Vacation Pay in California: Rules on Accrual, Caps, and Payouts

Get a practical overview of California vacation pay rules, including accrual methods, lawful caps, and payout obligations for departing employees. Help your company avoid wage claims by setting compliant vacation policies, tracking balances accurately, and paying unused time on separation.

By Brad Nakase, Attorney

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Have a quick question? I answered nearly 1500 FAQs.

Introduction

California treats vacation very differently from most states. And that often surprises employers. The law does not force any company to offer vacation in the first place. No rule says every employee must get it. But once an employer chooses to offer vacation, the entire thing becomes tied to wage laws. Suddenly, strict rules apply. Suddenly, “vacation” stops being a perk and becomes a kind of earned money that belongs to the employee. And that means employers must handle it carefully, or it can get expensive fast.

Vacation Pay in California is treated as Wages

Vacation pay in California is not a gift. Not a bonus. It’s wages. Once earned, that vacation time “vests,” and employees have a right to use it. And they can use it as soon as it’s earned unless the employer has a reasonable waiting rule. Restrictions are allowed, but only reasonable ones. Nothing too rigid. Nothing that basically blocks the employee from ever using the time.

Because vacation pay in California is treated like wages, employers must pay out any unused and accrued vacation time when an employee leaves the company. Doesn’t matter why the person leaves. Quit, fired, or laid off. The payout must happen, and it must be timely. If an employer delays that payout, Labor Code section 203 kicks in. Those penalties can easily become larger than the actual unpaid vacation pay in California. A mistake many employers regret.

“Use It or Lose It” Policies Are Illegal

California blocks “use it or lose it” policies. Meaning, employers cannot force employees to forfeit earned vacation simply because a deadline has passed. No annual wipe-out or no expiration date for already-accrued time.

But that does not mean employees can hoard unlimited vacation forever. The law allows caps. A cap stops further accrual once the employee hits a certain amount. But it must be reasonable. A cap that basically prevents employees from ever taking a vacation is frowned upon. The DLSE has weighed in on this. A policy that tells employees they must use vacation within the same year it’s earned? Too strict. The DLSE says that’s unfair.

There is guidance: employees should get at least nine months after time is earned to use it. Less than that starts to look like an indirect “use it or lose it” policy. Employers need to be mindful of this.

How Employers May Structure Accrual

California allows different methods of giving a vacation. Some employers use “accrual as you go,” where a little vacation builds each pay period. Others prefer “lump sum,” where employees get a block of vacation time yearly. Either is fine, so long as the rules remain consistent and lawful.

Vacation pay in California accrues with length of service. Things like PTO, floating holidays, & personal days are treated like vacation in California. So the same rules apply to them too—caps, payouts, accruals, vesting.

Paid Sick Leave, however, follows its own separate laws and should not be mixed with vacation time. Many employers combine everything into “PTO banks,” but once combined, the whole bucket gets treated like vacation.

Staying Compliant: Tips

1. Have a Compliant Policy

A policy that is clear, written, and legally correct saves employers from headaches later. Spell out the accrual method. Spell out the cap if there is one. Make sure the cap is reasonable. And review the policy regularly, because laws shift, and business needs shift too.

2. Apply the Policy in Real Life

A policy on paper means nothing if managers don’t follow it. Employees need to understand how they earn and use vacation. Supervisors must know the rules because they are the ones approving time off. Also, when an employee leaves, the process for paying accrued vacation must be immediate and accurate. The wage statements must reflect it correctly.

3. Be Consistent

Inconsistent treatment creates disputes. Apply the policy the same way to everyone & keep good records. Track accruals, usage, and payouts. A disagreement over vacation pay in California is one of the easiest workplace disputes to prevent if the records are clean.

4. Stay Updated

California employment laws change often. Sometimes subtly. Sometimes dramatically. Employers may become noncompliant if they fail to update themselves. The safest course of action is frequently to speak with HR specialists or legal counsel who are knowledgeable about California rules. More so, if your business is growing/reorganizing.

Conclusion

Vacation in California seems simple on the surface, but the rules underneath are anything but simple. Employers don’t have to offer it — yet once they do, everything changes. Vacation turns into wages. It vests. It must be paid out. It cannot be taken away. And caps, while allowed, must stay within reason. These rules matter. They protect employees, yes. But they also protect employers who follow them. Policies must be written. Then applied. Then tracked.

That’s the path that keeps everyone out of trouble. And in a state like California, where labor laws shift often, staying informed is not optional — it becomes part of running the business itself.

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