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Minnesota ESST employee notice and paid leave premium changes
2025-06-19T05:00:00Z
Effective date: January 1, 2026
This applies to: Employers with employees in Minnesota
Description of change: On June 14, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz signed SF17 as part of the state’s two-year budget. The measure included some changes to the state’s Earned Sick and Safe Time (ESST) and paid leave.
Earned Sick and Safe Time
- Currently, employees must give notice of the need for leave as soon as practicable. This will change to require employees to give notice as reasonably required by the employer.
- Currently, employers may require reasonable documentation supporting the need for ESST when an employee takes leave for more than three consecutive scheduled workdays. This will change to only two days.
- While employers may not require employees to find a replacement worker to cover the hours the employee uses as ESST, employees will be allowed to voluntarily do so.
- Employers will be allowed to advance ESST to employees based on the number of hours they are anticipated to work for the remaining portion of an accrual year. If the advanced amount is less than the amount the employees would have accrued based on the actual hours worked, employers must provide additional ESST to make up the difference.
Paid leave
The maximum annual premium rate will change from 1.2 percent of taxable wages paid to each employee to 1.1 percent of taxable wages paid to each employee.
View related state info: FMLA - Minnesota





















































