Key Employment Facts
When you hire in the United States, the absence of federal mandates for paid leave, sick pay and health insurance creates a system where benefits are largely employer-defined. This makes hiring in the US uniquely flexible but also uniquely complex, as state laws fill the gaps with varying requirements.
| Key Employment Facts |
| Federal Minimum Wage |
$7.25/hour (unchanged since 2009; 30+ states set higher rates) |
| Probation Period |
No statutory concept (at-will employment) |
| Standard Working Hours |
40 hours/week (overtime at 1.5x after 40 hours under FLSA) |
| Paid Annual Leave |
No federal mandate (average: 10-15 days by employer policy) |
| Notice Period |
No federal requirement (WARN Act: 60 days for mass layoffs of 100+) |
| 13th Salary |
Not statutory |
| Sick Leave |
No federal mandate (15+ states and many cities require paid sick leave) |
| Maternity Leave |
FMLA: 12 weeks unpaid (employers with 50+ employees); 13 states + DC have paid programmes |
| Paternity Leave |
Same FMLA entitlement as maternity (12 weeks unpaid); paid in states with PFML |
Good to Know: The United States is the only OECD country with no federal paid maternity leave. In practice, competitive employers offer 10-20 days PTO, employer-sponsored health insurance, 401(k) retirement plans with employer match (typically 3-6% of salary), and short/long-term disability insurance. These voluntary benefits add 20-30% to base salary cost and are expected by professional workers. States with mandatory paid family and medical leave include California, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Washington, Connecticut, Oregon, Colorado, Maryland, Delaware, Minnesota, Maine, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia. Each has different contribution rates, benefit durations and eligibility rules.