Insights

A Review of 2025 Labor and Employment Legislation

A Review of 2025 Labor & Employment Legislation in California

California's 2025 legislative session reshaped the workplace landscape with aggressive restrictions on employment‑related clawbacks and debt, strengthened pay equity enforcement and remedies, and an expansion of employer pay data reporting. Building on prior pay transparency and pay equity frameworks, the Legislature refined definitions, adopted a good‑faith pay scale standard, extended limitations periods, and expanded reporting granularity.

The Legislature also expanded worker protections under the Fair Employment and Housing Act. New provisions add leave and accommodation rights for victims of violence and create a narrow safe harbor to encourage bias‑mitigation training. In parallel, an AI transparency statute sets safety and whistleblower protections for frontier model developers.

The Legislature also clarified classification and reimbursement rules for construction trucking, renewed displaced‑worker recall obligations, and enhanced Cal/WARN notice content and the timing for coordinating rapid‑response services. Sector‑specific updates include adjustments to meal and rest period rules, new access to training‑credential records, and extended oversight of foreign labor recruiters.

Although several high‑profile measures were vetoed, the overall trend is toward more prescriptive compliance, tighter data‑integrity expectations, and greater state‑level enforcement authority. Employers should expect closer scrutiny across compensation, notice and posting, leave administration, and technology governance—and should begin aligning policies, agreements, and reporting systems now. 

Read the White Paper.

Insights by Jones Day should not be construed as legal advice on any specific facts or circumstances. The contents are intended for general information purposes only and may not be quoted or referred to in any other publication or proceeding without the prior written consent of the Firm, to be given or withheld at our discretion. To request permission to reprint or reuse any of our Insights, please use our “Contact Us” form, which can be found on our website at www.jonesday.com. This Insight is not intended to create, and neither publication nor receipt of it constitutes, an attorney-client relationship. The views set forth herein are the personal views of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Firm.