Employer Jury Duty Requirements: How Jury Duty Works

Understand the laws that deal with jury duty and learn your obligations as an employer.

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You can schedule employees around vacations, but unexpected employee absenteeism can wreak havoc on small businesses. Employees can miss work for various reasons, including illness. However, jury duty is a unique concern for employers who must balance staffing needs with this government-imposed obligation.

We’ll explore how jury duty works, the employment laws surrounding it, and how employers should handle jury duty issues when they arise in the workplace.

How does jury duty work?

All Americans are obligated to serve jury duty. In fact, jury duty is often considered a person’s civic duty. Without juries composed of impartial and randomly chosen citizens, defendants in court cases can’t receive the speedy and fair trials outlined in the Sixth Amendment. Given this obligation, an employee’s jury duty summons supersedes their work for you.

Keep the following in mind when considering how jury duty affects your employees.

Some municipalities operate phone lines citizens can call the night before jury duty to learn whether they must report for service the next day. If they aren’t required to report in person, their jury duty summons is considered officially fulfilled.

Do you have to pay your employees for jury duty?

Whether you must pay your employees for jury duty depends on where your company is located. To help you determine your obligations, we’ve outlined federal and state laws as follows.

Federal jury duty laws

Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), a federal U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) law, employers are not legally required to pay employees for nonwork hours. Since employees are theoretically not working while on jury duty, federal law does not mandate that you pay your employees for jury duty.

However, jury duty waiting rooms equipped with Wi-Fi are becoming increasingly common, though Wi-Fi is only available in the early stages of jury duty. If your employees are under a remote work plan during the early stage of jury duty (i.e., preselection), you must pay them for their work.

Tip Bottom line

Consult with a business attorney if you need clarification about whether you must pay remote employees who work during the early stages of jury duty.

State jury duty laws

State laws governing jury duty pay supersede the FLSA. Most states don’t require employers to pay employees for jury duty, but eight states mandate jury duty pay. These states include the following:

Although 41 states have no jury duty pay laws, many employers offer jury duty pay as a flexible benefit. In fact, 68 percent of U.S. employees get jury duty pay when they serve. And perhaps most importantly, even if you’re not required to pay employees for jury duty, you still must grant employees as much time off as they need to fulfill their jury duty obligations. You cannot threaten, fire or penalize employees for their service.

FYI Did you know

Offering paid leave for an employee's jury duty obligations can generate goodwill, help maintain morale and boost retention.

Tips for setting up a system for jury duty absences

Employee jury duty can significantly impact a business. However, implementing a jury duty absence system can make this burden easier. Follow the below steps to implement your system:

Did You Know? Did you know

All employers nationwide are required to let workers return to their jobs when they return from jury duty and to continue paying employee benefits while they serve.

Jury duty FAQs

Can you deny a request for an employee to report for jury duty?

No. You can’t deny a request for an employee to serve on a jury. Since a jury duty summons is legally binding, you and your company have no authority to nullify or alter the summons.

However, as mentioned earlier, anyone summoned for jury duty can request a postponement or exemption, though neither outcome is guaranteed. If these requests are declined, you must give the employee time off to fulfill their service.

Can you require an employee to use paid days off such as vacation leave, sick leave, personal days or paid time off for the days they miss for jury duty?

Whether you can require employees to use PTO, personal days or sick leave for jury duty depends on your state. Fifteen states expressly prohibit this practice: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Utah, Vermont and Virginia. If you are based in another state, you are permitted to reduce employees’ allocated paid time off for days served on jury duty.

How does a person get picked for jury duty?

Voters are randomly selected from the voter registration lists every two to four years. Those who were selected within that period but were excused return to the pool and may be selected again.

How long does the average jury duty take?

Most juries are selected the same day citizens are required to report. If not selected by the end of the day, those people can leave, and their obligation is fulfilled. If a person is selected to be a juror, the average jury duty is three to five days. However, some trials are much longer. The judge may inform jurors of the approximate time they must serve.

What should be in my company’s jury duty policy?

Businesses should have a written jury duty policy along with their attendance policy so employees and managers know how to handle jury duty situations. Ideally, your policy should specify the following:

Jennifer Dublino contributed to this article.