New Hampshire enacts new leave law
Effective date: January 1, 2026
This applies to: Employers with 20 or more employees
Description of change: On June 27, 2025, Governor Kelly Ayotte signed HB2, a budget bill “relative to state fees, funds, revenues, and expenditures.” Despite its title, hidden in this bill were new employee leave provisions.
Starting January 1, 2026, New Hampshire employers with 20 or more employees must give employees up to 25 hours of unpaid, job-protected leave from work to attend:
- Their own medical appointments for childbirth or postpartum care; or
- Their child’s pediatric medical appointments within the first year of the child’s birth or adoption.
If both parents of the child work for the same employer, employers may require the parents to “share the leave.” This means the two employees may collectively take a total of 25 hours of unpaid leave in that first year.
Employees are entitled to use any accrued vacation or other appropriate paid leave when absent.
Employees must provide reasonable advance notice to the employer of their need for leave. Employees must also make a reasonable effort to schedule the leave so as not to unduly disrupt the employer’s operations.
Employers may ask employees for documentation that demonstrates that leave is being used for a qualifying reason. The law does not, however, provide any details on what type of documentation may be sufficient or requested.
View related state info: FMLA – New Hampshire




















































