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California Requires Employer Annual Workplace Rights Notice Under New Law

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Summary

The California Labor Commissioner's Office announces the Workplace Know Your Rights Act (Labor Code Sections 1550-1559), effective January 1, 2026, which requires employers to provide workers with annual written notice of their workplace rights by February 1. The notice must be distributed in languages normally used at the workplace and cover retaliation protections, workers' compensation rights, union and group activity rights, immigration-related protections, emergency contact notification, and rights during law enforcement interactions. Employers must allow workers to designate an emergency contact by March 30, 2026.

“This new law makes those protections real by requiring employers to provide that information every year, strengthening our commitment to educating and empowering workers across the state.”

Why this matters

California employers that have not yet prepared their annual workplace rights notice should prioritize this immediately — the February 1, 2026 deadline leaves minimal time. The notice requirement applies to all workers regardless of immigration status and must be provided in languages normally used at the workplace, which may require translation for multilingual workforces.

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GovPing monitors CA Labor Commissioner for new labor & employment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 2 changes logged to date.

What changed

The Workplace Know Your Rights Act, codified in California Labor Code Sections 1550-1559, establishes a new annual notice requirement that goes beyond existing workplace posting obligations. All California employers must provide written notice to workers annually by February 1, informing them of key rights including protection from retaliation, workers' compensation benefits, union and group activity rights, protections against unfair immigration-related practices, emergency contact notification rights, and rights during law enforcement interactions.

California employers should immediately prepare compliant notices and establish processes for annual distribution. The February 1, 2026 deadline is the first compliance target, and employers must also implement emergency contact designation procedures by March 30, 2026. Sample notices and guidance are available on the Labor Commissioner's Office website.

What to do next

  1. Provide annual workplace rights notice to all workers by February 1, 2026
  2. Allow workers to name an emergency contact by March 30, 2026
  3. Distribute notice in languages normally used at the workplace

Archived snapshot

Apr 22, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

  1. Press Room

NEWS RELEASE Release Number: 2026- 14 Date: January 30, 2026

New California law requires annual workplace rights notice

Sacramento — The California Labor Commissioner’s Office (LCO) is reminding employers about a new state law, the Workplace Know Your Rights Act, which requires employers to annually provide workers with clear information about their workplace rights.

This new law took effect on January 1 and requires employers to provide yearly notice to workers by February 1 explaining key rights under California’s labor laws. The written notice must be provided to all workers, regardless of their immigration status, and shared through common methods such as email, text message, or in person, in languages normally used at the workplace.

This new annual notice goes beyond existing workplace posting requirements by ensuring workers receive additional information about their rights. While required posting must still be maintained, the new annual notice is designed to increase awareness by delivering this information directly from employers to workers. The notice must include information explaining workers’ rights related to retaliation, workers’ compensation, protections against unfair immigration-related practices, the right to organize or act together with co-workers, emergency contact notification, and interactions with law enforcement at the workplace.

What California Labor Commissioner Lilia García-Brower said: “California continues to lead the nation in protecting all workers, regardless of immigration status. But those protections mean little if workers do not know their rights. This new law makes those protections real by requiring employers to provide that information every year, strengthening our commitment to educating and empowering workers across the state.”

Under the Workplace Know Your Rights Act, codified in Labor Code Sections 1550-1559, employers must inform workers about the following:

Protection from retaliation

Workers have the right to speak up about workplace issues without punishment. This includes concerns about pay, hours, health and safety, and other workplace protections. Workers are also protected when they file complaints, take part in investigations, or help others exercise their rights.

Protections against unfair immigration-related practices

Workers must be informed of certain protections related to their immigration status in the workplace. These include the right to receive required notices and protection from unfair or retaliatory actions, such as threats, discrimination, or misuse of employment eligibility verification practices.

Emergency contact notification

Workers have the right to name an emergency contact. If a worker is arrested or detained at work and the employer knows about it, the employer must notify that contact when required by law. Employers must allow workers to name an emergency contact by March 30, 2026.

Union and group activity rights

Workers have the right to join or organize a union. They also have the right to act together with co-workers to raise concerns about pay, hours, health and safety, or other working conditions. Workers can choose whether to take part in these activities without fear of retaliation.

Rights during law enforcement interactions

Workers must be informed about basic constitutional rights during law enforcement interactions in the workplace, such as rights related to questioning, searches, detention, and legal assistance.

Workers’ compensation rights

Workers have the right to medical care and other workers’ compensation benefits if they experience work-related injuries or illnesses. The notice explains how workers can report injuries and get these benefits. ****

Other new employment laws

In addition to the Workplace Know Your Rights Act, several other employment laws took effect on January 1, 2026:

  • An increase in California’s statewide minimum wage to $16.90 per hour, with higher minimum wages in some cities, counties, and industries.
  • Expanded Equal Pay Act protections that give workers more time to file unequal pay claims and recover lost wages.
  • Updated paid sick leave rules that expand how sick leave may be used, including for certain court proceedings and situations involving crime victims. Employers can find guidance and sample notices on the Labor Commissioner’s Office website.

About the Labor Commissioner’s Office

LCO combats wage theft and unfair competition by investigating allegations of illegal and unfair business practices.

In 2020, LCO launched a multi-pronged outreach campaign, “ Reaching Every Californian.” The campaign amplifies basic protections and builds pathways to affected populations, so workers and employers understand legal protections and obligations, as well as the Labor Commissioner’s enforcement procedures.

Workers who have questions about labor laws enforced by LCO can call 1-833-LCO-INFO (833-526-4636) between the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.

LCO is a division of the Department of Industrial Relations.

Californians can follow the Labor Commissioner on Facebook and X (Twitter).

Employers with questions on requirements may contact: MakeItFair@dir.ca.gov.

Media contact : Communications@dir.ca.gov, (510) 286-1161

Named provisions

Protection from retaliation Workers' compensation rights Union and group activity rights Protections against unfair immigration-related practices Emergency contact notification Rights during law enforcement interactions

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
CA Labor Commission
Published
January 1st, 2026
Compliance deadline
February 1st, 2026 (80 days ago)
Instrument
Guidance
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
Labor Code Sections 1550-1559

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Annual notice requirements Workers' rights compliance Emergency contact procedures
Geographic scope
California US-CA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Employment & Labor
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Civil Rights Public Health

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