Washington state law requires employers to provide paid sick leave to their employees. It also sets the minimum requirements for an employer’s paid sick leave policy.
You may not need a written paid sick leave policy , but having one is highly recommended. If you have a written policy, it must be readily available to all of your employees. If you do not have a written policy, state minimums still apply.
While the tabs below outline the minimum requirements of the state law, employers can offer more generous paid sick leave policies. If local laws require more generous paid sick leave benefits for employees, local requirements will apply.
Note: For definitions of who qualifies as an employee under this law, see RCW 49.46.010(3)
Most of the specific policies outlined here can be found in Chapter 49.46 RCW and Chapter 296-128 WAC .
Accruing Paid Sick Leave
At a minimum, employees must be provided one hour of paid sick leave for every 40 hours worked. You must provide paid sick leave to all your employees regardless of full-time, part-time, temporary, or seasonal status.
All hours that an employee works must be counted towards accrual, regardless of how many hours they work in a given week or pay period, including overtime hours.
For example:
Employees accrue paid sick leave for all hours worked, beginning Jan. 1, 2018. New employees begin accruing paid sick leave on their first day of work.
The default accrual year is Jan. 1 – Dec. 31. You can use a different accrual year (such as a fiscal year, benefit year, etc.) as long as it is a fixed, consecutive 12-month period.
Employees are entitled to use paid sick leave they have accrued once they have reached 90 calendar days of employment.
You must pay employees the paid sick leave they use within the same pay period they use it, unless you require verification for an employee’s absences that exceed three days. When an employee leaves their job for any reason, most employees optionally cash out any sick leave balances. Balances not cashed out must be reinstated if the employee is rehired within 12 months.
You must allow employees to use paid sick leave in increments consistent with your normal payroll practices, . For example:
Note: Employers can request an increment variance for “good cause” under WAC 296-128-630(4) . Not all municipalities will accept this variance (e.g.,the City of Seattle ).
Employees can work additional hours or shifts, or trade shifts with another employee, instead of using paid sick leave. Both the employee and employer must agree to any substitution.
For absences exceeding three required work days or longer, you can require an employee to provide verification that their paid sick leave absences are for an authorized purpose. You must include any verification requirements in your written paid sick leave policy. The verification requirements in your written paid sick leave policy must also detail an employee’s right to appeal the verification requirement if the verification results in an unreasonable burden or expense on the employee. Additionally, you also need to comply with applicable privacy laws.
Construction workers who separate from employment before they reach the 90-day threshold for accessing paid sick leave must be paid the balance of their paid sick leave. This requirement does not apply to workers employed by construction industry employers as described in NAICS 2361 (residential building construction). The following apply to covered construction workers:
You must pay your employees’ normal hourly compensation for each hour of paid sick leave that they use. Normal hourly compensation is not necessarily the same as an employee’s hourly wage.
Note: RCW 49.46.010(3) defines who qualifies for paid sick leave as an “employee.”
You must calculate your employee's normal hourly compensation based on the hourly rate they would have earned during the time they used paid sick leave. Premium pay rates may apply. (See Tips, gratuities, differentials, overtime, and pay premiums below)
Non-exempt, overtime eligible salaried employees using paid sick leave must be paid the equivalent to their hourly wage.
Note: Overtime exempt, salaried employees in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional position, or who are bona fide outside salespersons, are excluded from the paid sick leave law. See RCW 49.46.010(3)(c) and WAC 296-128-500 through 296-128-540.
You must calculate an equivalent hourly wage for non-hourly employees based on what they would have earned during the time they used paid sick leave.
Normal hourly compensation does not include:
If an employee’s normal hourly compensation includes a differential rate (for example, a night or swing shift), it is not considered a premium rate and must be included.
If an employee uses paid sick leave for scheduled overtime hours, their normal hourly wage should be used unless otherwise required. You do not need to include the overtime wage premium – the extra “half” of time-and-a-half.
Employers must apply a reasonable calculation to determine the normal hourly compensation for employees that do not have an hourly wage. You must apply these calculations to all employees with a similar status.
You must allow employees to use paid sick leave for themselves or their family members for any of the following reasons:
Note: Employers may allow employees to use paid sick leave for additional purposes.
Use of paid sick leave time cannot be counted as an absence that leads to, or results in, any type of discipline. You cannot discipline any employee for using paid sick leave for authorized purposes, or for filing a complaint under the law. This includes:
If you can show that an employee’s paid sick leave use was not for an authorized purpose under the law, you may deny payment of their paid sick leave for that use. You cannot deduct unpaid sick leave hours from an employee’s accrued paid sick leave balance.
If you want your employees to provide reasonable notice for their use of paid sick leave, you must have a written policy or a collective bargaining agreement that addresses it. Reasonable notice requirements cannot interfere with an employee’s right to use paid sick leave.
At a minimum, employees must carry over their accrued, unused paid sick leave balances of 40 hours or less from one accrual year to the next. You can offer a more generous carryover policy.
Example 1:
An employee starts working 40 hours a week in early February. Their employer uses the calendar year for their accrual year. If the employee doesn’t use any sick leave during the year, by the end of the year they will have about 48 hours of paid sick leave accrued on Dec. 31. However, their employer only allows the minimum of 40 hours or less to carry over. On Jan. 1st, the employee’s paid sick leave balance would drop from 48 to 40 hours.
Example 2:
An employee works 40 hours per week and already has a balance of 40 hours of accrued paid sick leave on July 1st. Their employer defines the fiscal year (July 1 – June 30) as their accrual year in their written paid sick leave policy. If the employee does not use any of their paid sick leave, on January 1st the employee will have earned another 26 hours of paid sick leave, a total of 66 hours. Their paid sick leave balance continues to accrue and does not reset until June 30th because the employer uses the fiscal year.
You must reinstate any previously accrued, unused paid sick leave if you rehire an employee within 12 months of their separation. This includes employees hired at a different location for the same employer.