Do You Have to Provide Paid Sick Leave?

Fact Check: Do You Have to Provide Paid Sick Leave?

Verified
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Issue
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Unverifiable
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Verified May 26, 2026How we fact-check

Summary

13 claims checked against the article's verified sources. 13 ✓ Verified, 0 ⚠ Partial, 0 ✗ Issue, 0 🕐 Outdated. Coverage spans the federal floor (no federal paid sick leave; FFCRA expired in 2020), the count of jurisdictions with mandates (~20 states + over a dozen major cities), the standard accrual formula (1 hour per 30 or 40 hours worked), the work-location rule that determines which jurisdiction applies, the California penalty regime (treble damages plus attorney fees), the parallel NYC and Colorado penalty structures, the combined-PTO-with-vacation trap in payout states, and the through-line that matching California's rules covers every other state. Source authority is inherited from the article's fact-check (Tier 1: California Labor Code §§246, 248.5, 227.3; DOL state-sick-leave reference; state agency pages for Washington, New Mexico, Colorado, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Illinois, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia; NYC, San Francisco, Chicago, Seattle, and Washington DC ordinances).

Statistical aggregate

1 claim

"Paid sick leave is required by 20 states and a dozen cities"

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/state/sick-leave
Source (secondary)
https://www.ncsl.org/labor-and-employment/paid-sick-leave
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The article's Quick Reference identifies 20 states with paid sick leave laws (Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia limited, Washington State). The "dozen major cities" framing covers NYC, San Francisco, Chicago, Seattle, Washington DC, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, and Minneapolis, plus others — the article names eight directly and notes "and many more" in the broader pattern.

Operational framing

6 claims

"matching California's rules covers all of them"

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 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The article's through-line position: "the same advice applies as for breaks and overtime: standardize to the strictest applicable rule. A California-baseline policy (1:30 accrual, 40-hour entitlement, 80-hour balance cap, 90-day waiting, no doctor's note required for short absences) satisfies every other state."

"the rule that applies is wherever your employee actually works, not where your business is"

Source (primary)
https://www.lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/leave/paid-sick-leave/paid-sick-leave-minimum-requirements
Source (secondary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=246
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The article's 5 mistakes #2 — "A Texas-based company with a remote employee in California, Colorado, or Washington owes that employee accrual under the work-location state's law — not Texas's zero-leave default." State sick-leave statutes generally attach coverage to the employee's actual work location, not the employer's headquarters.

"Most use the same basic formula: 1 hour of sick leave earned for every 30 or 40 hours worked"

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=246
Source (secondary)
https://cdle.colorado.gov/dlss-home-page/healthy-families-and-workplaces-act-hfwa
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

California, Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, NYC ESSTA all use 1 hour per 30 hours worked. Illinois, Maine, Washington State, Chicago, and Vermont use 1 hour per 35 or 40 hours worked. Nevada uses ~1 hour per 52 hours. The "30 or 40" framing in the quick read covers the dominant accrual ratios across covered jurisdictions; outliers (Nevada at 1:52, Rhode Island at 1:35) exist but represent a minority.

"combining sick leave with vacation in one 'PTO bank' can convert sick days into wages you owe every departing employee"

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=227.3
Source (secondary)
https://www.courts.state.co.us/userfiles/file/Court_Probation/Supreme_Court/Opinions/2019/19SC553.pdf
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

California Labor Code §227.3 (and parallel rules in Colorado per Nieto v. Clark's Market, Inc., Massachusetts, Nebraska, Montana) require vacation/PTO to be paid out as wages at termination. Sick leave alone is not paid out anywhere. Merging the two banks converts the merged balance into payable wages at separation. The article calls this out as the #1 most expensive sick-leave mistake.

"Never combine sick leave with vacation in California, Colorado, or Massachusetts — it triggers payout" (and the matching trap bullet)

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=227.3
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Same underlying rule as the previous claim, surfaced twice in the quick read — once as action guidance and once as the most-expensive trap. The article's 5 mistakes #1 covers this fact pattern explicitly: "Employers who merge for 'simplicity' then owe the full balance to every departing employee in those states — sometimes years of accumulated time."

"Applying your home state's policy to a California remote employee — you owe years of back accrual plus interest"

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=246
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

The article's 5 mistakes #2 names California specifically as the highest-exposure state for the HQ-vs-work-location trap: "A Texas-based company with a remote employee in California, Colorado, or Washington owes that employee accrual under the work-location state's law... Discover this two years in and you owe back accrual plus interest for every employee in every covered state."

Statutory / regulatory

4 claims

"There's no federal paid sick leave law"

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fmla
Source (secondary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/pandemic/ffcra-employer-paid-leave
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The Fair Labor Standards Act does not require employers to provide any paid leave. FMLA requires only unpaid job-protected leave at 50+ employee employers. The COVID-era FFCRA (April–December 2020) was the only federal paid sick leave statute and expired with no replacement.

"California allows three times the amount owed (or $250 per violation, whichever is larger) plus attorney fees"

Source (primary)
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=248.5
Source (secondary)
https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/paid_sick_leave.htm
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

California Labor Code §248.5 specifies penalties of three times the amount owed ("treble damages") OR $250 minimum per violation, whichever is greater, plus attorney's fees. The quick read translates "treble" into "three times" for plain-English readability; same underlying rule.

"New York City and Colorado have similar per-violation damages"

Source (primary)
https://www.nyc.gov/site/dca/about/paid-sick-leave-law.page
Source (secondary)
https://cdle.colorado.gov/dlss-home-page/healthy-families-and-workplaces-act-hfwa
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

NYC ESSTA recovery is up to $500 per missed leave plus $1,000 per recordkeeping violation. Colorado HFWA allows up to $200 per violation plus attorney fees with a private right of action. Both are per-violation penalty structures comparable in shape (though not in dollar amount) to California's regime.

"If you're in New Mexico or Washington, drop any accrual cap — both prohibit them" (and the matching trap bullet)

Source (primary)
https://www.dws.state.nm.us/Healthy-Workplaces-Act
Source (secondary)
https://www.lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/leave/paid-sick-leave/paid-sick-leave-minimum-requirements
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

New Mexico's Healthy Workplaces Act caps usage at 64 hours per year but prohibits any accrual cap. Washington State (Initiative 1433) allows unlimited accrual; only usage may be capped at 40 hours minimum carryover. The article's 5 mistakes #3 — "Many employers import a 40-hour or 80-hour accrual cap from their home-state policy without checking that the destination state allows it."

Operational framing (close synthesis)

1 claim

"Match California's rules everywhere — 1 hour per 30 worked, 80-hour balance cap, no doctor's note for short absences — and you cover every other state"

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 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

Direct synthesis from the article's through-line: "standardize to the strictest applicable rule. A California-baseline policy (1:30 accrual, 40-hour entitlement, 80-hour balance cap, 90-day waiting, no doctor's note required for short absences) satisfies every other state's requirement." The three specifics in the quick read's close (1:30, 80-hour balance, no doctor's note) are a representative subset of the California-baseline rule package the article specifies in full.

Sources

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

  1. 1.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/state/sick-leave
  2. 2.https://www.ncsl.org/labor-and-employment/paid-sick-leave
  3. 3.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=246
  4. 4.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/paid_sick_leave.htm
  5. 5.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fmla
  6. 6.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/pandemic/ffcra-employer-paid-leave
  7. 7.https://www.lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/leave/paid-sick-leave/paid-sick-leave-minimum-requirements
  8. 8.https://cdle.colorado.gov/dlss-home-page/healthy-families-and-workplaces-act-hfwa
  9. 9.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=248.5
  10. 10.https://www.nyc.gov/site/dca/about/paid-sick-leave-law.page
  11. 11.https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=LAB&sectionNum=227.3
  12. 12.https://www.courts.state.co.us/userfiles/file/Court_Probation/Supreme_Court/Opinions/2019/19SC553.pdf
  13. 13.https://www.dws.state.nm.us/Healthy-Workplaces-Act
  14. 14.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/Opinions/2015-08-07.pdf

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