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Remote Work Policy

Remote Work Policy

REMOTE WORK POLICY

Company: [Company Name]

Effective Date: [Effective Date]

HR Contact: [HR Contact]

1. PURPOSE AND SCOPE

This Remote Work Policy ("Policy") establishes the guidelines, expectations, and responsibilities for employees of [Company Name] who work remotely or in a hybrid arrangement. This Policy applies to all employees approved to work at a location other than a designated company office. Remote work is a revocable privilege granted at the sole discretion of the Company and is not an entitlement or a term of employment.

2. ELIGIBILITY

Remote work arrangements are available to: [Eligibility Criteria]. The remote work arrangement applicable to approved employees is: [Remote Arrangement]. Eligibility does not guarantee a remote work arrangement. The Company may revoke remote work privileges at any time with reasonable notice based on performance, business needs, or other legitimate business reasons.

3. WORK HOURS, AVAILABILITY, AND OVERTIME

Remote employees must be available and responsive during core business hours of [Core Hours]. Employees are expected to attend all required meetings, respond to communications within two hours during core hours, and maintain the same level of productivity as in-office employees. Non-exempt employees: [Overtime Policy]. Non-exempt employees shall not work hours beyond their scheduled shift without prior written supervisor approval. The Company is responsible for compensating all hours worked by non-exempt employees, including unreported overtime, in compliance with the FLSA.

4. REMOTE WORKSPACE REQUIREMENTS

Employees are responsible for maintaining a safe, ergonomic, and professional work environment at their remote location. The workspace must: (a) have a reliable internet connection sufficient to support video conferencing; (b) be free from distractions during core hours; (c) provide a professional background for video calls; and (d) comply with any applicable local zoning or homeowners association requirements. The Company is not responsible for costs associated with the setup or maintenance of the employee's home office beyond the reimbursements provided in this Policy.

5. EQUIPMENT AND EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT

Equipment: [Equipment Policy]. Internet and phone reimbursement: [Internet Reimbursement]. All company-provided equipment remains the property of [Company Name] and must be returned upon separation from employment or revocation of remote work privileges. Employees must not install unauthorized software on company devices. Lost or damaged company equipment may result in the employee's financial responsibility for repair or replacement costs.

6. DATA SECURITY AND MONITORING

Security requirements: [Security Requirements]. Electronic monitoring: [Monitoring Disclosure]. Employees must comply with all Company data security policies and must immediately report any security breach, unauthorized access, or loss of company data to IT. Employees shall not access company systems from public Wi-Fi networks without using a VPN. Confidential company information shall not be stored on personal devices without authorization.

7. PERFORMANCE EXPECTATIONS

Remote employees are held to the same performance standards as in-office employees. Supervisors will evaluate performance based on results, quality of work, communication responsiveness, and meeting attendance — not physical presence. Failure to meet performance standards while working remotely may result in revocation of remote work privileges, formal disciplinary action, or both.

8. WORKPLACE SAFETY AND WORKERS' COMPENSATION

Workers' compensation coverage extends to remote employees for injuries arising out of and in the course of employment at their approved remote work location. Employees must report any work-related injuries at their remote location to HR within 24 hours. Employees are responsible for maintaining a safe home work environment consistent with OSHA general duty clause principles.

9. REVOCATION OF REMOTE WORK PRIVILEGES

[Company Name] reserves the right to revoke or modify any remote work arrangement at any time, with or without cause, upon reasonable notice. Revocation will not be applied in a discriminatory manner. Employees whose remote work was granted as an ADA reasonable accommodation will receive separate notice and an interactive process discussion before any revocation.

10. GOVERNING LAW AND ACKNOWLEDGMENT

This Policy is governed by the laws of the State of [Governing State] and applicable federal law, including the FLSA. This Policy may be updated at any time. Employees will be notified of material changes. Questions should be directed to [HR Contact].

EMPLOYEE ACKNOWLEDGMENT

I acknowledge that I have received, read, and understand the [Company Name] Remote Work Policy effective [Effective Date], and I agree to comply with its terms.

Employee Name: _________________________

Signature: _________________________ Date: _____________

Employee

________________

Signature

HR Representative

________________

Signature

Maintained by Vladislav Sergienko, Founder·Template last modified: ·Report an error

What Is a Remote Work Policy?

A Remote Work Policy in the United States establishes the obligations and procedures governing the conduct it regulates.

The legal framework governing remote work in the United States spans multiple federal statutes and a patchwork of state laws. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq., requires employers to track all hours worked by non-exempt employees — including hours worked at home — and to pay overtime for hours in excess of 40 per week. The Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division (WHD) has issued Field Assistance Bulletin 2020-5, clarifying that FLSA obligations apply equally to remote and in-office work. Employers who fail to track and compensate remote employees' overtime face the same FLSA liability as employers with in-office overtime violations.

State wage and hour laws impose additional obligations that vary significantly by jurisdiction. California Labor Code § 2802 requires employers to reimburse employees for all necessary business expenses, including a proportionate share of home internet and phone costs for remote workers. Illinois's Wage Payment and Collection Act, Massachusetts's Wage Act, and equivalent statutes in several other states impose similar reimbursement requirements. A remote work policy that addresses expense reimbursement comprehensively protects employers in states with reimbursement obligations and reduces employee disputes.

OSHA's General Duty Clause (29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(1)) technically applies to home offices, but OSHA has long exercised enforcement discretion and does not inspect home offices of employees working for employers in non-hazardous industries. OSHA's 2000 policy letter clarified that the agency will not conduct inspections of home offices or hold employers liable for employees' home office conditions in non-regulated industries. However, employers are well-advised to provide ergonomic guidance for home office setup to reduce workers' compensation exposure from remote work injuries.

When Do You Need a Remote Work Policy?

A Remote Work Policy is needed by any U.S. employer that permits or requires employees to work from locations other than the employer's physical office on a regular, recurring, or indefinite basis. The policy translates the general employment relationship into the remote work context and protects both employer and employee by establishing clear, documented expectations.

Employers transitioning from in-office to hybrid work models need a policy that defines which roles are eligible for remote or hybrid schedules, how many days per week each eligible role must be physically present, and how hybrid schedules are approved and managed. Without a written policy, managers apply inconsistent standards, creating employee relations problems and potential discrimination claims when some employees receive more favorable remote arrangements than others.

Employers with multi-state remote workforces need a policy that accounts for the varying state law obligations that apply when employees work in states different from the employer's state of incorporation or primary operations. California, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Illinois each impose distinct wage and hour obligations, sick leave requirements, and expense reimbursement duties on employers whose employees work in those states, regardless of where the employer is headquartered. A policy with state-specific addenda or a general provision requiring compliance with the employee's work location state law addresses this multi-state complexity.

Employers in technology, financial services, healthcare, and other regulated industries need remote work policies that specifically address data security requirements for remote work — including requirements to use VPN connections for access to company systems, prohibitions on using public Wi-Fi for sensitive work, and requirements for secure physical storage of printed documents. Health information subject to HIPAA, financial data subject to Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) security requirements, and payment card data subject to PCI DSS standards each carry specific security obligations that a remote work policy must address.

Employers who provide company-owned equipment for remote work — laptops, monitors, phones, headsets — need a policy that documents what equipment is provided, who is responsible for maintenance and repair, what happens to equipment when employment ends, and what restrictions apply to personal use of company equipment. California and several other states require that company-provided equipment be maintained at the employer's expense.

What to Include in Your Remote Work Policy

A complete Remote Work Policy for U.S. employers must address the following key provisions to effectively manage the legal, operational, and compliance dimensions of remote and hybrid work.

The eligibility and approval section defines which job categories, roles, and seniority levels are eligible for remote or hybrid arrangements, the approval process for individual remote work agreements, and any trial period requirements for new remote arrangements. The policy should state clearly whether remote work is a right, a privilege granted by manager discretion, or a defined benefit for certain roles — language that a court would apply if a remote arrangement is revoked and the employee disputes the revocation.

The work hours and overtime provisions establish the employee's required core hours (the specific hours during which the employee must be available regardless of time zone), how time is recorded and reported, and the policy's compliance with FLSA overtime requirements. For non-exempt employees, the policy must require daily time record submission and prohibit off-the-clock work. For exempt employees, the policy should address minimum availability expectations without creating an hourly tracking arrangement that could jeopardize exempt status under FLSA § 13(a)(1).

The designated workspace section requires the employee to maintain a dedicated, safe, and ergonomically appropriate home office space, to comply with OSHA-aligned ergonomics guidance for monitor height, chair adjustment, and keyboard positioning, and to report any home office injuries through the employer's standard workers' compensation reporting process. The policy should clarify whether the employer will conduct a home office inspection or rely on employee self-certification.

The equipment and expense reimbursement section specifies what equipment the employer provides (company-owned laptop, headset, second monitor), what technology costs the employer reimburses (a monthly internet stipend, cell phone allowance), and the process for submitting reimbursement requests. California Labor Code § 2802 reimbursement obligations should be addressed for any California-based remote employees, including a specific monthly internet and phone reimbursement amount or methodology.

The data security and confidentiality section requires remote employees to: use the employer's VPN for all access to company systems and data; store confidential information only on encrypted company-issued or company-approved devices; prohibit use of public Wi-Fi for work involving confidential data without VPN protection; secure printed documents containing sensitive information; and report any data security incidents through the employer's incident reporting process. For employers subject to HIPAA, GLBA, or PCI DSS, the policy should incorporate the applicable regulatory requirements by reference.

The electronic monitoring disclosure informs employees that the employer may monitor company-owned devices, network activity, email, and communication tools, as required by Connecticut General Statutes § 31-48d, Delaware Code tit. 19 § 705, and New York Labor Law § 52-c for employees in those states, and as a general disclosure for all remote employees.

The performance and communication expectations section defines the communication tools the employee is required to use, expected response times for messages and emails during core hours, participation requirements for scheduled meetings, and the performance evaluation process for remote employees.

The policy modification and revocation section states that remote work is a revocable privilege subject to business needs, that the employer may require in-office attendance with reasonable advance notice, and that violation of the remote work policy may result in revocation of remote work authorization and disciplinary action up to and including termination.

Sources & Citations

Statutory citations link to official government sources.

  1. 29 U.S.C. § 201US – Cornell LII
  2. 29 U.S.C. § 654US – Cornell LII
  3. Fair Labor Standards ActUS – Cornell LII
  4. FLSAUS – Cornell LII
  5. HIPAAUS – Cornell LII

Cite this page

Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:

APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Remote Work Policy (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/policies/remote-work-policy

MLA

"Remote Work Policy (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/policies/remote-work-policy.

BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-remote-work-policy,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Remote Work Policy (United States)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/policies/remote-work-policy}},
  note         = {Free legal document template. Based on Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)}
}

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Frequently Asked Questions

Based on Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) — Template last modified June 2026

This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer

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