2024 EEO-1 data collection online portal now open
On May 20, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) opened the online reporting platform for employers to submit their 2024 EEO-1 data. The deadline for employers to file is June 24.
“As part of the EEOC’s efforts to identify continued cost savings for the American public, there will be a shorter collection period during which filers may submit their 2024 reports. The collection period will not extend beyond the Tuesday, June 24, 2025 ‘Published Due Date’ deadline,” EEOC Acting Chair Andrea Lucas said in a press release.
How does the EEOC use EEO-1 data?
EEO-1 statistics are used by the EEOC to investigate charges of employment discrimination against employers in private industry and to publish periodic reports on workforce demographics. Any reports the EEOC publishes based on EEO-1 data include only aggregated data that protect the confidentiality of each employer’s information, as well as the privacy of each employee’s personal information.
Who must comply?
Private employers with 100 or more employees and federal contractors with 50 or more employees that meet certain criteria must comply. They’re required to annually report demographic workforce data to the EEOC that includes the number of individuals employed broken down by:
- Race/ethnicity,
- Sex, and
- Job category.
Who is exempt?
The EEOC doesn’t collect workforce demographic data in this manor from:
- Local referral unions,
- State and local governments, and
- Public elementary and secondary school systems, or school districts.
Demographic data for these entities are collected through other EEOC data collections.
Workforce snapshot period
Workforce demographic data that gets collected must include all full-time and part-time employees who were employed during an employer-selected pay period (i.e., workforce snapshot period) in the fourth quarter of the reporting year, in this case any pay period between October 1 through December 31, 2024. Employers aren’t required to use the same workforce snapshot period that they selected in previous reporting cycles.
How should employers count remote workers?
Employees who work remotely must be included in an employer’s EEO-1 report by the specific establishment to which the employees report. Under no circumstances should an employee’s home address be reported on any EEO-1 submission or report, the EEOC says.
If a remote employee isn’t assigned to and doesn’t report to any physical location on a permanent basis, the employee should be counted at the establishment to which the employee’s manager reports or is assigned. If an employee doesn’t report to an establishment and the employee’s manager also doesn’t report to an establishment, the employee (and their manager) should be included on the employer’s “Headquarters Report.” If an employer operates entirely remotely and doesn’t have any physical locations, not even a headquarters office, the employer should report the address where the business is legally registered, for example, a Post Office Box in lieu of a physical address.
How should employers identify race and/or ethnicity information for the report?
Voluntary self-identification by employees is the preferred method of identifying the race and/or ethnicity information required for the EEO-1 report. Employers may:
- Offer employees the opportunity to self-identify.
- Provide a statement about the voluntary nature of this inquiry for employees.
If an employee declines to self-identify their race and/or ethnicity, employment records or observer identification may be used. Where records are maintained, they should be kept separately from the employee’s basic personnel file or other records available to those responsible for personnel decisions.
Reporting by sex
The EEO-1 data collection provides only binary options (i.e., male or female) for reporting employee counts by sex, job category, and race or ethnicity.
Lucas added a stern message to employers in her press release about the data collection, “As you report data on your employees’ race, ethnicity, and sex, I want to take this opportunity to remind you of your obligations under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 not to take any employment actions based on, or motivated in whole or in part by, an employee’s race, sex, or other protected characteristics. Title VII’s protections apply equally to all workers, regardless of their race or sex. Different treatment based on race, sex, or another protected characteristic can be unlawful discrimination, no matter which employees or applicants are harmed.”
Other resources
All updates about the 2024 EEO-1 data collection, including an instruction booklet, may be found online on the EEO-1 dedicated website.
Key to remember: Employers subject to EEO-1 reporting must submit their 2024 data online to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission between May 20 and June 24.