
If you suspect you’re earning less than coworkers doing the same job, you may be right – and California law gives you real tools to do something about it. Pay discrimination happens when employers pay women, people of color, nonbinary employees, or other protected groups less than colleagues for substantially similar work.
You don’t need to have proof before you act. You need to know what to look for and what to do next. Kramer Brown Hui LLP represents California workers in pay discrimination cases and offers free consultations.
Not sure if what you’re experiencing qualifies? Contact Kramer Brown Hui LLP for a free, confidential consultation.
Pay discrimination under California’s Equal Pay Act means your employer pays you less than someone performing substantially similar work – based on a protected characteristic. California’s protections exceed federal standards. You don’t need the same job title as the person earning more.
The substantially similar standard covers three factors:
Work performed under similar conditions across different locations at the same employer can still be compared.
Protected characteristics under California law:
What compensation is covered:
Everything, not just your salary. California law covers base pay, bonuses, stock and stock options, overtime, profit sharing, vacation and holiday pay, benefits, and travel reimbursements.
Strong documentation is the foundation of a pay discrimination case. Start building your record before you file anything.
What to gather:
Once you have documentation, an employment attorney can evaluate what you have and help you identify gaps. Kramer Brown Hui LLP offers free consultations to walk through your situation.
Kramer Brown Hui LLP is a Los Angeles employment law firm representing California workers in pay discrimination, wrongful termination, harassment, and wage and hour cases. The firm’s attorneys have been recognized as Super Lawyers and include partners selected to the Top 100 Southern California Super Lawyers and Top 50 Women Attorneys of Southern California lists. The firm takes a collaborative approach – every case is reviewed by multiple attorneys to build the strongest possible strategy.
If you believe you’re being underpaid because of your sex, race, ethnicity, or another protected characteristic, schedule a free consultation to understand your options.
You need to show four things: (1) you perform substantially similar work to a higher-paid colleague, (2) there’s a pay gap, (3) you belong to a protected class, and (4) the employer’s stated reason for the gap is pretextual. Protected wage discussions under California Labor Code Section 232 are a legitimate way to gather the salary comparisons you need.
The clearest signs are pay gaps among people in California doing substantially similar work, salary secrecy enforced by your employer, lower pay after protected leave, and being passed over for raises despite strong performance – when those patterns track a protected characteristic like gender or race.
You have three years from the date of the discriminatory act to file with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD) under FEHA. The federal EEOC deadline is 300 days. Missing these deadlines can permanently bar your claim, so don’t wait.
No. California Labor Code Section 232 and the Fair Pay Act both prohibit retaliation for discussing, disclosing, or inquiring about wages – your own or a coworker’s. If you’ve been disciplined or threatened for asking about pay, that retaliation may be its own legal claim.
Pay discrimination is easier to fix the earlier you act in Los Angeles. Back pay, pay adjustments, and damages are all possible remedies – but the longer a gap continues, the harder it becomes to recover what you’ve lost.
If the patterns in your workplace don’t add up, trust that instinct. Contact our firm today for a free consultation and find out what your options actually are.
California Wage & Hour Resources:
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