AUSTRALIA | P'Nut Street Noodles Chain workers across Australia have been underpaid, according to the Fair Work Ombudsman.
The Fair Work Ombudsman has commenced legal action alleging workers in the P’Nut Street Noodles chain in Sydney, Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast were underpaid almost AUD 1 million.
Facing the Federal Circuit and Family Court are Sabcha Pty Ltd, which employed staff to work across 11 P’Nut Street Noodles restaurants, and one of the company’s managers and directors, Ankur Sehgal.
The Fair Work Ombudsman alleges Sabcha Pty Ltd underpaid 118 workers a total of AUD 976,463. Alleged individual underpayments range from AUD 70 to as much as AUD 79,000.
The large majority of the allegedly underpaid staff were migrant workers who were in Australia at the time on sponsored work, student and other visas from countries including Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, India and Indonesia.
They worked as cooks, front-of-house service staff, kitchen hands and in other roles.
Fair Work Inspectors discovered the alleged underpayments when they conducted surprise audits after a number of underpayment allegations were made through the Fair Work Ombudsman’s anonymous report tool.
It is alleged that the primary cause of the underpayments was Sabcha paying staff unlawfully low flat rates, resulting in underpayment of minimum wage, penalty and overtime rates. A split-shift allowance and leave entitlements were allegedly also underpaid.
The Fair Work Ombudsman alleges Sabcha also breached record-keeping and pay slip obligations under the Fair Work Act, including by providing false or misleading time-and-wages records and pay slips to inspectors.
It is alleged that some of the breaches by Sabcha, relating to providing false and misleading information to the FWO and underpayment of annual leave entitlements, are serious contraventions under the Protecting Vulnerable Workers laws because they were committed knowingly and systematically.
Serious contraventions attract a tenfold increase in available maximum penalties.
It is alleged that Sehgal was involved in the underpayment of leave entitlements and all pay slip and record-keeping breaches.
Underpayments allegedly occurred between April 2019 and May 2021. The large majority, AUD 632,592, related to employees in Sydney, where seven of the stores were located. The four Queensland stores had alleged combined underpayments of AUD 343,871.
Fair Work Ombudsman Anna Booth said allegedly underpaying vulnerable migrant workers and knowingly or recklessly providing false records to the FWO was completely unacceptable conduct.
“We are committed to using all powers at our disposal to protect vulnerable workers in this country, and to ensure that employers who deliberately or systematically breach the law face significant consequences,” Booth said.
“The alleged scale of underpayment across the P’Nut Street Noodles chain was concerning. Record-keeping is a bedrock obligation for any employer. We allege Sabcha failed to provide both its employees and our inspectors the accurate pay slips the law demands, instead providing false or misleading records.”
She added that employers should be aware that taking action to protect migrant workers and improve compliance in the fast food, restaurants and cafés sector are priorities for the FWO.
“Any employees with concerns about their pay or entitlements should contact us for free advice and assistance.”
The FWO is seeking penalties in court. For the alleged serious contraventions, Sabcha Pty Ltd faces penalties of up to AUD 666,000 per breach.
For the other alleged contraventions, Sabcha Pty Ltd faces penalties of up to AUD 66,600 per breach and Sehgal faces penalties of up to AUD 13,320 per breach.
The regulator is also seeking an order requiring Sabcha Pty Ltd to back-pay all workers in full, plus interest and superannuation.
A directions hearing is listed in the Federal Circuit and Family Court in Sydney on 28 April 2025.
The Fair Work Ombudsman filed 146 litigations against employers involving visa holder workers, and secured nearly AUD 23 million in penalties in cases that have included visa holder workers, in the seven financial years to June 2024.
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