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Employee Handbook

Employee Handbook

EMPLOYEE HANDBOOK

[Company Name]

[Company Address]

Effective Date: [Effective Date]

Questions: [HR Contact Info]

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER

This Employee Handbook is provided for informational purposes only. It is not a contract of employment, express or implied, and does not guarantee employment for any specific period. [Company Name] reserves the right to modify, suspend, or terminate any policy in this handbook at any time, with or without notice, at the Company's sole discretion. No manager or supervisor has authority to make representations inconsistent with this handbook without the written approval of the CEO or HR Director.

WELCOME

Welcome to [Company Name]. We are committed to maintaining a productive, respectful, and legally compliant workplace. This handbook outlines the policies and expectations that apply to all employees. Please read it carefully, ask questions if anything is unclear, and keep it accessible as a reference throughout your employment.

1. EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIP

1.1 At-Will Employment. [At Will Statement]

1.2 Standard Work Schedule. The standard work schedule is: [Standard Work Week]. Individual schedules may vary based on operational needs and will be established by the employee's manager.

1.3 Governing Law. This handbook and the employment relationship shall be governed primarily by the laws of the State of [Governing State], as well as applicable federal law.

2. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY AND ANTI-HARASSMENT

2.1 Equal Employment Opportunity. [EEO Statement].

2.2 Anti-Harassment Policy. [Harassment Policy].

2.3 Reporting. [Reporting Procedure]. Retaliation against any employee who makes a good-faith complaint or participates in an investigation is strictly prohibited.

3. LEAVE POLICIES

3.1 Paid Time Off. [PTO Policy].

3.2 Sick Leave. [Sick Leave Policy].

3.3 Family and Medical Leave (FMLA). [FMLA Policy].

3.4 Other Leave. The Company provides additional leave as required by applicable federal and state law, including jury duty leave, military leave (USERRA), bereavement leave, and voting leave. Contact HR for details.

4. CODE OF CONDUCT AND DISCIPLINE

4.1 Conduct Expectations. [Code Of Conduct].

4.2 Disciplinary Process. [Disciplinary Process].

5. TECHNOLOGY AND CONFIDENTIALITY

5.1 Technology Policy. [Technology Policy].

5.2 Confidentiality. [Confidentiality Statement].

5.3 Social Media. Employees may not disclose confidential company information on personal social media accounts or make statements that could be construed as speaking on behalf of the Company without authorization. Employees retain the right to discuss wages and working conditions with coworkers as protected by the NLRA.

EMPLOYEE ACKNOWLEDGMENT

By signing below, I acknowledge that I have received and read [Company Name]'s Employee Handbook, effective [Effective Date]. I understand this handbook is not a contract of employment, that my employment is at-will, and that the Company reserves the right to modify these policies at any time. I agree to comply with all policies contained in this handbook.

Employee Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________

Printed Name: _______________________________________________

Department: _______________________________________________

HR Representative Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________

Employee

________________

Signature

HR Representative

________________

Signature

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

What Is a Employee Handbook?

An Employee Handbook in the United States sets out the rules and standards the organisation expects those it covers to follow.

No single federal statute requires employers to maintain an employee handbook, but multiple federal laws create obligations that are most effectively satisfied through written policies communicated to employees. The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), 29 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., requires covered employers (50 or more employees) to include FMLA policy information in any employee handbook. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.) are best implemented through written anti-discrimination and harassment policies with clear reporting procedures. The Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA), 29 U.S.C. § 651 et seq., requires employers to communicate safety policies to workers.

The at-will employment doctrine — recognized in all US states except Montana, which requires just cause for termination after a probationary period — means that an employer can terminate an employee at any time for any lawful reason unless the parties have agreed otherwise. The handbook is the primary vehicle through which employers protect their at-will status: a clear, prominent disclaimer stating that the handbook does not create a contract of employment and that employment remains at-will prevents courts from construing handbook language as implied contractual commitments. California, New York, and New Jersey courts have occasionally held that specific handbook promises created contractual rights, making well-drafted disclaimer language essential in those states.

The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq., governs handbook policies at non-union as well as unionized employers. Section 7 of the NLRA protects employees' rights to engage in concerted activities for mutual aid and protection — including discussing wages and working conditions. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) regularly challenges handbook policies that it finds could reasonably be interpreted to chill employees' exercise of Section 7 rights, including overly broad confidentiality policies, social media policies, and conflict-of-interest policies. Employers must draft handbook policies with NLRA compliance in mind.

State law adds significant complexity for multi-state employers. California's Labor Code, New York Labor Law, Massachusetts General Laws, and Illinois Human Rights Act all impose requirements that exceed federal minimums — including mandatory paid sick leave policies, specific break-time policies, pregnancy accommodation policies, and pay transparency requirements. An employee handbook for a multi-state employer must either address state-specific requirements in separate state addenda or maintain jurisdiction-specific handbook versions.

When Do You Need a Employee Handbook?

A US employer needs a current, legally compliant Employee Handbook in several specific circumstances — and the absence of one creates legal and operational risk.

New hire onboarding is the primary deployment context. The handbook communicates workplace rules and expectations before the employment relationship fully develops, establishes the employer's at-will status from day one, documents that employees received required legal notices (FMLA rights, COBRA notice, EEO policy, OSHA safety information), and obtains the signed acknowledgment that serves as evidence the employee was informed.

Employers facing anti-discrimination, harassment, or retaliation claims benefit significantly from a compliant written policy. The US Supreme Court recognized in Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S. 775 (1998) and Burlington Industries v. Ellerth, 524 U.S. 742 (1998) that an employer can establish an affirmative defense to supervisory harassment claims by demonstrating (a) it exercised reasonable care to prevent and correct harassing behavior, and (b) the employee unreasonably failed to use the employer's complaint procedures. A written anti-harassment policy with a clear reporting mechanism is the foundation of this affirmative defense.

California employers with five or more employees must provide at least two hours of sexual harassment prevention training to supervisors and at least one hour to non-supervisory employees every two years under California Government Code Section 12950.1. The handbook must include the required DFEH (now CRD) training notice and the DFEH pamphlet on sexual harassment.

Illinois employers must comply with the Illinois Human Rights Act's mandatory annual sexual harassment prevention training requirement under 775 ILCS 5/2-109. New York employers must comply with the New York State Human Rights Law's annual training requirement. Both state statutes require written policies meeting minimum content standards.

Employers who need to enforce discipline, performance standards, or separation decisions rely on the handbook to establish that the employee received notice of the applicable standards. Courts in wrongful termination cases routinely ask whether the employer's handbook set out the standards that were allegedly violated. A documented, consistent policy — and evidence that the employee acknowledged receiving it — substantially strengthens the employer's defense.

What to Include in Your Employee Handbook

A legally compliant US Employee Handbook must cover a core set of policies required by federal law, supplemented by state-specific policies and the employer's specific workplace rules.

The at-will employment disclaimer must appear prominently — typically on the first page and again in the acknowledgment form — and must state unambiguously that employment is at-will, that neither the handbook nor any other company document creates a contract of employment, and that the employer reserves the right to modify, rescind, or replace any policy at any time. Courts in California (e.g., Foley v. Interactive Data Corp., 47 Cal.3d 654 (1988)) and New York have analyzed disclaimer language carefully, requiring it to be explicit and conspicuous.

The equal employment opportunity and anti-harassment policy must prohibit discrimination and harassment on all federally and state-protected bases, identify the categories protected under Title VII, the ADEA (29 U.S.C. § 623), the ADA, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, and applicable state law, establish a complaint procedure with multiple reporting channels (to allow employees to bypass a harassing supervisor), prohibit retaliation for good-faith complaints, and identify the person responsible for receiving complaints.

The FMLA policy must be included by covered employers (50+ employees) and must inform employees of their right to up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for qualifying family and medical reasons, the notice procedures employees must follow, the certification requirements for medical leave, and the employee's rights upon return. The FMLA regulation at 29 C.F.R. § 825.300 specifies the content of required notices.

Leave policies must address all applicable paid and unpaid leave types: paid sick leave (required by California, New York, Illinois, Massachusetts, Washington, and many other states and localities), paid family leave (required by California, New York, New Jersey, Washington, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Colorado, Oregon, and others), state-specific pregnancy disability leave, bereavement leave, jury duty and witness leave, military leave under USERRA (38 U.S.C. § 4301 et seq.), and any additional leaves the employer offers.

The wage and hour policy must address the employer's pay periods, pay schedules, meal and rest break entitlements (with state-specific detail for California — 30-minute unpaid meal break for shifts over 5 hours, 10-minute paid rest break per 4 hours worked — and other states with mandatory break requirements), overtime eligibility for non-exempt employees under the FLSA (29 U.S.C. § 207), and procedures for reporting time worked.

The technology and electronic communications policy must address use of company devices and systems, personal use policies, monitoring and privacy notices (employees in several states, including Connecticut, Delaware, and New York, must receive written notice before electronic monitoring), social media use consistent with NLRA Section 7 protections, data security requirements, and prohibition on storing confidential information on personal devices or cloud accounts without authorization.

The progressive discipline policy should describe the employer's general approach to performance and conduct issues — verbal warning, written warning, performance improvement plan, suspension, and termination — while preserving the employer's discretion to bypass steps for serious misconduct. The policy must not create a promise that termination will only occur after all steps are exhausted, which would undermine at-will status.

The acknowledgment form is a standalone page that the employee signs separately, confirming receipt of the handbook, acknowledging that they are responsible for reading and complying with all policies, acknowledging the at-will employment disclaimer, and confirming that the handbook does not constitute a contract. The signed acknowledgment should be retained in the employee's personnel file.

Sources & Citations

Statutory citations link to official government sources.

  1. 524 U.S. 775 (1998)US – Justia
  2. 524 U.S. 742 (1998)US – Justia
  3. 29 U.S.C. § 2601US – Cornell LII
  4. 42 U.S.C. § 12101US – Cornell LII
  5. 42 U.S.C. § 2000eUS – Cornell LII
  6. 29 U.S.C. § 651US – Cornell LII
  7. 29 U.S.C. § 151US – Cornell LII
  8. 29 U.S.C. § 623US – Cornell LII
  9. 38 U.S.C. § 4301US – Cornell LII
  10. 29 U.S.C. § 207US – Cornell LII
  11. 29 C.F.R. § 825.300US – eCFR
  12. Americans with Disabilities ActUS – Cornell LII
  13. ADAUS – Cornell LII
  14. ADEAUS – Cornell LII
  15. Family and Medical Leave ActUS – Cornell LII
  16. FMLAUS – Cornell LII
  17. FLSAUS – Cornell LII
  18. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964US – Cornell LII
  19. Title VIIUS – Cornell LII

Cite this page

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

APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Employee Handbook (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/employment/hr-forms/employee-handbook

MLA

"Employee Handbook (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/employment/hr-forms/employee-handbook.

BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-employee-handbook,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Employee Handbook (United States)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/employment/hr-forms/employee-handbook}},
  note         = {Free legal document template. Based on Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. §201-219)}
}

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Frequently Asked Questions

Based on Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. §201-219) — Template last modified June 2026Verify the source →

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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