California employment law is complex and constantly evolving. For small business owners juggling operations, sales, and customer service, staying on top of employment compliance can feel overwhelming. Yet compliance isn't optional - mistakes can lead to wage claims, lawsuits, CRD investigations, and substantial penalties. This checklist breaks down the essential compliance requirements for California small businesses in 2026, giving you a practical roadmap to protect your business and your employees.
Foundation: Mandatory Employment Policies
Employee Handbook
Your handbook is the foundation of employment compliance. It should include:
- At-will employment statement: Clarify that employment is at-will (unless you've created an implied contract otherwise)
- Anti-discrimination policy: Clear statement that discrimination based on protected characteristics is prohibited
- Anti-harassment policy: Including sexual harassment, with reporting procedures
- Code of conduct: Expectations for employee behavior and professionalism
- Confidentiality and trade secrets: Protection of business information
- Social media policy: Guidelines for employee social media conduct
- Acknowledgment form: Employee signature confirming receipt and understanding of policies
Critical note: Avoid making promises about job security, specific termination procedures, or guaranteed employment. Such promises can create implied contracts.
Wage and Hour Policy
Your wage policy must clearly communicate:
- Pay frequency: How often and when employees are paid
- Overtime policy: California overtime rules (1.5x for 8+ hours/day, 2x for 12+ hours/day)
- Break policies: Meal and rest break entitlements and how they're handled
- Timekeeping requirements: How employees track time, punch in/out procedures
- Deduction limitations: What may and may not be deducted from wages (minimal deductions allowed in CA)
- Final paycheck procedures: How and when final paychecks are issued
Leave Policies
California law requires clear communication of:
- Paid sick leave: Accrual rate (at least 1 hour per 30 hours worked), eligible uses, carryover rules
- Vacation/PTO: If provided, accrual, usage, and payout upon termination rules
- FMLA/CFRA: Eligibility, covered reasons, notice requirements, job restoration obligations
- Pregnancy disability leave: Up to 4 months protection under California law
- Military leave: Protections for military service
- Jury duty and voting: Time off protections
- Bereavement leave: If provided by company policy
Workplace Safety and Violence Prevention
In 2026, workplace safety and violence prevention are critical compliance areas:
- Written violence prevention plan: Assessment of workplace violence risks and procedures
- Incident reporting: Clear procedures for reporting threats or concerning behavior
- Threat assessment: Documented process for evaluating reported threats
- Investigation procedures: How the company investigates safety complaints
- Emergency procedures: Clear instructions for emergency situations
- Employee notification: Process for notifying employees of potential threats
Mandatory Workplace Training
Harassment and Discrimination Training
California law (Assembly Bill 1825) requires:
- Who: All supervisors and managers (5+ employees)
- When: Within 6 months of hire, then every two years
- Duration: At least 1 hour for supervisors, 1 hour for non-supervisory employees
- Content: Discrimination, harassment (including sexual harassment), retaliation prevention
- Documentation: Keep attendance records and completion certificates
Workplace Violence Prevention Training
New 2026 requirements include:
- All employees: Training on identifying and reporting threats
- Timing: At hire and annually
- Content: Recognition of warning signs, reporting procedures, response protocols
- Documentation: Maintain records of training dates and attendance
Wage and Hour Training
Internal training for management on:
- California overtime rules (not federal rules)
- Meal and rest break requirements
- Minimum wage compliance
- Proper wage deductions
- Record-keeping requirements
Wage and Hour Compliance
Minimum Wage
- 2026 rate: $16.90/hour (or higher in some regions like San Francisco)
- Verify: Check if your location has local minimum wage ordinances requiring higher pay
- Verify annually: Minimum wage increases each January; update payroll systems
- For tipped employees: Even tipped employees must receive California minimum wage
- Youth exceptions: Limited exceptions for workers under 20 (very restricted)
Overtime Compensation
- Calculate correctly: 1.5x for 8+ hours/day, 2x for 12+ hours/day, 1.5x for 7th consecutive day
- Include all compensation: Overtime must be calculated on actual earned wages, not just base hourly rate
- No averaging: California doesn't allow weekly averaging of overtime hours
- Exempt classification: Misclassifying employees as exempt to avoid overtime is a common violation; use the ABC test and ensure legitimate exemptions
- Tracking: Maintain accurate time records showing hours worked daily
Meal and Rest Breaks
- Meal breaks: 30-minute unpaid break for 5+ hour shifts; second break for 10+ hours
- Rest breaks: 10-minute paid break for every 4 hours worked
- Ensure actual breaks: Breaks must be free from work; monitoring during breaks can violate law
- Compensation: If breaks are missed or interrupted, pay one hour's wages at regular rate per missed break
- Track carefully: Maintain records showing break times
Wage Statements
- Frequency: Issued with each paycheck
- Content: Hours worked, rate of pay, gross wages, deductions, net pay, all required
- Clarity: Must be understandable and show all deductions clearly
- Itemization: Multiple rates and periods must be clearly itemized
- Violations: Wage statement violations carry $50-$200 penalties per employee per pay period under PAGA
Final Paychecks
- Timing: All wages due at or before termination; full amount due immediately (not waiting for next pay period)
- Include accrued vacation: Unused vacation must be paid out (in CA, vacation is generally earned wages)
- Method: Must provide final paycheck in person or mail with next regular paycheck
- Penalties: Violations trigger waiting time penalties (continued wages until paid)
Leave Law Compliance
Paid Sick Leave (California Minimum)
- Accrual: At least 1 hour per 30 hours worked (or front-load 5 days/40 hours annually)
- Uses: Illness, preventive care, bereavement, victim services, domestic violence/harassment/sexual assault
- Carryover: Employees can carry over up to 5 days (or 40 hours) year to year
- Payout: Upon termination, must pay out all accrued unused sick leave at regular rate
- Notification: Clearly communicate accrual policy to employees
FMLA and CFRA Administration
- Policy: Provide written notice of FMLA/CFRA rights to all employees
- Tracking: Maintain records of leave taken and remaining entitlements
- Job restoration: Upon return from leave, restore to same or equivalent position
- Benefits continuation: Maintain health insurance during leave period
- Certification: Can require medical certification but must follow USDOL/CRD guidelines
Discrimination and Harassment Prevention
Anti-Discrimination Compliance
- Protected characteristics: Ensure no decisions based on race, color, religion, sex, gender identity, national origin, age, disability, genetic info, sexual orientation, military status
- Policy enforcement: Actively enforce anti-discrimination policies
- Investigation: Promptly investigate any discrimination complaints
- Documentation: Keep detailed records of investigations and corrective actions
- Training: Ensure all managers understand what constitutes discrimination
Sexual Harassment Prevention
- Training: Annual training for supervisors and employees (2026 strengthened requirements)
- Clear reporting mechanism: Multiple ways to report (HR, management, hotline if applicable)
- Investigation procedures: Documented process for investigating complaints
- Documentation: Keep records of all complaints and investigations
- Corrective action: Take immediate action to stop harassment
- No retaliation: Protect employees who report harassment
Record Keeping and Documentation
Personnel Records
- Retention: Keep for 3 years (statute of limitations for wage claims)
- Content: Application materials, performance reviews, discipline records, training documentation
- Access: Employees can request to review their personnel files
- Organization: Maintain organized, retrievable records
Time and Wage Records
- Accuracy: Maintain accurate daily records of hours worked
- Duration: Keep for at least 3 years
- Detail: Show actual hours worked, breaks taken, overtime hours
- Verification: Reconcile timekeeping records with payroll regularly
- Employee access: Employees have right to inspect wage records
Compliance Audit Trail
- Training records: Document all mandatory training dates and attendance
- Policy acknowledgments: Keep signed copies of employee handbook acknowledgments
- Leave tracking: Document all leave requests, approvals, and usage
- Complaints and investigations: Detailed documentation of any complaints and how they were handled
Using Compliance Tools: Wiser Workplace's Compliance Checker
Staying Current
Employment law changes annually. Rather than managing changes manually, consider using tools designed for compliance management:
- Regular audits: Use Wiser's compliance checker to audit your current policies and procedures
- Policy templates: Access updated policy templates reflecting 2026 changes
- Checklists: Use provided checklists to ensure all compliance areas are covered
- Training tracking: Document and track mandatory training completion dates
- Documentation assistance: Tools to help maintain required documentation systematically
Key Compliance Timeline for 2026
- January 1: Verify minimum wage rates; update payroll systems
- Ongoing: Conduct harassment training for supervisors (within 6 months of hire, then every 2 years)
- Ongoing: Annual violence prevention and safety training for all employees
- Annually: Review and update employment policies for law changes
- Ongoing: Document leave usage and maintain accurate time/wage records
- Ongoing: Investigate any discrimination or harassment complaints promptly
Key Takeaways for Small Business Compliance
California employment law compliance doesn't have to be overwhelming. By implementing the foundational elements - clear policies, proper training, accurate wage and hour tracking, and responsive complaint procedures - you protect both your employees and your business.
The cost of compliance is far lower than the cost of lawsuits. A single wage claim involving unpaid overtime can easily exceed $50,000 to $200,000+ in PAGA penalties once you add all affected employees. A sexual harassment claim can exceed $100,000 in damages and attorney fees. Investing in proper compliance systems upfront prevents these catastrophic outcomes.
Use the checklist above as your starting point. Review your current policies against these requirements. Update what needs updating. Train your team. Document everything. And consider using compliance tools and professional resources when you need guidance on new or evolving requirements.