5 min read May 10, 2026

Wisconsin is one of the minority of U.S. states with no state-mandated paid sick leave law as of 2026. That means workers in Eau Claire, Kenosha, and Green Bay have fewer guaranteed paid sick-day protections than workers in neighboring Illinois or Minnesota — unless their employer voluntarily provides them. What does Wisconsin law actually guarantee? Who protects Wisconsin workers when they are sick? Here are the answers to the questions Wisconsin employees ask most often.

Does Wisconsin have a state paid sick leave law?

No. As of 2026, Wisconsin has not enacted a state statute requiring private employers to provide paid sick leave to employees. Several Wisconsin cities — including Milwaukee — have attempted to pass local sick leave ordinances, but the Wisconsin Legislature preempted local sick-leave laws through 2011 legislation [Wis. Stat. § 103.10(1m)], rendering city-level mandates unenforceable.

The result: paid sick leave in Wisconsin is entirely at the employer's discretion, unless a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) or written employment contract specifies otherwise.

Can my Wisconsin employer fire me for missing work when I am genuinely ill?

Possibly — with important caveats. Wisconsin is an at-will employment state: absent a contract or legal protection, employers can terminate for any lawful reason, including excessive absences. However, several federal protections may apply:

  • FMLA (federal): If you have worked for your employer for 12+ months and your employer has 50+ employees, a qualifying serious health condition entitles you to up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act
  • Wisconsin FMLA: Under Wis. Stat. § 103.10, the state FMLA applies to employers with 50+ employees and provides up to 2 weeks of unpaid leave for a serious health condition of the employee or a qualifying family member
  • ADA (federal): If your illness constitutes a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act, your employer may be required to provide a reasonable accommodation — which could include modified attendance expectations

None of these protections guarantee paid leave — but they may protect your job while you are away.

What is the Wisconsin Family and Medical Leave Act (WFMLA)?

The Wisconsin Family and Medical Leave Act [Wis. Stat. § 103.10] is a state-level leave law that runs parallel to the federal FMLA. Key Wisconsin-specific features:

  • Employer threshold: 50 or more employees (same as federal FMLA)
  • Employee eligibility: Worked for the employer at least 52 weeks AND at least 1,000 hours in the preceding 12 months
  • Leave entitlement: Up to 6 weeks for the birth or adoption of a child; up to 2 weeks for the serious health condition of the employee or a family member
  • Job protection: Yes — employer must restore to the same or equivalent position
  • Pay: Leave is unpaid unless the employer's policy or your accrued paid leave allows for wage continuation
0 days
State-mandated paid sick days
Wisconsin law, 2026
2 weeks
Wisconsin FMLA: sick leave entitlement (employee illness)
Wis. Stat. § 103.10
6 weeks
Wisconsin FMLA: parental leave entitlement
Wis. Stat. § 103.10
50+
Employee threshold for WFMLA coverage
Wis. Stat. § 103.10

If my employer provides a PTO bank, can they deny me time off for illness?

If your employer offers a unified Paid Time Off (PTO) bank, your access to paid time off for illness is governed by the employer's written PTO policy — not state law. Wisconsin law does not require employers to permit PTO use for illness specifically, but if the written policy says PTO may be used for sick time, that provision is contractually binding.

One important interaction: under the WFMLA, employers may require employees to use accrued paid leave (including PTO) concurrently with WFMLA leave. This means your employer can require that your two weeks of WFMLA leave for a serious health condition run simultaneously with your available PTO balance — you receive pay during WFMLA leave, but your PTO bank is depleted.

What happens if my employer has fewer than 50 employees?

For employees of small Wisconsin employers (fewer than 50 employees), neither federal FMLA nor Wisconsin FMLA applies. This gap in coverage is significant: small employers — which represent the majority of Wisconsin businesses — have no obligation to provide any sick leave, paid or unpaid, beyond what their written policies promise.

Workers in this situation may still have protections if:

  • Their employer's written policy includes sick leave provisions (enforceable as written contract)
  • A collective bargaining agreement provides sick leave rights
  • Their illness constitutes an ADA disability (reasonable accommodation may include modified attendance policies)

Does Wisconsin have any emergency sick leave laws?

As of 2026, Wisconsin has no permanent state emergency sick leave law. Federal COVID-era emergency paid leave requirements (FFCRA) expired and were not permanently extended in Wisconsin. Wisconsin legislators have periodically introduced sick leave bills, but none have passed as of the current session.

For context on how other states approach mandatory paid sick leave, see the full Wisconsin Labor Law dossier which includes comparisons with neighboring state frameworks.

What should Wisconsin employees without paid sick leave do?

Practical steps for Wisconsin workers without a state safety net:

  1. Review your employee handbook — identify what leave is offered and under what conditions it can be used
  2. Understand your FMLA eligibility — if your employer has 50+ employees and you've worked there 12+ months, you have federal FMLA rights even without paid sick leave
  3. Consider disability insurance — short-term disability coverage (often available through employer or individual policy) provides income replacement during extended illness
  4. Negotiate at hiring — paid sick leave is a negotiable benefit; employees in high-demand roles should request it explicitly

Avertissement: This article provides general legal information about Wisconsin sick leave rules and does not constitute legal advice. For guidance specific to your situation, contact the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development at dwd.wisconsin.gov or consult a licensed Wisconsin employment attorney.

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