New Jersey Family Leave Act NJFLA Changes July 2026 | Qcera
- Posted by Margaret Kahng
- On April 17, 2026
- 0 Comments
New Jersey employers are facing a significant leave law change in just three months. On July 17, 2026, the amended New Jersey Family Leave Act (NJFLA) takes effect, expanding employer coverage, lowering employee eligibility thresholds, and adding new job protection requirements tied to Temporary Disability Insurance (TDI) and Family Leave Insurance (FLI) benefits.
What Is the New Jersey Family Leave Act?
The NJFLA provides eligible New Jersey employees with up to 12 weeks of job-protected leave to care for a family member with a serious health condition, bond with a newborn or newly placed child, or provide care during a public health emergency. Leave under the NJFLA is unpaid, though employees may be eligible for wage replacement through New Jersey’s FLI program while on leave.
What Is Changing on July 17, 2026?
New Jersey Governor Murphy signed A3451 into law on January 18, 2026. The amendments make three major changes to the NJFLA:
NJFLA: Before and After July 17, 2026
Who Is Newly Covered and What Does That Mean?
The employer threshold update is the most notable change. Organizations with 15 to 29 employees that previously had no NJFLA obligations are now covered employers. That means building leave policies, updating employee handbooks, training HR staff, and establishing a process to track eligibility, manage requests, and document decisions – all before July 17th.
How LeaveSource Helps HR Stay Compliant
The complexity of the amended NJFLA is exactly the kind of multi-layered compliance challenge that manual leave management cannot handle reliably. Tracking separate entitlements, monitoring benefit periods, and maintaining a defensible audit trail across multiple leave types requires a platform built for the task.
For organizations newly covered under the NJFLA, LeaveSource provides the foundation to build a compliant leave program quickly. For organizations already managing leave, it ensures that the July 17 changes are absorbed into your existing process without disruption. The Clock Is Ticking: Three Months to Compliance
July 17, 2026 is three months away. For HR and leave teams managing multi-jurisdictional leave programs, that window moves quickly. Updating policies, training staff, and building up a compliant process takes time – especially when done manually.
Is your organization ready for July 17?
Note: This post is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. HR teams should consult legal counsel regarding the specific applicability of the amended NJFLA to their organization. |
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