Notice to New Jersey Employers: New Jersey Expands Family Leave Act Coverage Starting July 2026 Banner Image

Labor & Employment Law

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Notice to New Jersey Employers: New Jersey Expands Family Leave Act Coverage Starting July 2026

What You Need to Know

  • Expanded Employer Coverage — New Jersey's Family Leave Act will now apply to all employers with 15 or more employees.
  • Easier Employee Eligibility — Employees can now qualify for leave after just 3 months and 250 hours worked, down from the previous 12-month/1,000-hour requirement.
  • Stronger Job Protection — Covered employees must be reinstated to an equivalent position after leave and treated as if they never took leave for layoff or recall purposes.

On January 17, 2026, Governor Phil Murphy signed A3451/S2950 into law, which significantly expands the NJ Family Leave Act’s (“FLA”) scope. Effective July 17, 2026, the FLA will cover all employers with 15 or more employees, as opposed to the previous 30 employee threshold.

The law also lessens the requirements for employee eligibility, reducing the eligibility requirement from 12 months and 1000 hours worked to 3 months and 250 hours worked.  Importantly, employers are also required to reinstate covered employees at the end of their leave to the same or an equivalent position with the same seniority, status, employment benefits, pay, and other terms and conditions. Employees returning from leave must be treated as if they had never taken leave for the purposes of any layoff or recall system.

In addition, an employee eligible for both earned sick leave and either Temporary Disability Insurance (“TDI”) or Family Leave Insurance (“FLI”) leave benefits has the option of using sick leave or the applicable TDI or FLI benefits. The employee may select the order in which the different kinds of leave are taken, however, cannot receive more than one kind of paid leave simultaneously.

In light of these changes, employers should review their policies to ensure that they allow for employee-selected consecutive use of benefits and that they reflect the new eligibility tracking systems discussed above. Smaller employers who are newly covered as a result of this expansion will need to develop policies and a NJ FLA compliance infrastructure to avoid non-compliance and potential liability.

If you have questions about how these NJ FLA changes affect your organization, please contact Scott Ohnegian, Adam McInerney, or any other member of Riker Danzig’s Labor and Employment Law Group.

Our Team

Adam J. McInerney

Adam J. McInerney
Partner

Scott A. Ohnegian

Scott A. Ohnegian
Partner

Lori Schiraldi Delia

Lori Schiraldi Delia
Counsel

Brandon H. Li

Brandon H. Li
Associate

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