The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) provides job-protected leave from work for family and medical reasons. This fact sheet explains employers’ obligations to provide employees information about their FMLA rights and responsibilities.
Covered employers: Covered employers under the FMLA include:
The FMLA protects leave for:
For more information about the FMLA generally, see Fact Sheet #28.
Covered employers must provide employees with certain critical notices about the FMLA:
Where a significant portion of the employer’s workforce is not literate in English, employers are required to provide certain notices in languages other than English.
Employers are also required to comply with all applicable requirements under Federal or State law for notices provided to sensory-impaired individuals.
Failure to provide required FMLA notices may constitute an interference with, restraint, or denial of the exercise of an employee’s FMLA rights. An employer may be liable for compensation and benefits lost by reason of the violation, for other actual monetary losses sustained as a direct result of the violation, for liquidated damages, and for appropriate equitable or other relief, including employment, reinstatement, promotion, or any other relief tailored to the harm suffered.
FMLA poster. Every employer covered by the FMLA must display or post an informative general notice about the FMLA. A covered employer must display this poster even if it has no eligible employees.
English and Spanish language FMLA posters are available free of charge from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division (WHD). Employers may distribute the information electronically, create their own poster or notice, or use another format. However, the material provided to employees must include all the information contained in the WHD FMLA poster, be accessible to applicants for employment and current employees, and fulfill all other requirements.
An employer who willfully violates this posting requirement may be subject to an FMLA civil money penalty, which is adjusted for inflation each year.
General notice upon hire. In addition to displaying a poster, if a covered employer has any FMLA eligible employees, it must also provide each employee with a general notice about the FMLA in the employer’s employee handbook or other written materials about leave and benefits. If no handbook or written leave materials exist, the employer must distribute this general notice to each new employee upon hire.
This general notice requirement can be met by duplicating the general notice language found on the WHD FMLA poster. Employers may distribute this information electronically, create their own poster or notice, or use another format. The material provided must include all the information contained in the WHD FMLA poster and fulfill all other requirements. If a significant portion of employees do not read and write English, the employer must provide this general notice in a language in which they can read and write.
Eligibility notice. The employer must provide employees with an eligibility notice the first time the employee requests leave for an FMLA-qualifying reason in the employer’s designated 12-month leave year.
The eligibility notice may be either oral or in writing and must:
Once an employee is notified they are eligible, employers are not required to provide a new eligibility notice for FMLA absences for the same qualifying reason during the same leave year. Employers are also not required to provide a new eligibility notice for FMLA absences for a different qualifying reason where the employee’s eligibility status has not changed. When an employee needs leave for a different qualifying reason in the same leave year and the employee’s eligibility status has changed, however, the employer must notify the employee of the change in eligibility status within five business days.
Rights and responsibilities notice. Each time employers are required to provide the eligibility notice, they must also provide employees with a rights and responsibilities notice, notifying employees of their rights under the FMLA, their obligations concerning the use of FMLA leave, and the consequences of failing to meet those obligations.
The rights and responsibilities notice must be in writing and must explicitly state all the following information, as applicable:
The rights and responsibilities notice may be distributed electronically provided all other requirements are met, and it may be combined with and provided to the employee at the same time as the eligibility notice. Employers can use WHD Form WH-381, Notice of Eligibility and Rights and Responsibilities, which is available at no cost, or create their own version as long as it meets all legal requirements. If a significant portion of an employer’s workforce is not literate in English, the rights and responsibilities notice must be provided in a language in which employees are literate.
Employers must be responsive in answering questions from employees concerning rights and responsibilities under the FMLA.
If information provided in the rights and responsibilities notice changes, the employer must notify the employee of the changes in writing within five business days of the first time, after the changes, that the employee requests leave. For example, if the initial leave period was paid leave and the subsequent leave period would be unpaid leave, notice of new arrangements for making health insurance premium payments may be required.
Designation notice. Once the employer has enough information to determine that the employee’s requested leave qualifies as FMLA leave, the employer must provide the employee with a written designation notice within five business days, absent extenuating circumstances. The designation notice informs the employee that the requested leave will be designated as FMLA leave and sets out the requirements applicable while the employee is on leave.
The designation notice must include:
If the leave does not qualify as FMLA leave, the employer must notify the employee in writing that the leave is not FMLA-protected and will not be counted as FMLA leave. This notice can be a simple written statement.
The employer is required to provide the employee with one designation notice for each FMLA-qualifying reason for leave in the 12-month leave year, regardless of whether the leave is taken in a continuous block or intermittently or on a reduced schedule. If the employee requests leave and the information provided in the designation notice changes, the employer must provide the employee written notice of the change. This notice must occur within five business days of the first leave request from the employee that follows any changes.
Employers may use WHD Form WH-382, Designation Notice, or create their own version of this notice, provided it meets all legal requirements.
If an employer is unable to determine whether a leave request should be designated as FMLA-protected because a submitted certification is incomplete or insufficient, the employer is required to state in writing what additional information is needed. The employer may use the designation notice to inform the employee that a certification is incomplete or insufficient and identify what information is needed to make the certification complete and sufficient. For more information about medical certification, see Fact Sheet #28G.
Some States have their own family and medical leave laws. Nothing in the FMLA prevents employees from receiving protections under other laws. Workers have the right to benefit from all the laws that apply.
The FMLA is a federal worker protection law. Employers are prohibited from interfering with, restraining, or denying the exercise of, or the attempt to exercise, any FMLA right. Any violations of the FMLA or the FMLA regulations constitute interfering with, restraining, or denying the exercise of rights provided by the FMLA. For more information about prohibited employer retaliation under the FMLA, see Fact Sheet #77B and Field Assistance Bulletin 2022-2.
The Wage and Hour Division is responsible for administering and enforcing the FMLA for most employees. If you believe that your rights under the FMLA have been violated, you may file a complaint with the Wage and Hour Division or file a private lawsuit against your employer in court. State employees may be subject to certain limitations in pursuit of direct lawsuits regarding leave for their own serious health conditions. Most Federal and certain congressional employees are also covered by the law but are subject to the jurisdiction of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management or Congress.
For additional information scan the QR Code, visit the Wage and Hour Division FMLA website https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fmla, and/or call our toll-free information and helpline, available 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in your time zone, 1-866-4-USWAGE (1-866-487-9243)
This publication is for general information and is not to be considered in the same light as official statements of position contained in the regulations.
The contents of this document do not have the force and effect of law and are not meant to bind the public in any way. This document is intended only to provide clarity to the public regarding existing requirements under the law or agency policies.