California minimum wage will increase to $12.00 per hour on January 1, 2019 for employers with 26 or more employees and $11.00 for smaller employers with 25 employees or less. Those rates will continue to increase annually until reaching $15 per hour in 2022 for larger employers and in 2023 for those with 25 or fewer employees. See California’s Gradual Increases in Minimum Wage, to Reach $15.00 Per Hour by January 1, 2022 (April, 2016).
California cities (and two counties) have implemented their own minimum wage ordinances. See also the UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education listing for regular updates. California employers need to examine the rules for every jurisdiction in which they operate, not just the one or more where they might have offices.
For example, as different municipalities have different definitions of “covered employer” and/or “covered employee,” a delivery company with drivers routinely working in multiple cities or counties each week may well have separate minimum wage compliance issues for each simultaneously.
Below is a comprehensive list of California municipalities requiring minimum wage levels greater than the state standard as of January 1, 2019:
City or CountyMinimum Wage RateBelmont$13.50Berkeley (effective from Oct. 1, 2018)$15.00Cupertino$15.00El Cerrito$15.00Emeryville$15.00 (55 or fewer employees) and
$15.69 (56 or more employees)
$15.00Los Angeles City (effective from July 1, 2018)$12.00 (25 or fewer employees) and
$13.25 (26 employees or more)
Los Angeles County (Unincorporated Areas) (effective from July 1, 2018)$12.00 (25 or fewer employees)
and $13.25 (26 employees or more)
Malibu (effective from July 1, 2018)$12.00 (25 or fewer employees)
and $13.25 (26 or more employees)
Milpitas (effective from July 1, 2018)$13.50Mountain View $15.65Oakland $13.80Palo Alto$15.00Pasadena (effective from July 1, 2018)$12.00 (25 or fewer employees)
and $13.25 (26 employees or more)
Redwood City$13.50Richmond $15.00San Diego $12.00San Francisco City and County
(effective from July 1, 2018)
$15.00San Jose $15.00San Leandro (effective from July 1, 2018)$13.00San Mateo $15.00Santa Clara $15.00Santa Monica (effective from July 1, 2018)
$12.00 (25 or fewer employees)
and $13.25 (26 employees or more)
Sunnyvale$15.65
Some cities have enacted separate minimum wage laws for hotels. For example, three Los Angeles County cities have their own hotel worker minimum wage. The current rate for each, effective July 1, 2018: Long Beach ($14.64); and Santa Monica and City of Los Angeles (both $16.10).
Non-profit charitable organizations should check for possibly slower implementation requirements under applicable local ordinances.
A covered employer must also conspicuously post an updated wage notice/bulletin for each applicable jurisdiction. Click the above city/county link(s) to download the most current notice.
See also:
For more information, please contact one of our attorneys, Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.
Helena Kobrin
December 14, 2018
If you are an employer facing possible litigation, or have an employee issue on which you need immediate guidance, call us to set up a consultation, or submit your message.
NOTE: Use of this website does not make one a client of the Law Offices of Timothy Bowles (“Firm” or “Bowles Law”). Establishing an attorney-client relationship and the confidentiality that comes with it depends on the Firm’s prior confirmation that no factor, including any conflict of interest (for example, our representation of another party adverse to you), exists to prevent that establishment. If you have confidential information that you would like to provide a Bowles Law attorney, please communicate directly to one of our attorneys, in person, by telephone, email, fax or other written means. Do not use this website to offer or communicate confidential information about any legal matter.