Understanding Your Rights Under CFRA & Family Medical Leave in California
If you're a California-based employee navigating health or family caregiving challenges, it's important to understand one of your key protections: the California Family Rights Act (CFRA).
At Chami Law, we help employees evaluate and enforce their rights, especially in cases of leave denial, retaliation, discrimination, or interference. This article explains what CFRA is, when it applies, how you identify violations, and when you may want to seek legal guidance.
What is CFRA?
The California Family Rights Act is a state law that provides eligible employees the right to up to 12 workweeks of job‐protected, unpaid leave in a 12-month period for qualifying reasons.
Key aspects:
- It covers caring for your own serious health condition, caring for a family member with a serious health condition, or bonding with a new child (birth, adoption, foster care).
- It is similar in many ways to the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) but with some important differences.
- Under CFRA, the employer must continue the employee's group health plan benefits under the same conditions as if the employee had not taken leave.
Who is eligible & when does CFRA apply?
To qualify for CFRA leave under California law, you must meet certain eligibility requirements:
- You must have worked for the employer for at least 12 months.
- You must have worked at least 1,250 hours in the 12-month period immediately preceding the leave.
- Your employer must be a "covered employer." In California, that means an employer with five or more employees in many cases.
- The reason for the leave must be a qualifying reason: e.g., your own serious health condition, a qualified family member's serious health condition, a new child bonding, etc.
What counts as a serious health condition?
A "serious health condition" under CFRA is defined similar to FMLA: an illness, injury, impairment, or physical or mental condition that involves inpatient care or continuing treatment by a health care provider.
Bonding Leave and "Designated Person"
Under recent changes, CFRA allows leave to care for a "designated person" - someone the employee names who has a serious health condition and who is related by blood or whose association with the employee is equivalent to a family relationship.
What rights do you have during leave?
Once you're eligible and the leave qualifies under CFRA, here are key protections you should know:
- Job protection & reinstatement: Your employer must reinstate you to your same or a comparable position when you return from leave.
- Health benefits continuation: Your group health insurance must be maintained under the same terms while you're on leave (up to 12 workweeks).
- Intermittent or reduced schedule: If medically necessary, you may take leave intermittently or on a reduced schedule.
- Notice requirements: If the leave is foreseeable (like planned surgery or birth), you should give your employer at least 30 days' notice.
- Use of paid leave: While CFRA leave is unpaid by the employer, you may choose (or be required) to use accrued paid leave (sick, vacation) during your CFRA leave, depending on your employer's policies.
What are potential violations and how to identify them?
It's important to recognize when your rights under CFRA may have been violated. Some red flags include:
- Refusing to grant eligible leave: If you are eligible under the criteria and your employer denies your request for leave or fails to grant it.
- Failure to reinstate after leave: If you take CFRA leave and then your employer refuses to return you to your job (or a comparable job) when you come back.
- Health benefits dropped or changed: If your employer fails to maintain your group health plan coverage during your leave.
- Retaliation or discrimination: If your employer takes adverse action (demotion, reduction of hours, termination) because you took or attempted to take CFRA leave.
- Incorrect eligibility or misclassification: If employer claims you aren't eligible though you meet criteria (12 months, 1,250 hours, employer size) or misinterprets who qualifies.
If any of the above occur, you may have a legal claim. For example, you might file a complaint with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD).
How to protect yourself and document your rights
Here are best practices for employees to protect their rights under CFRA:
- Document your eligibility: Keep records of your start date, hours worked, pay stubs, and employer size (number of employees) to show you meet the eligibility requirements.
- Provide clear notice: Even if your employer has forms, it's wise to give written notice (email or letter) that you believe you qualify under CFRA and state the reason and approximate timing. You don't have to use the words "CFRA" but you should clearly indicate the need for leave.Follow your employer’s internal procedures. Report the issue to HR in writing and keep copies. If HR is the problem, escalate to the next manager and document that you tried to resolve it internally.
- Follow employer's certification procedures: If asked, you may need to provide reasonable medical certification. But your employer cannot demand unnecessary details beyond what the law allows.
- Track your leave: Note the dates the leave begins, ends, any intermittent use, and whether you get reinstated to your job.
- Keep communications: Save emails, letters, memos about your leave request, employer responses, and any notes about conversations.
- Seek confidentiality if needed: If you are concerned about retaliation, avoid being the sole one to approach - you might consult legal counsel early to ensure your rights are protected.
- Know your fallback options: If you cannot work due to serious health condition, you may also have rights under other laws (e.g., disability/accommodation under the California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA)).
When should you consult legal counsel?
You should consider reaching out to an employment law attorney - such as Chami Law - if any of the following apply:
- Your employer denied your request for CFRA leave without a valid basis.
- You took CFRA‐qualifying leave and upon return your job or benefits were changed, removed, or you were demoted or fired.
- You believe you were retaliated against for exercising your CFRA rights.
- Your employer is creating obstacles (e.g., improper certification demands, refusal to maintain health benefit coverage, refusing intermittent leave) and you're unsure how to proceed.
- You want to understand how CFRA interacts with other leave laws (such as pregnancy disability leave, PFL, state disability) and how to maximize job protection and benefits.
At Chami Law, we offer no-obligation consultations to evaluate your situation, explain your rights, and guide you on potential next steps.
Final Thoughts - You Don’t Have to Navigate this Alone
Understanding your rights under CFRA is a key part of safeguarding your employment stability during times of serious health issues or family caregiving responsibilities. Many employees feel unsure, overwhelmed, or intimidated - but you don't have to navigate this alone.
If you're in California and believe you may qualify for CFRA leave - or are facing pushback from your employer - reach out to Chami Law. Our team is here to help guide you through evaluating your options, identifying potential violations, advising on documentation and timing, and supporting you in pursuing the best outcome.
We invite you to
contact us for more information and to schedule a consultation.











