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LeaveRights Project
All State Laws

Ohio

Verified February 2026

Ohio Civil Rights Act

Ohio Rev. Code §§ 4112.01–4112.99

Federal + State Anti-Discrimination
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Ohio does not have a comprehensive state leave law. Workers rely primarily on federal FMLA and ADA protections. Below you'll find state-specific anti-discrimination protections and resources.
Overview

Ohio does not have a state-level family or medical leave law that supplements the federal FMLA. For most employees, the right to unpaid, job-protected leave for serious health conditions or caregiving relies entirely on the federal Family and Medical Leave Act. To qualify, you must work for an employer with 50+ employees and have worked there for at least 12 months and 1,250 hours.

Ohio provides significantly broader anti-discrimination protection through the Ohio Civil Rights Act (Chapter 4112). The law covers employers with just 4 or more employees, well below the federal ADA threshold of 15. This means more Ohio workers have state-level protection against disability discrimination, including the right to reasonable accommodations for mental health conditions and other disabilities.

The Ohio Civil Rights Commission (OCRC) enforces the state's anti-discrimination laws and investigates complaints. Ohio also has a notable local protection: the city of Columbus enacted a paid sick leave ordinance in 2023, though enforcement and implementation details continue to develop. Workers' compensation in Ohio covers mental health injuries, but "mental-mental" claims (psychological injury without physical injury) generally require proof of a sudden, traumatic workplace event rather than cumulative stress.

Even without a state leave law, Ohio workers benefit from a strong anti-discrimination framework through the Ohio Civil Rights Act, combined with federal FMLA, the ADA, and evolving local protections. The low employer threshold of 4 employees means significantly more workers are covered than under federal law alone.

Eligibility

Employer Size

4+ employees

Leave Duration

N/A (no state leave law)

Paid Leave

Unpaid (job-protected)

How State and Federal Protections Compare

Leave: Ohio does not have a state family or medical leave law. Federal FMLA is the primary source of job-protected leave.

Anti-Discrimination: The Ohio Civil Rights Act covers employers with 4 or more employees, significantly lower than the federal ADA threshold of 15. Ohio also allows a longer filing deadline of up to 2 years for state discrimination claims.

Additional Protections

Ohio Civil Rights Act

Prohibits employment discrimination based on disability and other protected classes for employers with 4+ employees. Provides broader coverage than the federal ADA threshold of 15 employees.

Ohio Rev. Code § 4112.02

Columbus Paid Sick Leave

The city of Columbus enacted a paid sick leave ordinance in 2023 requiring employers to provide earned sick time to employees working within city limits. Covers physical and mental health needs.

Columbus City Code Ch. 2329

Workers' Compensation - Mental Health Coverage

Ohio workers' compensation covers mental injuries, but mental-mental claims (psychological injury without physical injury) generally require proof of a sudden, traumatic workplace event rather than cumulative stress.

Ohio Rev. Code § 4123.01

How to Exercise Your Rights

1. Request FMLA Leave (Federal)

Since Ohio has no state leave law, eligible employees follow federal FMLA procedures:

  • Notify your employer at least 30 days in advance for foreseeable leave.
  • If leave is unforeseeable, notify as soon as possible (usually same or next business day).
  • Follow your employer’s usual notice procedures for requesting leave.
  • Provide medical certification if requested (usually within 15 days).

2. File a Disability Discrimination Complaint

  • Verify your employer has 4+ employees and the incident is within 2 years.
  • File a charge with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission online, by phone, or at a regional office.
  • OCRC will investigate the complaint and attempt mediation or conciliation.
  • If no resolution is reached, OCRC may hold a public hearing or issue a right-to-sue letter.

Note: Filing with OCRC automatically cross-files with the federal EEOC through a work-sharing agreement.

Important Deadlines

  • 30 days - FMLA advance notice for foreseeable leave
  • 2 years - Deadline to file a discrimination charge with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission
  • 300 days - Deadline to file with the federal EEOC (extended because OCRC exists as a local agency)
  • 1 year - Deadline to file a workers' compensation claim
  • 7 days - Recommended timeframe for reporting a workplace injury to employer (required for prompt processing)

Official Resources

Full Statute Text

Read the complete text of the law

Ohio Civil Rights Commission (OCRC)

Enforces the Ohio Civil Rights Act and investigates employment discrimination complaints across the state.

888-278-7101

Ohio Department of Commerce - Bureau of Workers' Compensation

Administers workers' compensation claims and workplace safety programs in Ohio.

800-644-6292

Disability Rights Ohio

Federally designated legal protection and advocacy agency for people with disabilities in Ohio.

800-282-9181

U.S. DOL Wage and Hour Division - Ohio Offices

Enforces federal labor laws including the FMLA for workers in Ohio.

866-487-9243

Frequently Asked Questions

Check Your Eligibility

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