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Payroll

New Paid Leave Laws in 2026: A Clear Guide for Multistate Employers

June 3, 2026

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10 Minute Read

More states added or expanded paid leave this year. Here is what changed, where it applies, and the short list of things to check before your next payroll run.

If you run HR for a company with people in more than one state, the paid leave map you knew last year is already out of date. A new wave of state paid family and medical leave programs came online in 2026, and a few of them work differently than the ones you may already be administering. The good news: this is very manageable once you can see the whole board. Let us walk through it together.

Here is the part most teams miss, and it is worth knowing early: most of these laws apply even if you have a single employee living in that state. With remote and hybrid teams, that changes the question from “are we a Minnesota employer?” to “do we have anyone who logged in from Minnesota?” Knowing exactly where your people work is now a compliance input, not just an HR nicety.

With remote teams, the question isn’t ‘are we a Minnesota employer?’ It’s ‘do we have anyone who logged in from Minnesota?’ New paid leave programs in Minnesota, Delaware, and Maine plus expansions in six more states mean your compliance obligations depend on where your people actually work. Multistate now means multi-jurisdiction.

What changed in 2026

The headline is simple: the country added new programs and widened existing ones. As of 2026, roughly a dozen states plus Washington, D.C. have enacted paid family and medical leave programs that replace part of an employee’s wages during covered leave, and the list keeps growing.

Minnesota launched a brand-new program. Minnesota’s Paid Leave law took effect January 1, 2026, giving eligible employees up to twelve weeks of paid medical or family leave, and up to twenty weeks if they need both in the same benefit year. Job protection begins ninety days after hire, and employers were required to notify employees about their rights before the law went live. If you have anyone in Minnesota, this one is already active.

Delaware’s benefits went live. Under the Healthy Delaware Families Act, benefits became available January 1, 2026, offering up to twelve weeks of paid leave to bond with a new child, or six weeks for a personal serious health condition, caring for a family member, or handling a loved one’s overseas military deployment. Most employers with ten or more workers participate, and while payroll contributions started back in 2025, active administration is now the day-to-day reality.

Maine comes online in May. Maine’s paid family and medical leave benefits begin in May 2026, so if you have Maine employees, this is the one to put on the calendar right now rather than later.

Existing programs got wider, not just longer

Several states that already had paid leave used 2026 to expand who qualifies and why. Colorado, for example, became the first state to add NICU-specific leave: its Family and Medical Leave Insurance program now provides up to twelve additional weeks for parents of newborns in neonatal intensive care, and it trimmed the 2026 premium rate slightly at the same time.

California widened the definition of who an employee can take leave to care for, extending eligibility to a “designated person” who functions like family even without a blood relationship, which reflects a broader national shift toward recognizing chosen family in caregiving leave. For HR, that means the old “is this a qualifying family member?” checklist needs a refresh.

New Jersey lowered the threshold for who is covered under its Family Leave Act, expanding from employers with thirty or more employees down to those with fifteen or more, which pulls a lot of mid-sized companies into scope that were comfortably outside it before. If you sit in that fifteen-to-thirty headcount band, check your status.

Benefit amounts moved too. Massachusetts raised its maximum weekly PFML benefit for 2026, and Connecticut increased its paid leave benefits in step with a higher state minimum wage, so even teams in states you already track should confirm their numbers are current.

Do not forget the city and sick-time layer

Paid leave is not only a state story. New York City expanded its Earned Safe and Sick Time Act effective February 22, 2026, adding new covered reasons such as caregiving and public disasters, plus a separate bank of unpaid safe and sick time on top of existing paid hours. Municipal ordinances like this often go beyond state minimums, so a multistate employer is really a multi-jurisdiction employer.

2026 paid leave changes: Minnesota live (12-20 weeks), Delaware live (6-12 weeks), Maine coming May, plus expansions in CA, CO, NJ, MA, CT, NYC. Don’t miss deadlines. Start with location data. Build a process you can repeat. #PaidLeave #HR #Compliance

Your 2026 paid leave roadmap

You do not need to memorize every statute. You need a repeatable process. Here is the short version we walk clients through, and it works whether you have fifty employees or five hundred, with a deeper checklist in our compliance resource hub.

  1. Map your people. Pull a current list of work locations, including remote employees who moved. This single list drives every other step, and building a simple policy that asks employees to report a move keeps your records accurate.
  2. Match locations to live programs. Flag any state with a new or expanded 2026 program: Minnesota and Delaware are live now, Maine arrives in May, and several existing states changed benefit levels or eligibility.
  3. Confirm payroll contributions and rates. Premiums and rates shifted in several states this year, so verify your payroll system reflects the 2026 figures using our MPHR payroll configuration overview.
  4. Refresh notices and policies. Some states require employee notification on a deadline, so update your handbook and leave policies to reflect the new covered reasons and broader definitions of family.
  5. Set a recurring review. This is not a one-time project; new programs are already scheduled for future years, so a quarterly check keeps you ahead instead of catching up.

Where a good HCM setup carries the weight

Here is the honest truth: tracking accrual, applying the right state rules, generating required notices, and keeping clean location records by hand is where mid-sized teams burn out. A well-configured HCM platform can carry most of that load, automating accrual and contributions, applying the correct rules by work location, and giving you one place to see leave across every state you operate in, which is exactly the kind of setup we handle.

That is the part we care about most. Our clients tend to stay because the setup simply holds up: we maintain a 100% on-time implementation record and a 96% client retention rate, and when something does come up, a real person answers, so you can always reach our team. Paid leave compliance should feel like a system that runs quietly in the background, not a fire drill every January.

You are not behind, and you are not alone in finding this complicated; it genuinely is. The teams that handle it well are simply the ones who mapped their people, matched the programs, and built a process they can repeat, which is the same momentum that has more workers than ever gaining paid leave in 2026. Start with the location list. Everything else follows from there.


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