California At-Will Employment Law — Exceptions & Rights

California is an at-will employment state, which surprises a lot of workers who assume they're protected by default. At-will just sets the baseline — and that baseline has real, well-established exceptions that can make a termination illegal even though California doesn't require employers to give a reason for firing someone.

On this page: What at-will means · The exceptions · Illegal reasons for termination · At-will vs. contract employment · What to do next · FAQ

Think you may have a claim? Use the Wrongful Termination Compensation Calculator · Back Pay Calculator · Final Paycheck Calculator

Quick summary: California Labor Code § 2922 presumes employment is at-will — either side can end it at any time, for any reason or no reason, with no notice required. That presumption is overridden by a written or implied contract, and it never covers firing for an illegal reason.

What "At-Will Employment" Means in California

California Labor Code § 2922 states that employment with no specified term is presumed to be at-will. In practice, that means:

At-will is the default in nearly every US state, not just California. What varies state to state is how broadly each state recognizes exceptions to it — and California's exceptions are among the most protective in the country.

One state breaks the at-will pattern entirely: under Montana's Wrongful Discharge from Employment Act (1987), at-will status ends after a probationary period (typically 6 months unless the employer sets a different length) — after that, an employer needs "good cause" to terminate. Montana is the only US state with this rule. California has no equivalent law; its protections come entirely from the three exceptions above, not from ending the at-will default itself.

The Exceptions: When At-Will Firing Becomes Illegal

California courts and the legislature have carved out three main exceptions to the at-will presumption. If your termination falls into one of these, "at-will" doesn't protect your employer.

1. The Public Policy Exception

Established in Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (1980), this exception prohibits firing an employee for a reason that violates a well-established public policy — even without a specific statute naming that exact scenario. Common examples include being fired for refusing to break the law, for exercising a legal right (like voting or jury duty), or for reporting illegal conduct.

2. The Implied Contract Exception

Established in Foley v. Interactive Data Corp. (1988), this exception recognizes that an implied contract limiting at-will termination can arise from things like employee handbooks promising progressive discipline, consistent past practice, length of service, or verbal assurances of continued employment — even without a signed, written contract.

3. Statutory Exceptions

Exception Established by Covers
Public policy Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield (1980) Firing that violates a fundamental public policy, even without a specific statute naming the scenario
Implied contract Foley v. Interactive Data (1988) Handbook promises, consistent past practice, or verbal assurances of job security
Statutory FEHA, Labor Code § 1102.5, § 132a, CFRA Discrimination, whistleblowing, workers' comp retaliation, protected leave

Common Illegal Reasons for Termination in California

Even in an at-will state, these reasons for firing an employee are illegal:

If any of these followed a protected action within weeks rather than months, that timing is one of the strongest pieces of evidence in a wrongful termination claim. See the Wrongful Termination Compensation Calculator to estimate a starting range.

At-Will vs. Contract or Union Employment

Not every California employee is at-will. The presumption can be overridden:

Think your termination violated one of these exceptions? Most employment attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency for wrongful termination claims — no upfront cost. Get a free attorney review →

What to Do If You Think You Were Wrongfully Terminated

  1. Document the timeline: Write down the dates of any protected activity — a complaint, a leave request, a workers' comp filing, an injury report — and how soon after that the termination happened. Close timing is some of the strongest circumstantial evidence available.
  2. Identify which exception applies: Discrimination and retaliation claims, breach of an implied or written contract, and public-policy violations each have different requirements and filing processes.
  3. Estimate potential compensation: Use the Wrongful Termination Compensation Calculator for a starting-point range based on your salary and tenure.
  4. File with the appropriate agency: FEHA discrimination and retaliation claims generally go through California's Civil Rights Department before a lawsuit can be filed. Federal discrimination claims go through the EEOC within 180–300 days of termination.
  5. Consult an employment attorney: Given how fact-specific these exceptions are, an attorney consultation early on can clarify which theory fits your situation before you file anything.

Wrongful Termination Compensation Calculator

Estimate a starting-point settlement range based on salary and tenure.

Back Pay Calculator

Calculate lost wages from termination date to settlement.

Final Paycheck Calculator

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is California an at-will employment state?

Yes. Under California Labor Code § 2922, employment without a specified term is presumed to be at-will — meaning either the employer or the employee can end the relationship at any time, for any reason or no reason, with or without notice. That presumption can be overridden by a contract, and it never covers illegal reasons for termination.

Can my employer fire me for no reason in California?

Generally, yes — California's at-will presumption allows termination without a stated reason. But "no reason" is different from "a reason the employer won't say." If the real reason is discrimination, retaliation, or another protected category, the termination is illegal even though California is an at-will state. Employers rarely admit the real reason outright, which is why timing and pattern often matter more than what you were told.

What are the exceptions to at-will employment in California?

California recognizes three main exceptions: (1) the public policy exception, established in Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield (1980), which prohibits firing an employee for reasons that violate a fundamental public policy; (2) the implied contract exception, established in Foley v. Interactive Data (1988), which can arise from employee handbooks, length of service, or verbal assurances of job security; and (3) statutory exceptions — including FEHA discrimination protections, whistleblower protections under Labor Code § 1102.5, and retaliation protections for protected leave or workers' comp claims.

Is "at-will" the same as "right-to-work"?

No — these are unrelated concepts that are often confused. "At-will employment" governs when and why you can be fired. "Right-to-work" refers to laws that prohibit unions from requiring membership or dues as a condition of employment. California is an at-will state but is not a right-to-work state.

Can I be fired without notice in California?

Yes. At-will employment means no advance notice is legally required for either side — your employer can terminate you immediately, just as you can quit without notice. Some employment contracts or union agreements require notice or just cause, which would override the at-will default. Regardless of notice, your final paycheck is still due on a strict timeline under California law.

What should I do if I think I was wrongfully terminated?

Document the timeline of events, including any protected activity (a complaint, leave request, or injury report) shortly before the termination. Identify which exception to at-will employment might apply — discrimination, retaliation, or breach of an implied or written contract. Estimate potential compensation, then file with California's Civil Rights Department for FEHA-related claims or consult an employment attorney, many of whom offer free consultations and work on contingency.