaching to formal warnings, a performance improvement plan, reassignment, or termination. Whatever you decide, communicate the outcome to the complainant — even if you can't share all details due to confidentiality.
Step 7: Follow Up and Prevent Recurrence
Check in with the complainant two to four weeks after resolution. Is the situation better? Has there been any retaliation? Use the complaint as a learning opportunity — if you see patterns, address the root cause through training, policy updates, or structural changes.

Setting Up a Complaint Process for Your Small Team
Enterprise companies have dedicated HR departments with formal grievance procedures. But what if you're a 15-person startup where the founder is also the de facto HR manager? Here's how to build a complaint process that works at your scale.
Designate a complaint handler. Even if you don't have a dedicated HR person, someone needs to own the process. In most small teams, this is the founder, COO, or operations lead. Make sure everyone knows who to go to.
Create multiple reporting channels. Not everyone is comfortable walking up to the founder's desk. Offer at least two ways to submit complaints — a digital form, an email alias (like hr@yourcompany.com), or even an anonymous option through a tool like Google Forms.
Set clear timelines. Employees need to know what to expect. A simple framework works:
- Acknowledgment: within 24 hours
- Initial assessment: within 3 business days
- Investigation complete: within 10 business days
- Resolution communicated: within 2 business days after investigation
Document your policy. Write it into your employee handbook. Include what types of complaints the process covers, who reviews them, confidentiality expectations, and anti-retaliation protections.
Train your managers. Even if managers don't handle investigations, they need to know how to receive a complaint. The three rules: listen without judgment, don't promise specific outcomes, and escalate to the designated handler immediately. SHRM's guide on complaint handling provides an excellent framework for training managers on investigation basics.

Common Mistakes When Handling Complaints
Even well-intentioned teams get complaint handling wrong. Here are the pitfalls to avoid:
Ignoring or minimizing the complaint. A 20-person agency received a complaint about a senior designer making inappropriate jokes. The founder dismissed it as "just his sense of humor." Three months later, two junior designers quit within the same week, citing a hostile work environment. Taking every complaint seriously — even ones that seem minor — is non-negotiable.
Retaliation (even unintentional). Retaliation doesn't always look like firing someone. It can be subtle: reducing someone's responsibilities, excluding them from meetings, or giving them less desirable projects. Federal law prohibits retaliation against employees who file complaints, and the EEOC considers retaliation the most commonly filed charge of discrimination.
Failing to document. If you didn't write it down, it didn't happen — at least from a legal perspective. Every step of the complaint process should be documented, from the initial form to the final resolution.
Delayed response. Waiting two weeks to acknowledge a complaint sends a clear message: we don't care. Speed matters. Even if the investigation takes time, prompt communication shows the employee their concern is a priority.
Breaching confidentiality. Complaints should be shared only with people who need to know — the investigator, relevant management, and potentially legal counsel. Discussing a complaint casually with other team members destroys trust and may expose you to liability.
No follow-up. Resolving the complaint and then never checking back is like treating a symptom without curing the disease. Schedule a follow-up conversation and look for systemic issues that need addressing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an employee file a complaint anonymously?
Yes, and it's a good practice to offer anonymous reporting as an option. Anonymous complaints can be harder to investigate since you can't follow up directly, but they still provide valuable signals about workplace issues. Consider using a simple anonymous form alongside your standard complaint process.
How long should we keep employee complaint records?
The EEOC recommends keeping personnel records, including complaint documentation, for at least one year from the date of the complaint. However, many employment attorneys recommend retaining records for three to seven years, especially for complaints involving harassment or discrimination.
What if the complaint is about the business owner or CEO?
This is common in small teams. Designate an independent third party — a board member, outside counsel, or a fractional HR consultant — to handle complaints against leadership. The key is that the person investigating should have no reporting relationship to the accused.
Should we use a different form for harassment vs. general complaints?
A single general-purpose form works well for most small teams. You can add a checkbox for the complaint type (harassment, safety, policy violation, etc.) to help with triage. Larger organizations sometimes use separate forms for harassment complaints to ensure they follow a specific investigation protocol.
What happens if an employee files a false complaint?
While rare, false complaints should be addressed in your complaint policy. Make clear that filing a complaint in good faith is always protected — even if the investigation doesn't substantiate the claim. Intentionally false or malicious complaints, however, may result in disciplinary action. Be very careful with this distinction to avoid discouraging legitimate reports.
Is a verbal complaint enough, or does it need to be in writing?
While verbal complaints should always be taken seriously, written complaints provide better documentation and clarity. If an employee reports an issue verbally, offer to help them fill out the formal complaint form. This ensures nothing gets lost in translation and creates a proper record for your files.
A solid employee complaint form is one of the simplest HR tools you can implement — and one of the most impactful. It shows your team that their concerns matter, protects your business legally, and helps you catch problems before they become crises.
If you're looking for a centralized place to manage employee documents, track team data, and build your HR processes, Tiny Team helps growing teams stay organized — free for teams up to 10 people, then a flat $79/month for teams up to 50.


