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Arizona law

Employment Laws in Arizona.

Arizona protects the standard federal classes (race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, disability) but does not add state-specific expansions like sexual orientation or gender identity. The 2026 minimum wage is $15.15/hour, adjusted annually by CPI. Arizona has no state overtime law — federal FLSA rules apply. The Employment Protection Act codifies at-will employment with specific exceptions including whistleblower retaliation.

Last verified: 2026-02-25

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State law

Key Arizona Statutes

Employment Discrimination (ACRD)A.R.S. § 41-1463

Prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, and disability. Enforced by the Arizona Attorney General's Civil Rights Division (ACRD). Complaints must be filed within 180 days.

Minimum WageA.R.S. § 23-363

The 2026 minimum wage is $15.15/hour (up from $14.70 in 2025), adjusted annually by CPI. Tipped employees may be paid up to $3/hour less if tips bring total to minimum wage. Established by Proposition 206 (Fair Wages and Healthy Families Act).

Earned Paid Sick TimeA.R.S. § 23-372

Employers with 15+ employees: 40 hours/year accrual (1 hour per 30 hours worked). Employers with fewer than 15 employees: 24 hours/year. Part of Proposition 206.

Employment Protection Act (At-Will Exceptions)A.R.S. § 23-1501

Arizona codifies at-will employment with specific exceptions: breach of written employment contract, termination violating Arizona statute, retaliatory discharge for refusing to commit an illegal act or disclosing employer's legal violations, and exercise of workers' compensation rights or jury service.

Public Employee Whistleblower ProtectionA.R.S. § 38-532

Public employees are protected from reprisal for disclosing violations of law, mismanagement, gross waste, or abuse of authority. Penalties include up to $10,000 civil penalty, mandatory dismissal of the retaliator, and full remedies for the whistleblower.

State law

Official Sources

Not Legal Advice

This page summarizes publicly available statutes and rules for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by viewing this content. Laws change — always verify with the primary source or consult a licensed attorney in Arizona.

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