The RegistryPractice Area · Statewide

Employment Attorneys in California

Counsel for workers — termination, wages, harassment, and retaliation claims. This is the statewide record for employment in California — every attorney on the State Bar of California's official roll whose practice reaches this shelf, scored in the open by the published Growth Score.

Californians search this field under many names — employment lawyer, employment attorney, wrongful termination attorney, wrongful termination lawyer, workplace harassment lawyer — and the registry answers all of them from the same source. Below: the governing deadline with its citation, what to weigh as you read the roster, the questions Californians ask with the code sections that answer them, and the record city by city, from the North Coast to the border.

The clock & the craft

Statute of limitations

Three years to file a discrimination, harassment, or retaliation complaint with the Civil Rights Department.

Cal. Gov. Code § 12960

After the CRD issues a right-to-sue notice, suit must follow within one year (Cal. Gov. Code § 12965). Most wage claims reach back three years under Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 338 — up to four via Bus. & Prof. Code § 17200.

Reading the roster

For a workplace matter, look for attorneys who practice employment law on the side of the table you sit on — most represent either workers or employers, rarely both. Ask whether the attorney has taken wage-and-hour or FEHA cases through the county's superior court or PAGA and arbitration procedures, how they evaluate damages, and whether they work on contingency for termination and harassment claims. Bring your personnel file, pay records, and any severance offer to a first call.

Employment · statewide roster

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195,000+ California attorneys are being verified against official State Bar of California records. Verified listings for Employment · California will appear here as indexing completes.

Official State Bar data · Scored in the open · Updated daily

Employment questions, cited

Can I be fired without a reason in California?

Usually yes — Cal. Lab. Code § 2922 presumes employment is at-will, meaning either side may end it at any time. But the reason cannot be unlawful: termination based on a protected characteristic (Cal. Gov. Code § 12940), for whistleblowing (Cal. Lab. Code § 1102.5), for taking protected leave, or in violation of public policy supports a wrongful termination claim despite at-will status.

How long do I have to sue for wrongful termination or discrimination?

For claims under the Fair Employment and Housing Act, you generally have three years from the unlawful act to file a complaint with the California Civil Rights Department (Cal. Gov. Code § 12960), then one year from the right-to-sue notice to file in court (Cal. Gov. Code § 12965). Common-law wrongful termination claims run two years under Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 335.1.

What overtime pay am I owed in California?

Non-exempt employees earn 1.5× their regular rate after 8 hours in a day or 40 in a week, and 2× after 12 hours in a day, under Cal. Lab. Code § 510. California's daily overtime rule is broader than federal law. Misclassification as "exempt" or as an independent contractor (tested under Lab. Code § 2775's ABC test) is a frequent source of unpaid-overtime claims.

When must my final paycheck be paid after I quit or am fired?

Immediately at termination if you are discharged (Cal. Lab. Code § 201), or within 72 hours if you quit without notice (Cal. Lab. Code § 202). A willfully late final paycheck accrues waiting-time penalties of a full day's wages for each day late, up to 30 days, under Cal. Lab. Code § 203.

Is it illegal for my employer to retaliate against me for reporting violations?

Yes. Cal. Lab. Code § 1102.5 prohibits retaliation against an employee who reports conduct they reasonably believe violates a law or regulation — internally or to a government agency. Separate anti-retaliation rules protect wage complaints (Lab. Code § 98.6) and discrimination complaints (Gov. Code § 12940(h)). Remedies can include reinstatement, lost pay, and civil penalties.

Legal information, not legal advice.

From the answer files

Employment by city

Employment in Los AngelesLos Angeles County · Los AngelesEmployment in Long BeachLos Angeles County · Los AngelesEmployment in PasadenaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesEmployment in Santa MonicaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesEmployment in San DiegoSan Diego County · San DiegoEmployment in Chula VistaSan Diego County · San DiegoEmployment in San FranciscoSan Francisco County · Bay AreaEmployment in OaklandAlameda County · Bay AreaEmployment in San JoseSanta Clara County · Bay AreaEmployment in Santa RosaSonoma County · North CoastEmployment in EurekaHumboldt County · North CoastEmployment in ReddingShasta County · Shasta CascadeEmployment in SacramentoSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyEmployment in DavisYolo County · Sacramento ValleyEmployment in FolsomSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyEmployment in SalinasMonterey County · Central CoastEmployment in Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara County · Central CoastEmployment in FresnoFresno County · San Joaquin ValleyEmployment in BakersfieldKern County · San Joaquin ValleyEmployment in South Lake TahoeEl Dorado County · SierraEmployment in RiversideRiverside County · Inland EmpireEmployment in San BernardinoSan Bernardino County · Inland EmpireEmployment in IrvineOrange County · Orange CountyEmployment in AnaheimOrange County · Orange CountyEmployment in Santa AnaOrange County · Orange CountyEmployment in Palm SpringsRiverside County · DesertEmployment in StocktonSan Joaquin County · San Joaquin ValleyEmployment in ModestoStanislaus County · San Joaquin ValleyEmployment in OxnardVentura County · Central CoastEmployment in FremontAlameda County · Bay AreaEmployment in VisaliaTulare County · San Joaquin ValleyEmployment in San Luis ObispoSan Luis Obispo County · Central Coast

Adjacent shelves of the law

Read the record. Then decide.

Describe your matter once, weigh the published scores, and place the call — the choice is always yours.

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195,000+ attorneys · 58 counties · Scored in the open