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California’s employment law landscape is the most complex in the country — a layered system of state statutes, regulatory requirements, and judicially created standards that governs virtually every aspect of the employment relationship. For entrepreneurs building their first California company, the gap between what you think you need to do and what you’re actually legally required to do is significant and expensive.
Wage Payment Requirements
California requires wages to be paid at least twice monthly on designated paydays. Overtime must be paid at 1.5x for hours over 8 per day and over 40 per week, and 2x for hours over 12 per day — California’s daily overtime threshold is more employee-favorable than the federal weekly-only standard. The 7th consecutive day of work in a workweek triggers overtime regardless of total weekly hours. Final wages must be paid immediately upon involuntary termination and within 72 hours upon voluntary resignation with notice (or immediately if resignation is without notice).
Failure to pay final wages on time triggers waiting time penalties — one day’s wages for each day of delay, up to 30 days. For a $150,000/year employee terminated on Friday and paid on the following Monday, that’s three days of waiting time penalty — approximately $1,740 in penalties on top of the wages owed. Multiply this by the number of terminated employees who don’t receive their final check on time and the exposure accumulates quickly.
Meal and Rest Break Requirements
California requires a 30-minute off-duty meal period for shifts over five hours. A second 30-minute meal period is required for shifts over ten hours. A 10-minute paid rest period is required for every four hours worked or major fraction thereof. These aren’t suggestions — they’re legal requirements, and failure to provide them triggers a premium pay obligation of one hour of pay per missed meal or rest period per employee per day.
In a restaurant with 20 servers working six-hour shifts, if meal breaks aren’t being properly provided (a common issue in food service), the exposure is 20 meal break premiums per day, 365 days per year — $73,000 per year in premium pay, and potentially a PAGA claim multiplying that exposure across the four-year statute of limitations period. Meal and rest break compliance requires operational discipline — actual break schedules, documentation, and manager accountability — not just a policy in an employee handbook.
Wage Statement Requirements
Every California paycheck must be accompanied by a wage statement — a pay stub — that includes specific required information: the employee’s name and last four digits of their social security number, the name and address of the employer, the pay period covered, gross wages earned, total hours worked (for non-exempt employees), all deductions, all applicable hourly rates in effect during the pay period and the number of hours worked at each rate, and net wages. Each omission is a separate Labor Code violation subject to PAGA penalties.
The Compliance Investment
Building a California employment compliance program — proper payroll systems, meal and rest break tracking, wage statement generation, and manager training — costs money upfront but is far cheaper than PAGA exposure on the back end. A California employment attorney can review your practices and identify gaps for $3,000–$8,000 per engagement. Annual HR compliance maintenance is a similar range. These are not optional expenses for California employers — they’re risk management investments with calculable returns based on avoided PAGA exposure.
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