..
Again, it makes no difference. Your employment can be terminated within 12 months anyway - even if you completed a six-month probationary period.
However, if may also interest you to know that if you were pregnant, your company would find it very difficult to terminate your employment - even within the initial 12 month period. If you were to claim that the termination was related to your being pregnant (and there would be a huge onus on them to prove otherwise), you wouldn't need to have accumulated 12 months' service to avail of the relevant protection.
The attached extract from ETE's site refers.
"How long do I have to be employed to be able to take a case for Unfair Dismissal?
The Acts apply to employees who (with certain exceptions, see below) have had at least a year's continuous service with the same employer.
-the employees trade union membership or activities, either outside working hours or at those times during working hours when permitted by the employer,
-the employee's pregnancy, giving birth or breastfeeding or any matters connected therewith,
-the exercise or proposed exercise by an employee of the right to any form of protective leave or natal care absence under the Maternity Protection Act 1994,
-the exercise or proposed exercise by an employee of -the right to adoptive leave or additional adoptive leave under the Adoptive Leave Act 1995,
-the exercise or proposed exercise by the employee of the right to parental leave or force majeure leave under the Parental Leave Act 1998,
-the employee's rights or proposed exercise of rights under the National Minimum Wage Act 2000.
-the exercise or proposed exercise by the employee of the right to carer's leave under and in accordance with the Carers Leave Act 2001.
Employees claiming dismissal due to the above grounds may bring an unfair dismissal claim even though they do not have a year's continuous service with their employer."
www.entemp.ie/employment/...#dismissal