EEOC votes to rescind harassment guidance document
On January 22, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) voted 2 to 1 to rescind the latest version of its guidance on harassment in the workplace. The commission acted without any notice or comment period.
Approved in 2024, the nearly 200-page guidance document described how harassment based on protected characteristics — such as race, sex, religion, age, and disability — is defined under federal law. It included more than 70 examples of situations employers might encounter in the workplace.
Guidance updated in 2024, edited in 2025
While most of the information in the 2024 guidance wasn't new, one addition was a section on gender identity and sexual orientation. Citing the 2020 Supreme Court decision Bostock vs. Clayton County and other cases, the added guidance included examples of prohibited conduct, such as repeated and intentional use of a name or pronoun the individual no longer uses, and denial of access to a bathroom consistent with their gender identity.
That section of the 2024 guidance was vacated in May 2025 by a federal court in Texas. The court held that the EEOC had exceeded its authority “by issuing Enforcement Guidance requiring bathroom, dress, and pronoun accommodations inconsistent with the text, history, and tradition of Title VII and recent Supreme Court precedent.” Shortly after, a notice was added to the guidance online, and paragraphs were greyed out on the website.
What happens next
The repeal of the guidance doesn’t have a legal effect. The guidance was a non-binding document. The EEOC cannot determine that any given conduct is lawful or unlawful under Title VII — that determination is made by the courts.
With respect to LGBTQ issues, the Bostock decision remains the law of the land. Thus, Title VII protects against discrimination because of sexual orientation and gender identity. When it decided Bostock, however, the Supreme Court expressly noted that it was not “addressing bathrooms, locker rooms, or anything else of the kind” and that those were “questions for future cases.” Since Bostock, courts have come to differing conclusions as to the scope of the case’s application and protections.
Many state and local laws and ordinances expressly prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, regardless of how the EEOC views the scope of federal law. These state and local laws remain in full force.
Employers should know that even if the EEOC doesn’t pursue a claim of discrimination or makes a no-cause determination, an employee who feels they were discriminated against can file a civil lawsuit on their own behalf.
Key to remember: The EEOC voted on January 22 to rescind its detailed guidance document on harassment in the workplace. Despite the withdrawal of the EEOC’s guidance, employers should continue to ensure that their workplaces are free of unlawful discrimination and be especially mindful of state and local law considerations.
















































