the Family and
Medical Leave Act
the Family and
Medical Leave Act
The Employee’s Guide to
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Who Can Use FMLA Leave?
When Can I Use FMLA Leave?
What Can the FMLA Do for Me?
How Do I Request FMLA Leave?
Communication with Your Employer
Medical Certication
Returning to Work
How to File a Complaint
Website Resources
This Guide Explains:
An Introduction to the Family
and Medical Leave Act
When you or a loved one experiences a serious health condition
that requires you to take time o from work, the stress from
worrying about keeping your job may add to an already dicult
situation.
The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) may be able to help.
Whether you are unable to work because of your own serious
health condition, or because you need to care for your parent,
spouse, or child with a serious health condition, the FMLA
provides unpaid, job-protected leave. Leave may be taken all at
once, or may be taken intermittently as the medical condition
requires.
This guide provides a simple overview of how the FMLA may
benet you. In your time of need, sometimes you just need time.
2 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
Who Can Use FMLA Leave?
In order to take FMLA leave, you must rst work for a covered
employer. Generally, private employers with at least 50 employees
are covered by the law. Private employers with fewer than 50
employees are not covered by the FMLA, but may be covered
by state family and medical leave laws. Government agencies
(including local, state and federal employers) and elementary and
secondary schools are covered by the FMLA, regardless of the
number of employees.
If you work for a covered employer, you need to meet additional
criteria to be eligible to take FMLA leave. Not everyone who works
for a covered employer is eligible.
First, you must have worked for your employer for at least 12
months. You do not have to have worked for 12 months in a row (so
seasonal work counts), but generally if you have a break in service
that lasted more than seven years, you cannot count the period of
employment prior to the seven-year break.
Second, you must have worked for the employer for at least 1250
hours in the 12 months before you take leave. That works out to an
average of about 24 hours per week over the course of a year.
Lastly, you must work at a location where the employer has at least
50 employees within 75 miles of your worksite. So even if your
employer has more than 50 employees, if they are spread out and
there are not 50 employees within 75 miles of where you work, you
will not be eligible to take FMLA leave.
Airline Flight Attendants/Flight Crew Employees
Due to non-traditional work schedules, airline ight attendants and
ight crew members are subject to special eligibility requirements
under the FMLA. You meet the hours of work requirement if, during
the 12 months prior to your need for leave, you have worked or
been paid for at least 60% of your applicable monthly guarantee,
and have worked or been paid for at least 504 hours, not including
personal commute time, or time spent on vacation, medical or sick
leave.
YES
NO
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 3
YES
YES
YES
AND
Your employer is not
covered by the FMLA
and does not have to
oer FMLA leave
Your employer
is covered by the
FMLA
I have worked for
my employer for at
least 12 months
I have worked for
my employer for at
least 1250 hours in
the last 12 months
You are eligible for
FMLA leave
My employer has
50 or more
employees within 75
miles of my jobsite
You are not eligible
for FMLA leave
You are not eligible
for FMLA leave
You are not eligible
for FMLA leave
NO
NO
NO
I work for an employer who has 50 or more employees
OR
I work for a public agency, elementary, or secondary school
Am I Eligible for FMLA Leave?
4 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
When Can I Use FMLA Leave?
If you work for an employer that is covered by the FMLA, and you
are an eligible employee, you can take up to 12 weeks of FMLA leave
in any 12-month period for a variety of reasons, including:
Serious Health Condition
You may take FMLA leave to care for your spouse, child or parent
who has a serious health condition, or when you are unable to work
because of your own serious health condition.
The most common serious health conditions that qualify for FMLA
leave are:
1) conditions requiring an overnight stay in a hospital or other
medical care facility;
2) conditions that incapacitate you or your family member (for
example, unable to work or attend school) for more than three
consecutive days and require ongoing medical treatment
(either multiple appointments with a health care provider, or
a single appointment and follow-up care such as prescription
medication);
3) chronic conditions that cause occasional periods when you or
your family member are incapacitated and require treatment
by a health care provider at least twice a year; and
4) pregnancy (including prenatal medical appointments,
incapacity due to morning sickness, and medically required
bed rest).
Military Family Leave
The FMLA also provides certain military family leave entitlements.
You may take FMLA leave for specied reasons related to certain
military deployments. Additionally, you may take up to 26 weeks
of FMLA leave in a single 12-month period to care for a covered
servicemember with a serious injury or illness.
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 5
Expanding Your Family
You may take FMLA leave for the birth of a child and to bond with
the newborn child, or for the placement of a child for adoption or
foster care and to bond with that child. Men and women have the
same right to take FMLA leave to bond with their child but it must
be taken within one year of the child’s birth or placement and must
be taken as a continuous block of leave unless the employer agrees
to allow intermittent leave (for example, a part-time schedule).
Parent
Parent means a biological, adoptive, step or foster father or
mother, or any other individual who stood in loco parentis to the
employee when the employee was a child. This term does not
include parents-in-law.
Son or Daughter
Son or daughter (or child) means a biological, adopted, or foster
child, stepchild, legal ward, or child of a person standing in
loco parentis, who is either under age 18, or age 18 or older
and “incapable of self-care because of a mental or physical
disability” at the time that FMLA leave is to commence.
Spouse
Spouse means a husband or wife as dened or recognized in the
state where the individual was married and includes individuals
in a common law marriage or same-sex marriage.
In Loco Parentis
A person stands in loco parentis if that person provides day-
to-day care or nancial support for a child. Employees with
no biological or legal relationship to a child can stand in loco
parentis to that child, and are entitled to FMLA leave (for
example, an uncle who cares for his sister’s children while she
serves on active military duty, or a person who is co-parenting
a child with his or her same-sex partner). Also, an eligible
employee is entitled to FMLA leave to care for a person who
stood in loco parentis to that employee when the employee was
a child. (See Administrators Interpretation No. 2010-3 and Fact
Sheets 28B and C.)
6 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
What Can the FMLA
Do for Me?
If you are faced with a health condition that causes you to miss
work, whether it is because of your own serious health condition
or to care for a family member with a serious health condition, you
may be able to take up to 12 weeks of job-protected time o under
the FMLA.
If you take FMLA leave, your employer must continue your health
insurance as if you were not on leave (you may be required to
continue to make any normal employee contributions).
As long as you are able to return to work before you exhaust your
FMLA leave, you must be returned to the same job (or one nearly
identical to it). This job protection is intended to reduce the stress
that you may otherwise feel if forced to choose between work and
family during a serious medical situation.
Time o under the FMLA may not be held against you in
employment actions such as hiring, promotions or discipline.
You can take FMLA leave as either a single block of time (for
example, three weeks of leave for surgery and recovery) or in
multiple, smaller blocks of time if medically necessary (for example,
occasional absences due to diabetes). You can also take leave on a
part-time basis if medically necessary (for example, if after surgery
you are able to return to work only four hours a day or three days a
week for a period of time). If you need multiple periods of leave for
planned medical treatment such as physical therapy appointments,
you must try to schedule the treatment at a time that minimizes the
disruption to your employer.
FMLA leave is unpaid leave. However, if you have sick time, vacation
time, personal time, etc., saved up with your employer, you may use
that leave time, along with your FMLA leave so that you continue
to get paid. In order to use such leave, you must follow your
employer’s normal leave rules such as submitting a leave form or
providing advance notice. Even if you dont want to use your paid
leave, your employer can require you to use it during your FMLA
leave. For example, if you are out for one week recovering from
surgery, and you have two weeks of paid vacation saved up, your
employer can require you to use one week of your vacation time
for your FMLA leave. When you use paid leave for an FMLA-covered
reason (whether at your request or your employer’s), your leave
time is still protected by the FMLA.
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 7
How Do I Request
FMLA Leave?
To take FMLA leave, you must provide your employer with
appropriate notice. If you know in advance that you will need FMLA
leave (for example, if you are planning to have surgery or you are
pregnant), you must give your employer at least 30 days advance
notice. If you learn of your need for leave less than 30 days in
advance, you must give your employer notice as soon as you can
(generally either the day you learn of the need or the next work
day). When you need FMLA leave unexpectedly (for example, if a
family member is injured in an accident), you MUST inform your
employer as soon as you can. You must follow your employer’s
usual notice or call-in procedures unless you are unable to do so
(for example, if you are receiving emergency medical care).
While you do not have to specically ask for FMLA leave for your
rst leave request, you do need to provide enough information
so your employer is aware it may be covered by the FMLA. Once
a condition has been approved for FMLA leave and you need
additional leave for that condition (for example recurring migraines
or physical therapy appointments), your request must mention
that condition or your need for FMLA leave. If you don’t give your
employer enough information to know that your leave may be
covered by the FMLA, your leave may not be protected.
You do not have to tell your employer your diagnosis, but you do
need to provide information indicating that your leave is due to an
FMLA-protected condition (for example, stating that you have been
to the doctor and have been given antibiotics and told to stay home
for four days).
8 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
Communication
with Your Employer
Ongoing communication between you and your employer will
make the FMLA process run much more smoothly. Each of you has
to follow guidelines about notifying the other when FMLA leave is
being used.
You will need to inform your employer if your need for FMLA leave
changes while you are out (for example, if your doctor determines
that you can return to work earlier than expected). Your employer
may also require you to provide periodic updates on your status
and your intent to return to work.
Your employer must notify you if you are eligible for FMLA leave
within ve business days of your rst leave request. If the employer
says that you are not eligible, it has to state at least one reason
why you are not eligible (for example, you have not worked for the
employer for a total of 12 months).
At the same time that your employer gives you an eligibility notice,
it must also give you a notice of your rights and responsibilities
under the FMLA. This notice must include all of the following:
A denition of the 12-month period the employer uses to keep
track of FMLA usage. It can be a calendar year, 12 months from
the rst time you take leave, a xed year such as your anniversary
date, or a rolling 12-month period measured backward from
the date you use FMLA leave. You need to know which way your
employer measures the 12-month window so that you can be sure
of how much FMLA leave you have available when you need it.
Whether you will be required to provide medical certication from
a health care provider.
Your right to use paid leave.
Whether your employer will require you to use your paid leave.
Your right to maintain your health benets and whether you will
be required to make premium payments.
Your right to return to your job at the end of your FMLA leave.
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 9
When your employer has the information necessary to determine if
your leave is FMLA protected, it must notify you whether the leave
will be designated as FMLA leave and, if possible, how much leave
will be counted against your FMLA entitlement. If your employer
determines that your leave is not covered by FMLA, it must notify
you of that determination.
10 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
STEP 1
You must notify
your employer
when you know
you need leave
Please see page 7
STEP 2
Your employer
must notify
you whether
you are eligible
for FMLA leave
within ve
business days
Please see page 8
STOP
Your leave is not
FMLA-protected
(You may request
leave again in the
future. Employee
eligibility can
change.)
Your employer
must provide
you with your
FMLA rights and
responsibilities,
as well as any
request for
certication
Please see page 8
eligible
not
eligible
certification
requested
certification
not
requested
STEP 3
You must
provide a
completed
certication to
your employer
within 15
calendar days
Please see page 12
The FMLA Leave Process
This owchart provides general information to walk you through your
initial request for FMLA leave step by step, and help you navigate the
sometimes complicated FMLA process.
Please note, it is ESSENTIAL for you to be familiar
with your employer’s leave policy. There are
several instances throughout the FMLA
leave process where you will need to comply
with BOTH the FMLA regulations AND
your employer’s leave policy.
t
START HERE
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 11
STEP 5
Your leave is
FMLA-protected
(There are employee
responsibilities
while out on
FMLA leave.)
Please see page 8
STEP 6
When you
return to work,
your employer
must return you
to your same or
nearly identical
job
Please see page 14
STOP
Your leave is not
FMLA-protected
(You may request
leave again in the
future.)
not designated
STEP 4
Your employer
must notify you
whether your
leave has been
designated as
FMLA within ve
business days
Please see page 8
your responsibility
your
employers responsibility
designated
12 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
Medical Certication
If your employer requests medical certication, you only have
15 calendar days to provide it in most circumstances. You are
responsible for the cost of getting the certication from a health
care provider and for making sure that the certication is provided
to your employer. If you fail to provide the requested medical
certication, your FMLA leave may be denied.
The medical certication must include some specic information,
including:
contact information for the health care provider;
when the serious health condition began;
how long the condition is expected to last;
appropriate medical facts about the condition (which may include
information on symptoms, hospitalization, doctors visits, and
referrals for treatment);
whether you are unable to work or your family member is in need
of care; and
whether you need leave continuously or intermittently. (If
you need to take leave a little bit at a time, the certication
should include an estimate of how much time you will need for
each absence, how often you will be absent, and information
establishing the medical necessity for taking such intermittent
leave.)
If your employer nds that necessary information is missing from
your certication, it must notify you in writing of what additional
information is needed to make the certication complete. You must
provide the missing information within seven calendar days.
If your employer has concerns about the validity of your
certication, it may request a second opinion, but it must cover
the cost. Your employer may request a third opinion if the rst and
second opinion dier, but it must cover the cost.
If your need for leave continues for an extended period of time, or
if it changes signicantly, your employer may require you to provide
an updated certication.
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 13
STEP 1
Your employer
must notify you
if a certication
is required
STEP 2
You must
provide a
completed
certication to
your employer
within 15 days
STEP 3
Your employer
must designate
your leave if it is
FMLA-protected
your employer may require you to:
Obtain a 2nd
medical opinion
if your employer
doubts the
validity of your
certication
Correct any
deciencies in
your certication
identied by your
employer within
seven days
Obtain a 3rd
medical opinion
if the 1st and 2nd
opinions dier
your responsibility
your
employers responsibility
Certication at a Glance
your employer may deny fmla leave
if you fail to provide a requested certification
14 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
Returning to Work
When you return to work, the FMLA requires that your employer
return you to the same job that you left, or one that is nearly
identical.
If you are not returned to the exact same job, the new position
must:
involve the same or substantially similar duties, responsibilities,
and status;
include the same general level of skill, eort, responsibility and
authority;
oer identical pay, including equivalent premium pay, overtime
and bonus opportunities;
oer identical benets (such as life insurance, health insurance,
disability insurance, sick leave, vacation, educational benets,
pensions, etc.); and
oer the same general work schedule and be at the same (or a
nearby) location.
Please keep in mind that if you exhaust your FMLA leave
entitlement and are unable to return to work, your employer is not
required to restore you to your position.
SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES:
Key Employees
Certain key employees may not be guaranteed reinstatement to
their positions following FMLA leave. A key employee is dened
as a salaried, FMLA-eligible employee who is among the highest
paid 10 percent of all the employees working for the employer
within 75 miles of the employee’s worksite.
Teachers
Special rules apply to employees of local education agencies.
Generally, these rules apply when you need intermittent leave
or when you need leave near the end of a school term.
Please visit our website for more complete information.
The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act 15
To contact the WHD oce nearest you, visit:
www.dol.gov/whd/america2.htm
How to File a Complaint
The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division (WHD) is
responsible for administering and enforcing the Family and Medical
Leave Act for most employees.
If you have questions, or you think that your rights under the FMLA
may have been violated, you can contact WHD at 1-866-487-9243.
You will be directed to the WHD oce nearest you for assistance.
There are over 200 WHD oces throughout the country staed
with trained professionals to help you.
The information below is useful when ling a complaint with WHD:
your name
your address and phone number (how you can be contacted)
the name of the company where you work or worked
location of the company (this may be dierent than the actual job
site where you worked)
phone number of the company
manager or owner’s name
the circumstances of your FMLA request and your employer’s
response
Your employer is prohibited from interfering with, restraining, or
denying the exercise of FMLA rights, retaliating against you for ling
a complaint and cooperating with the Wage and Hour Division, or
bringing a private action to court. You should contact the Wage and
Hour Division immediately if your employer retaliates against you
for engaging in any of these legally protected activities.
16 The Employee’s Guide to the Family and Medical Leave Act
Website Resources
Visit the Wage and Hour Division website at www.dol.gov/whd/fmla
for resources containing information about the FMLA, including:
Key News
General Guidance
Fact Sheets
e-Tools
Posters
Forms
Interpretive Guidance
Law
Regulations
Please refer to The Employee’s Guide to Military Family Leave
under the Family Medical Leave Act (WH1513) for more specic
information about taking FMLA leave under the provisions
for military family leave.
WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
WH1506 06/15
1-866-487-9243 www.dol.gov/whd