On February 21, 2025, Governor Gretchen Whitmer signed into law two bills amending the state’s Wage Act and Earned Sick Time Act (ESTA).

As we previously explained, absent those amendments, February 21 would have been the effective date for those laws as ordered by the Michigan Supreme Court. Below, we share highlights of the new bills as preliminary guidance.

Changes to the Wage Act

Steeper Minimum Wage Hikes, Faster

Senate Bill 8 (SB 8), the bill that amended the Wage Act, retains the $12.48 per hour minimum wage rate set to take effect February 21. Thereafter, minimum wage will rise again on January 1, 2026 (and on the first of the year annually thereafter) to $13.73, a higher wage rate than the originally scheduled hourly rate of $13.29. The 2027 increase will also be larger than scheduled, jumping to an hourly rate of $15.00.

In short, minimum wage earners will see bigger hikes, sooner, under SB 8. The main takeaway for Michigan employers concerned about compliance as of February 21 is that the statewide minimum wage as of that date is $12.48 per hour.

Smaller Tip Credit Reductions, No Abolishment, Plus Enforcement

SB 8 will not gradually phase out tip credits, which would have occurred under the state Supreme Court Order. Instead, the proportional maximum credit will diminish by 2% annually through 2031, when a tipped worker’s minimum wage would equal 50% of the full minimum wage.

Effective today, employers must ensure that tipped workers receive a minimum rate of $4.74, which is 38% of the full minimum wage. Note that this is meaningfully lower than what the Order required ($6.49 per hour, or 48% of the full minimum wage).

SB 8 also adds a maximum civil fine of $2,500 on employers who fail to comply with the minimum wage scheme for tipped workers.

Changes to ESTA

House Bill 4002 (HB 4002), the bill that amended ESTA, significantly modified the Supreme Court’s Order. The key changes from the Order are as follows:

  • A revised definition of “small business” from “fewer than 10” to “10 or fewer” employees, along with a delay of mandatory paid earned sick time accrual and usage for small business employees until October 1, 2025.
  • Excluding the following individuals from paid earned sick time eligibility: trainees or interns and youth employees, as well as employees who schedule their own working hours and are not subject to disciplinary action if they do not schedule a minimum number of working hours.
  • Clarification that paid earned sick time does not accrue while an employee is taking paid time off, and that employers may cap usage and carryover of accrued paid leave at 72 hours per year, or at 40 hours per year if they are a small business.
  • Express permission to frontload paid earned sick time, including detailed instructions about how to frontload part-time employees’ leave and waiving requirements to track accruals, carryover unused time or pay out the value of unused time at the end of the year for frontloading employers.
  • Changes to language regarding an employee’s request for an “unforeseeable” need to use paid earned sick time, including requiring employee to give notice as soon as “practicable” or in accordance with the employer’s policy related to requesting or using sick time or leave (assuming the employer has provided a copy of the policy to the employee and the policy permits the employee to request leave after becoming aware of the need), and permitting employers to take adverse action against employees who do not comply with notice requirements.
  • Added language permitting an employer to take adverse personnel action against an employee if the employee uses paid earned sick time for a purpose other than a purpose sanctioned by ESTA, or who violates the ESTA’s notice requirements.
  • Elimination of a private right of action, but expansion of potential civil penalties that the state’s Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity (LEO) may impose through an administrative proceeding, including, but not limited to, a civil penalty up to eight (8) times the employee’s normal hourly wage.

What Should Michigan Employers Do?

Employers must immediately comply with the Wage Act and pay non-exempt workers a general minimum wage of at least $12.48 per hour and tipped workers a rate of at least $4.74 per hour.

As for ESTA, “small employers” can wait until October 2025 to begin providing benefits, but all employers should take steps to comply. Many of the ESTA amendments clarify the initial version of Supreme Court’s Order, so steps employers have likely taken to prepare for the February 21 effective date will be a helpful starting point. Epstein Becker Green soon will publish more detailed insights about ESTA and its relationship to other leave laws.

Epstein Becker Green Staff Attorney Elizabeth A. Ledkovsky assisted with this post.

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