Michigan
Verified March 2026Michigan Earned Sick Time Act
MCL §§ 408.961-408.974 (Act 338 of 2018, as amended)
Michigan's Earned Sick Time Act (ESTA), effective February 21, 2025 (replacing the voided Earned Sick Time Act after the Michigan Supreme Court's July 2024 ruling in Mothering Justice v. Attorney General), requires all employers to provide paid sick time. Employees accrue at least 1 hour of paid leave for every 30 hours worked. Large employers (11 or more employees) must allow use of up to 72 hours per year; small employers (10 or fewer) may cap usage at 40 hours per year. Small employers had until October 1, 2025 to comply. Employers may require new employees to wait 120 calendar days before using accrued time. Employers may frontload the full amount (72 or 40 hours) at the start of the benefit year.
Covered uses include the employee's own mental or physical illness, medical diagnosis, treatment, or preventive care, a family member's health needs, and needs related to domestic violence or sexual assault (including medical care, counseling, relocation, legal services, or related proceedings). Employers may request documentation for absences of more than 3 consecutive days but must pay any out-of-pocket documentation costs.
Michigan does not currently have a comprehensive paid family and medical leave insurance (PFMLI) program. For extended medical leave needs, eligible workers rely on the federal FMLA (12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for employers with 50+ employees).
Michigan provides exceptionally strong disability protections through the Persons with Disabilities Civil Rights Act (PWDCRA), which covers employers with 1 or more employees, one of the broadest thresholds in the nation. The PWDCRA explicitly includes mental health conditions as protected disabilities and requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations. The Michigan Department of Civil Rights (MDCR) investigates discrimination complaints.
Employer Size
1+ employees
Leave Duration
72 hours accrued
Paid Leave
Yes
Additional Protections
Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act
Prohibits employment discrimination based on religion, race, color, national origin, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, height, weight, familial status, and marital status. Updated in 2023 (effective March 2024) to add sexual orientation and gender identity protections.
MCL 37.2101 et seq.
Workers' Compensation - Mental Health
Michigan workers' compensation covers mental disabilities arising from work-related injuries or conditions. Claims for purely mental-mental injuries have specific requirements.
MCL 418.301
1. Request Earned Sick Time from Your Employer
- Notify your employer of your need for leave. If foreseeable, provide notice as early as possible.
- Leave can be used for your own health needs (including mental health) or a family member's health needs.
- Your employer may require documentation for absences of 3 or more consecutive days.
2. File a Complaint for Leave Violations
- Visit the Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity website.
- File a complaint if your employer denies paid medical leave, retaliates against you, or fails to comply with the Earned Sick Time Act.
- Include documentation of your leave request and your employer's response.
3. File a Discrimination Complaint
- Visit the Michigan Department of Civil Rights website.
- File within 180 days of the discriminatory act.
- Complete the complaint form detailing the discrimination or retaliation related to your disability or mental health condition.
Important Deadlines
- As soon as possible - Notify your employer of foreseeable paid medical leave as early as possible
- 3 days - Employer may require documentation for absences of 3 or more consecutive days
- 180 days - Deadline to file a discrimination complaint with the Michigan Department of Civil Rights
- 300 days - Deadline to file a charge with the federal EEOC
Official Resources
Frequently Asked Questions
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