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Deadline: October 1, 2025


What’s happening by October 1, 2025

  • Under Michigan law, small businesses (10 or fewer employees) must begin complying with ESTA as of October 1, 2025.
  • Until that date, small employers have some transitional relief: they are not yet required to accrue, track, or provide paid sick time under the small-employer rules.
  • As of October 1, small employers must provide at least 40 hours of paid earned sick time per year, either via accrual or via frontloading.
  • Under the accrual model, employees accrue 1 hour of earned sick time per 30 hours worked.
  • Employers may cap how much paid sick time an employee can use in a year (for small employers, up to 40 hours unless the employer opts for a higher amount).
  • Employers also must comply with notice, documentation, and anti-retaliation requirements as set by the law.
  • Some substantive changes were adopted in HB 4002 (effective Feb 21, 2025) to clarify and moderate the original ESTA mandate.

What’s changed or clarified under the 2025 amendments

TopicKey Provision / Change
Small-employer relief periodSmall businesses are exempt from ESTA accrual, tracking, or providing paid sick leave until October 1, 2025.
Cap for small employers40 hours per “year” for use (unless employer opts for more).
Carryover / frontloadingEmployers may choose to frontload and thereby relieve themselves of accrual tracking; frontloaded hours need not carry over; unused time with accrual may carry over up to 40 hours for small employers.
Waiting period for new hiresEmployers may impose a 120-day waiting period before use for new employees (unless sick time is frontloaded).
Documentation & notice rulesFor leave spanning more than 3 consecutive days, employers may request reasonable documentation within 15 days. For foreseeable absences, employers may require up to 7 days advance notice; for unforeseeable, as soon as practicable or under policy.
Anti-retaliation & enforcement changesThe amendments removed some of the stronger prescriptive enforcement tools (such as rebuttable presumptions) and removed employees’ private right of action, replacing them with civil fines.

Key steps small employers should take now

  1. Audit your headcount to confirm 1–10 employees.
  2. Decide whether you’ll use accrual or frontloading.
  3. Update policies and employee handbooks.
  4. Provide notices and post the required state poster.
  5. Update payroll or HR systems.
  6. Train managers and supervisors on compliance and retaliation rules.
  7. Prepare for enforcement after October 1, 2025.

Need more information? Please contact LRCC SVP of Public Affairs Steve Japinga at sjapinga@lansingchamber.org.