Family and Medical Leave (FMLA)
About this article
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from primary statutes (U.S. Code, CFR, state compiled statutes) and official government agency guidance. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
FMLA was Bill Clinton's first signature law, in February 1993, after the previous Congress had passed it twice and George H.W. Bush had vetoed it twice. The compromise that finally got it through gave eligible employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave a year for qualifying reasons — a serious health condition, caring for a spouse, child, or parent with a serious illness, or the birth, adoption, or foster placement of a child.
"Job-protected" is the part that matters. When you come back, your employer has to put you in your old position or an equivalent one with the same pay, benefits, and conditions. They can't fire you, demote you, or quietly cut your hours because you took the leave.
The catch is who actually qualifies. Roughly 44% of U.S. workers don't meet FMLA's eligibility tests — too small an employer, not enough hours, not enough tenure. If that's you, your state may still cover you (CA, NY, NJ, MA, WA, CO and several others have their own broader leave laws), but federal FMLA isn't going to be the answer.
When does it apply?
You're eligible for FMLA when all four of these are true:
- Your employer is covered — private employers with 50+ employees, all public agencies, all schools.
- You've worked for that employer for at least 12 months (they don't have to be consecutive).
- You've logged at least 1,250 hours over the past 12 months — roughly 24 hours/week.
- You work at a location with 50+ employees within 75 miles. This is the catch that disqualifies a lot of people at small branch offices.
Qualifying reasons:
- Birth, adoption, or foster placement of a child (within one year of arrival).
- Caring for a spouse, child, or parent with a serious health condition.
- Your own serious health condition that keeps you from doing your job.
- Qualifying military exigency or up to 26 weeks to care for a covered servicemember.
Things people get wrong:
- "FMLA leave has to be taken all at once." Not true — intermittent leave is allowed for chemo, dialysis, physical therapy, postpartum follow-ups, and a child's chronic condition.
- "My boss approved it, so I'm safe." Maybe — but your employer can require you to burn accrued PTO and sick time concurrently with FMLA, which often surprises people.
- "FMLA means I get paid." It does not. The federal version is unpaid. State paid-family-leave programs (CA, NY, NJ, MA, WA, CT, OR, CO, etc.) layer paid benefits on top.
What to Do If Your Employer Denies or Punishes You for Taking Leave
Step 1: Notify your employer ASAP. For foreseeable leave (a scheduled surgery, a due date), the rule is 30 days' notice. For sudden emergencies, "as soon as practicable" — usually within a day or two. Notice can be verbal, but follow it up in writing.
Step 2: Get the paperwork right. Your employer has to give you FMLA designation forms within 5 business days. Have your healthcare provider complete the medical certification — vague forms are the easiest way for HR to delay or deny.
Step 3: Document everything. Save your request, the employer's response, the medical certification, and any back-and-forth about your return date or accommodations.
Step 4: If they deny or retaliate, file. Complaints go to the DOL Wage and Hour Division, or you can sue directly. The deadline is 2 years from the violation (3 if willful).
What should you NOT do?
Don't miss the notice window. If you knew about the surgery a month out and only told your boss the day before, your employer can legally delay the leave by 30 days.
Don't take a side gig during FMLA. Working another job during your leave is one of the cleanest ways to lose protection. Courts have upheld terminations for this.
Don't assume your state has nothing extra. CA, NY, NJ, MA, WA, CT, RI, DC, OR, CO and a growing list cover smaller employers, more family members, and add paid wage replacement on top of federal FMLA.
Don't blow off the certification deadline. Generally 15 days to return the form. Miss it and your employer can deny the protection — even if your underlying medical situation is legitimate.
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