FMLA: Not all employees get 480 hours of leave
The federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) entitles eligible employees to up to 12 workweeks of FMLA leave in a 12-month leave year period. Not all 12 workweeks, however, look the same.
Only if an employee normally works 40 hours per week does the 12 workweeks result in 480 hours of leave. If an employee normally works 36 hours per week, however, that equates to only 360 hours of FMLA leave. On the flip side, if an employee normally works 50 hours per week, that equates to 600 hours of FMLA leave.
On the surface, this might look like some employees get more FMLA leave than others. They don’t.
When employees take FMLA leave intermittently or on a reduced schedule, versus continuous leave for weeks at a time, employers look at how many hours of FMLA leave employees get. In other words, employers need to figure out how many intermittent FMLA leave hours is in an employee’s “bucket.”
Look at the hours worked, not scheduled
Many employees are scheduled to work only 40 hours per week but end up normally working more. To determine the FMLA workweek, employers should focus on the hours worked, not the hours employees were scheduled to work. The actual (as opposed to scheduled) workweek is the basis of an employee’s allotted leave.
Otherwise, employers could simply say all eligible employees get 480 hours, regardless of what their actual workweeks look like. But this isn’t how the law works.
Counting leave
If an employee is taking FMLA leave in full workweeks, employers may simply count the weeks. They don’t need worry about how many hours that equates to since it’s straight workweeks of leave versus intermittent. An employee, for example, who begins 12 weeks of continuous leave on July 22, 2024, would exhaust the 12 weeks of FMLA leave on October 14, 2024 — pretty straightforward.
When an employee takes FMLA leave in less than full weeks, that’s when things get trickier. Employers must count only the amount of leave taken against their allotted 12 weeks. If, therefore, an employee who would otherwise work 40 hours a week takes off eight hours, the employee would use one-fifth of a week of FMLA leave. On the other hand, if an employee would normally work 48 hours, and the employee takes off eight hours, the employee would use one-sixth of a week of FMLA leave.
Varying schedules
If an employee's schedule varies from week to week making it hard for employers to determine how many hours an employee would otherwise have worked, employers would use a weekly average of the hours scheduled over the 12 months prior to the beginning of the leave (including any hours for which the employee took leave of any type) to calculate the employee's leave entitlement.
Key to remember: Some employees get more or less than 480 hours of FMLA leave, depending on their actual workweek.