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Minnesota’s Paid Leave Law

Minnesota’s Paid Leave Law

  • On September 22, 2025
Minnesota_Paid_Leave_update_Qcear_LeaveSource

Here’s a summary of what Minnesota’s Paid Leave law (sometimes called Paid Family & Medical Leave) will look like starting in 2026. The main points are:

    What is it, and When It Begins

  • The program starts January 1, 2026.

  • It provides payments and job protection to people who need time off for serious health issues, family obligations, bonding with a new child, certain safety needs, or military-related situations.


  • Who’s Covered/ Eligible

  • Most employees are covered: full-time, part-time, temporary, many seasonal workers.

  • Some are not automatically covered: independent contractors, self-employed persons, certain tribal-nation employees, federal employees, and some seasonal hospitality workers. But many of those can opt in, where allowed.

  • To be eligible, an employee must have earned at least $3,700 in the past year (≈ 5.3% of the state’s average annual wage).

  • Also, there must be a qualifying event that lasts at least 7 days.


  • How Much Leave / What Types

  • There are two main types of leave: Medical Leave (for your own serious health condition) and Family Leave (for things like bonding a new child; caring for a family member; certain military duties; or safety leave—e.g. issues like domestic violence or sexual assault).

  • Each type gives up to 12 weeks per benefit year.

  • You can take both kinds in a single benefit year, but there’s a combined cap of 20 weeks total.

  • The “benefit year” starts on the first day you take leave.


  • Pay / Wage Replacement

  • Workers will receive a portion of their usual wages — most people will get between 55% and 90% of their regular wages.

  • The weekly benefit is capped at the state’s average weekly wage, which for 2025 is $1,372/week.


  • Funding/ Premiums

  • The program is funded via a payroll premium, shared between employer and employee.

  • For 2026, the total premium rate is 0.88% of employee wages.

    • Employers must pay at least 50% of that.
    • The rest (up to 50%) may be deducted from the employee’s paycheck.
  • There’s a small employer reduced rate: if you have ≤ 30 employees and the average wage of employees is ≤ 150% of the statewide average weekly wage, the employer portion is reduced.


  • Protections & Other Rights

  • Once you’ve worked 90 days for your current employer, job protection kicks in: you must be able to return to your same job (or an equivalent one) after leave.

  • Health insurance continuation is required during leave: employer must maintain health insurance benefits.

  • Protections against retaliation: employers can’t punish or retaliate for using leave.


  • Key Deadlines & Employer Responsibilities

  • Employers need to post notice and inform employees by December 1, 2025.

  • Premium payments: first premiums due April 30, 2026, covering wages from Jan 1-Mar 31. Employers can begin deducting employee share starting Jan 1, 2026.

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