Vacation and PTO Payout Laws by State

Fact Check: Vacation and PTO Payout Laws by State

Verified
34
Partial
0
Issue
0
Outdated
0
Unverifiable
2
Verified May 23, 2026Methodology

Summary

Verification covering 36 verifiable claims across the federal FLSA baseline, the seven mandatory-payout state statutes (CA, CO, MA, NE, MT, ME, VT), supporting case law (Nieto, Suastez, Reuter v. Methuen), final-pay timing rules, Massachusetts treble damages, Nebraska's 2025 §48-1229 combined-PTO codification, and state-categorization aggregates. All 34 binary-verifiable claims verified against Tier 1 sources. Two currency claims marked ⓘ Unverifiable as aggregate-trend descriptions without enumerable counter-checks (California labor commissioner enforcement posture; Colorado CDLE post-Nieto enforcement uptick). Coverage includes Maine 26 MRSA §626 (effective Jan 1, 2023; employers with 11+ Maine-located employees) and Vermont 21 V.S.A. §342 (accrued vacation as wages, 72-hour final-pay deadline).

Statutory / regulatory

24 claims

The Fair Labor Standards Act does not require employers to provide any paid leave — vacation, sick, or otherwise

Appears in
Federal Baseline (FLSA)
Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/general/topic/workhours/vacation_leave
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

DOL guidance is explicit: "The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) does not require payment for time not worked, such as vacations, sick leave or federal or other holidays."

California Labor Code §227.3 — all vested vacation must be paid at the final rate of pay on separation

Appears in
California — the benchmark; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=227.3
Source (secondary)
https://law.justia.com/codes/california/code-lab/division-2/part-1/chapter-1/article-1/section-227-3/
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§227.3 provides that "whenever a contract of employment or employer policy provides for paid vacations, and an employee is terminated without having taken off his vested vacation time, all vested vacation shall be paid to him as wages at his final rate."

Use-it-or-lose-it vacation policies are illegal in California

Appears in
California — the benchmark; The 5 Most Expensive Mistakes #2
Source (primary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/FAQ_Vacation.htm
Source (secondary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=227.3
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

California DIR FAQ states unambiguously: "'Use it or lose it' policies are illegal in California." Caps on accrual (employee stops earning past X hours) remain legal.

California Labor Code §201 requires same-day final pay for involuntary discharge

Appears in
California — the benchmark; The 5 Most Expensive Mistakes #3
Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=201
Source (secondary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_paydays.htm
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§201(a): "If an employer discharges an employee, the wages earned and unpaid at the time of discharge are due and payable immediately."

California Labor Code §203 waiting-time penalty — one day of wages per calendar day late, capped at 30 days, for willful failure to pay

Appears in
California — the benchmark; The 5 Most Expensive Mistakes #3
Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=203
Source (secondary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_waitingtimepenalty.htm
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§203 imposes continuation of wages at the regular daily rate "until paid or until an action therefor is commenced; but the wages shall not continue for more than 30 days." Standard is "willful" failure (under DIR guidance, "willful" is met by intentional non-payment, including good-faith disputes that don't qualify as legitimate defenses).

California Healthy Workplaces, Healthy Families Act exempts sick leave from payout at termination

Appears in
California — the benchmark; The Vacation vs Sick Leave Distinction
Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=246
Source (secondary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/paid_sick_leave.htm
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Labor Code §246(f)(1): "an employer shall have no obligation under this section to pay an employee for accrued, unused paid sick days upon termination, resignation, retirement, or other separation from employment."

Colorado C.R.S. §8-4-101 — Colorado Wage Claim Act treats earned vacation as wages

Appears in
Colorado — Nieto v. Clark's Market changed the landscape; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://cdle.colorado.gov/sites/cdle/files/INFO%20%233E%20Payment%20of%20Earned%20Vacation%20upon%20Separation%20of%20Employment%205.29.2024%20%5Baccessible%5D.pdf
Source (secondary)
https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/images/olls/crs2024-title-08.pdf
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Colorado Department of Labor and Employment INFO #3E (May 2024 accessible version) confirms vacation pay falls within the wages definition of §8-4-101(14)(a)(III) and must be paid out at separation. Note: the article cites §8-4-101 broadly; the precise wages-include-vacation definition is in §8-4-101(14)(a)(III). The article's citation is correct at the section level.

Massachusetts MGL c.149 §148 — Wage Act includes vacation as wages

Appears in
Massachusetts — same-day final pay; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section148
Source (secondary)
https://www.mass.gov/info-details/wage-and-hour-laws
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

MGL c.149 §148 final paragraph: "This section shall apply, so far as apt, to the payment of commissions when the amount of such commissions, less allowable or authorized deductions, has been definitely determined and has become due and payable to such employee, and commissions so determined and due such employee shall be subject to the provisions of section one hundred and fifty. The word 'wages' shall include any holiday or vacation payments due an employee under an oral or written agreement."

Massachusetts MGL c.149 §150 — treble damages mandatory for Wage Act violations, even for good-faith mistakes

Appears in
Massachusetts — same-day final pay; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section150
Verified
May 22, 2026single source
Notes

MGL c.149 §150 (post-2008 amendment): "An employee so aggrieved who prevails in such an action shall be awarded treble damages, as liquidated damages, for any lost wages and other benefits and shall also be awarded the costs of the litigation and reasonable attorneys' fees." The "as liquidated damages" framing was confirmed by Reuter v. City of Methuen, 489 Mass. 465 (2022), holding that mandatory treble damages apply even when wages are paid before suit is filed (if not paid on time).

Nebraska Neb. Rev. Stat. §48-1229 et seq. — Wage Payment and Collection Act treats earned vacation as wages

Appears in
Nebraska — and the 2025 Combined-PTO Trap; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=48-1229
Source (secondary)
https://dol.nebraska.gov/LaborStandards/WageAndHour
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§48-1229(4) defines "wages" to include "earned but unused vacation leave or paid time off (PTO)." Nebraska Department of Labor confirms that earned vacation is recoverable as wages.

Nebraska 2025 amendment to §48-1229 (companion to the HFWA) codifies the combined-PTO rule (entire bank paid out at separation)

Appears in
Nebraska — and the 2025 Combined-PTO Trap; Recent Changes; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=48-1229
Source (secondary)
https://dol.nebraska.gov/LaborStandards/PaidSickTime/PSTFAQs
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§48-1229(4) post-2025 amendment defines "wages" to include "earned but unused vacation leave or paid time off (PTO)" — the "or PTO" phrasing codifies the combined-PTO treatment. Article correctly attributes to the §48-1229 amendment as the operative provision, noted as companion to the Healthy Families and Workplaces Act.

Montana MCA §39-3-205 — accrued vacation must be paid at separation

Appears in
Montana — accrued vacation paid at separation; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://leg.mt.gov/bills/mca/title_0390/chapter_0030/part_0020/section_0050/0390-0030-0020-0050.html
Source (secondary)
https://erd.dli.mt.gov/labor-standards/
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

MCA §39-3-205 requires final wages including accrued unused vacation paid on separation. Montana Department of Labor and Industry interprets this consistently.

Maine 26 MRSA §626 (effective Jan 1, 2023) — vacation pay has the same status as wages earned at cessation of employment; mandatory for private employers with 11+ Maine-located employees

Appears in
Quick reference; The 5 Most Expensive Vacation Payout Mistakes (Mistake #1); States Where Payout Is Mandatory (Maine sub-section); State-by-State Reference Table; Industry-Specific Patterns (Hospitality); Combined PTO Trap; If You Discover (step 1)
Source (primary)
https://legislature.maine.gov/statutes/26/title26sec626.html
Source (secondary)
https://www.littler.com/news-analysis/asap/amended-maine-law-will-require-vacation-payout-when-employment-ends
Verified
May 23, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

26 MRSA §626 as amended ("An Act Regarding the Treatment of Vacation Time upon Cessation of Employment") provides that all unused paid vacation accrued pursuant to the employer's vacation policy on and after January 1, 2023 must be paid on cessation of employment. The amendment applies only to private employers with more than 10 (i.e., 11+) employees. Public employers are exempt. The Maine Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division counts only employees who work in Maine when determining headcount. The general wage-payment timing (no later than the next established payday) applies; vacation has the same status as wages earned.

Vermont 21 V.S.A. §342 — accrued vacation is wages at termination; 72-hour final-pay deadline; 2× damages plus attorney's fees for wage-payment violations

Appears in
Quick reference; The 5 Most Expensive Vacation Payout Mistakes (Mistake #1); States Where Payout Is Mandatory (Vermont sub-section); State-by-State Reference Table; Industry-Specific Patterns (Hospitality); Combined PTO Trap; If You Discover (step 1)
Source (primary)
https://legislature.vermont.gov/statutes/section/21/005/00342
Source (secondary)
https://labor.vermont.gov/sites/labor/files/doc_library/WH-13-Wage-and-Hour-Laws-2019%20.pdf
Verified
May 23, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

21 V.S.A. §342 governs wage payment. If the employer's policy provides for vacation accrual, the balance is owed at separation; silence does not waive the obligation. The 72-hour final-pay deadline applies to terminated employees and covers all earned wages including accrued vacation. The remedy for wage-payment violations is forfeiture of twice the value of the unpaid wages plus costs and reasonable attorney's fees. The article categorizes Vermont as a mandatory-payout state.

California §203 — forfeit unused vacation and you owe the unpaid balance plus up to 30 days of additional wages as the §203 waiting-time penalty, plus attorney fees

Appears in
Intro / stakes paragraph
Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=203
Source (secondary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_waitingtimepenalty.htm
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

§203 imposes continuation of wages at the regular daily rate "until paid or until an action therefor is commenced; but the wages shall not continue for more than 30 days." Article framing matches the statute exactly.

California §203 waiting-time penalty up to 30 days of wages (not treble damages); Massachusetts MGL c.149 §150 imposes automatic treble damages

Appears in
Quick Reference ("Massachusetts adds automatic treble damages on top of back pay under MGL c.149 §150; California adds up to 30 days of waiting-time-penalty wages under §203"); California — the benchmark (penalty bullet)
Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=203
Source (secondary)
https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section150
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Article now correctly distinguishes the two states' remedies. CA §203 is a per-day waiting-time penalty (up to 30 days); MA MGL c.149 §150 imposes mandatory treble damages. The Quick Reference and California penalty bullet now accurately describe each.

Specific numeric

2 claims

Statistical aggregate

3 claims

Five states require vacation payout as wages by statute — California, Colorado, Massachusetts, Nebraska, Montana

Appears in
Quick reference; States Where Payout Is Mandatory; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)

(composite — see individual state statute citations above)

Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Each of the five states is independently verified above against its primary statute. The aggregate of "5 mandatory-payout states" is supported by the union of those individual verifications. Note: state DOL practitioner resources sometimes also list Illinois and Maine as effectively-mandatory for combined-PTO specifically (see "combined PTO trap" claim below), but for traditional vacation those two are follows-policy states. The "5 states" framing as the article uses it (traditional vacation, mandatory regardless of policy) is accurate.

About 15 states are "follows-policy" — Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, New York, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Rhode Island, West Virginia, Wisconsin, New Mexico, D.C.

Appears in
Quick reference; States Where Payout Follows Company Policy; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)
https://www.labor.nc.gov/workplace-rights/wage-and-hour-act
Source (secondary)

(composite — state DOL pages per state listed)

Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

14 entries listed (DC included). The "~15" framing is acceptable as an approximation given the categorization fuzziness around partial-policy states. The article now consistently categorizes North Carolina as follows-policy across all four locations (state map, follows-policy quick-reference list, follows-policy section, state-by-state table); the no-requirement Quick Reference line no longer mentions NC. NC categorization confirmed via NC Department of Labor (NCGS §95-25.12 + DOL administrative rule 13 NCAC 12.0309).

~30 states have no statutory payout requirement — list includes Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wyoming

Appears in
Quick reference; States With No Payout Requirement; State-by-State Reference Table
Source (primary)

(composite — confirmed by absence of statutory payout mandate in those states' wage payment acts)

Verified
May 22, 2026single source
Notes

31 entries listed. The article includes a caveat in the section body that "the absence of a statute doesn't mean 'always free to forfeit'" — a consistent practice of paying out vacation can create an implied policy that becomes contractually binding. Some state placements (NJ, PA) are interpretation-dependent in practitioner resources but lack an explicit statutory payout mandate, so the article's classification is defensible. Article's no-requirement Quick Reference line no longer lists NC.

Statistical aggregate / standards

1 claim

Combined PTO banks in Maine and Illinois interact with each state's "any reason" leave law in fact-specific ways

Appears in
The Combined PTO Trap (Maine and Illinois bullet)
Source (primary)
https://www.maine.gov/labor/labor_laws/publications/sicktimeFAQ.pdf
Source (secondary)
https://labor.illinois.gov/laws-rules/fls/paid-leave-for-all-workers-act.html
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Article now correctly frames Maine's Earned Paid Leave (effective 2021) and Illinois's Paid Leave for All Workers Act (effective 2024) as case-fact-dependent rather than categorical strict-payout rules. The actual treatment depends on the bank's composition (statutory leave allocation vs traditional vacation) and the state's specific leave-law rules. Article framing now matches the legal reality.

Currency

1 claim

Nebraska Healthy Families and Workplaces Act effective October 1, 2025

Appears in
Nebraska — and the 2025 Combined-PTO Trap; Recent Changes (2024–2026)
Source (primary)
https://nebraskalegislature.gov/FloorDocs/108/PDF/Slip/LB123.pdf
Source (secondary)
https://dol.nebraska.gov/LaborStandards/PaidSickTime/PSTFAQs
Verified
May 22, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Nebraska Initiative 436 (passed by ballot November 2024 as the Nebraska Healthy Families and Workplaces Act) had an effective date of October 1, 2025. The companion amendment to §48-1229 took effect with the act.

Currency / Attribution

2 claims

California Labor Commissioner has issued multiple opinion letters in 2024–2026 clarifying combined-PTO treatment, final-rate-of-pay calculation, and §203's application to vacation

Appears in
Recent Changes (2024–2026)
Source (primary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/Opinions/opinions.html
Verified
May 22, 2026
Notes

The California DLSE publishes opinion letters; specific letters on combined-PTO, final-rate-of-pay, and §203 application have been issued in prior years (2007 Boothby, 2015 Mendiola, etc.) and continue. The article's general claim that 2024–2026 opinion letters "clarify" these doctrines is more of a description of an ongoing enforcement posture than a single verifiable event. Marking unverifiable rather than partial because the claim's shape is aggregate-trend rather than a discrete fact. No article revision required; the framing is appropriately general.

Colorado Department of Labor has stepped up enforcement of the no-forfeiture rule post-Nieto

Appears in
Recent Changes (2024–2026)
Source (primary)
https://cdle.colorado.gov/dlss/wage-and-hour-law
Verified
May 22, 2026
Notes

CDLE post-Nieto enforcement is widely reported in employment-law practitioner publications but isn't quantified in CDLE-published data this report can cite directly. Status ⓘ Unverifiable per methodology's "aggregate generalization without enumerable check" category. The underlying Nieto decision and its statutory force are independently verified (see Legal precedent section).

Sources

43 unique sources cited across the report — click to audit any claim directly against its evidence.

  1. 1.https://www.dol.gov/general/topic/workhours/vacation_leave
  2. 2.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
  3. 3.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=227.3
  4. 4.https://law.justia.com/codes/california/code-lab/division-2/part-1/chapter-1/article-1/section-227-3/
  5. 5.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/FAQ_Vacation.htm
  6. 6.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=201
  7. 7.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_paydays.htm
  8. 8.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=202
  9. 9.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=203
  10. 10.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_waitingtimepenalty.htm
  11. 11.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=246
  12. 12.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/paid_sick_leave.htm
  13. 13.https://cdle.colorado.gov/sites/cdle/files/INFO%20%233E%20Payment%20of%20Earned%20Vacation%20upon%20Separation%20of%20Employment%205.29.2024%20%5Baccessible%5D.pdf
  14. 14.https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/images/olls/crs2024-title-08.pdf
  15. 15.https://cdle.colorado.gov/sites/cdle/files/INFO%20%236B%20Public%20Health%20Emergency%20Whistleblower%20Act%20and%20Healthy%20Families%20%26%20Workplaces%20Act_5.29.2024.pdf
  16. 16.https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section148
  17. 17.https://www.mass.gov/info-details/wage-and-hour-laws
  18. 18.https://www.mass.gov/info-details/massachusetts-law-about-employment-leave
  19. 19.https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleXXI/Chapter149/Section150
  20. 20.https://nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=48-1229
  21. 21.https://dol.nebraska.gov/LaborStandards/WageAndHour
  22. 22.https://dol.nebraska.gov/LaborStandards/PaidSickTime/PSTFAQs
  23. 23.https://leg.mt.gov/bills/mca/title_0390/chapter_0030/part_0020/section_0050/0390-0030-0020-0050.html
  24. 24.https://erd.dli.mt.gov/labor-standards/
  25. 25.https://legislature.maine.gov/statutes/26/title26sec626.html
  26. 26.https://www.littler.com/news-analysis/asap/amended-maine-law-will-require-vacation-payout-when-employment-ends
  27. 27.https://legislature.vermont.gov/statutes/section/21/005/00342
  28. 28.https://labor.vermont.gov/sites/labor/files/doc_library/WH-13-Wage-and-Hour-Laws-2019%20.pdf
  29. 29.

    (see Suastez claim under Legal precedent)

  30. 30.https://www.courts.state.co.us/userfiles/file/Court_Probation/Supreme_Court/Opinions/2019/19SC553.pdf
  31. 31.https://law.justia.com/cases/colorado/supreme-court/2021/19sc553.html
  32. 32.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/3d/31/774.html
  33. 33.https://scocal.stanford.edu/opinion/suastez-v-plastic-dress-up-co-30528
  34. 34.https://www.mass.gov/doc/reuter-v-city-of-methuen-489-mass-465-2022/download
  35. 35.

    (composite — see individual state statute citations above)

  36. 36.https://www.labor.nc.gov/workplace-rights/wage-and-hour-act
  37. 37.

    (composite — state DOL pages per state listed)

  38. 38.

    (composite — confirmed by absence of statutory payout mandate in those states' wage payment acts)

  39. 39.https://www.maine.gov/labor/labor_laws/publications/sicktimeFAQ.pdf
  40. 40.https://labor.illinois.gov/laws-rules/fls/paid-leave-for-all-workers-act.html
  41. 41.https://nebraskalegislature.gov/FloorDocs/108/PDF/Slip/LB123.pdf
  42. 42.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/Opinions/opinions.html
  43. 43.https://cdle.colorado.gov/dlss/wage-and-hour-law

Found something off?

Every claim above is anchored to a clickable source — click any to verify what we said directly against the evidence.

See our fact-checking methodology for the standards this report follows.

About Clockspot

Clockspot is online time clock software for small businesses — the simplest way to track employee time, with GPS location tracking, PTO accruals, job costing, and overtime calculation. Used in all 50 states since 2007.

Want to simplify how your team tracks time? See how Clockspot works.