Across the United States, state and municipal governments are increasingly passing anti-discrimination laws that extend protections beyond federal requirements, reshaping the legal landscape for workers and employers alike.
Twenty-four states and Washington, D.C., now enforce anti-discrimination laws that protect a broader range of personal traits than federal law requires, and the 2026 legislative session is pushing that number higher.
As those laws evolve, they are broadening how discrimination is defined and giving workers, in many jurisdictions, access to legal remedies that do not exist under federal law.
For many American workers, the protections available on the job increasingly depend not only on national standards, but on where they live and work.
Federal Anti-Discrimination Law as the Baseline
The legal foundation for workplace anti-discrimination in the United States begins at the federal level. Three laws form the core of that framework. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin.
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 extends those protections to workers with physical or mental disabilities, requiring employers to make reasonable accommodations. And the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 protects workers 40 and older from age-based treatment in hiring, pay, and other employment decisions.
Federal law also shields workers from retaliation for filing a discrimination complaint or participating in an investigation, and these protections apply regardless of whether a worker is full-time, part-time, or a non-citizen.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission enforces these standards nationwide, establishing a common legal baseline that applies across every state.
The Growing Role of State and Local Governments
State and local governments are playing a larger role in defining workplace protections. By early 2026, some jurisdictions had expanded anti-discrimination laws to cover hair texture and natural hairstyles associated with race, along with housing status, height and weight, immigration status, and justice-impacted status, meaning protection for people with arrest or conviction histories.
Those laws are also widening how discrimination is understood. Some now address AI-assisted hiring, protections tied to how employers respond to immigration enforcement, and limits on disciplining workers for lawful political activity outside the workplace.
Enforcement is changing as well. Employers in certain jurisdictions are now required to give workers formal notice of their rights, maintain written anti-discrimination policies, conduct audits of certain workplace practices, or submit information to government agencies.
These requirements place more responsibility on employers to demonstrate how policies operate in practice rather than relying only on complaint-driven enforcement. In this way, state-level policymaking continues to function as a testing ground for how workplace protections develop across the United States.
Municipal Leadership in Worker Protections
Large municipalities have pushed this trend further by writing anti-discrimination rules that are more detailed and, in some cases, more accessible to workers. New York City offers one of the clearest examples.
The New York City Human Rights Law protects a wide range of traits, including caregiver status, height, weight, immigration or citizenship status, arrest or conviction record, and sexual and reproductive health decisions. The city also directs that the law be read liberally so that federal and state law serve as a floor, not a ceiling.
That matters because city law can cover more protected groups, make it easier for workers to challenge discriminatory treatment, and create additional avenues for enforcement and remedy through local agencies or the courts.
Other cities have followed a similar path. Philadelphia enacted protections in late 2025 prohibiting discrimination based on menstruation, perimenopause, and menopause.
Pittsburgh amended its anti-discrimination ordinance that same year to broaden the city’s definition of protected class, adding coverage for traits such as pregnancy-related conditions, protective hairstyles and hair texture, citizenship or immigration status, preferred language, medical marijuana patient status, and housing status.
These municipal frameworks show how cities are continuing to move beyond the baseline set elsewhere in employment law.
Why Local Protections Are Expanding
The expansion of local protections reflects a workplace that has changed faster than federal law often does. As expectations around fairness have broadened, more workers and advocates have pushed for rules that speak more directly to how discrimination now appears on the job.
That pressure tends to land first at the state and local level, where lawmakers are often closer to the industries, communities, and disputes shaping public debate. Regional priorities add another layer, since a city or state may respond more quickly to the concerns that feel most immediate within its own workforce.
Advocacy groups have helped carry that process forward by identifying gaps in older legal frameworks and pressing local officials to close them. Local law has therefore become one of the clearest places to watch how workplace protections are being redefined.
What These Changes Mean for Workers and Employers
For workers, one practical effect of these changes is access to more legal protections depending on where they live and work.
In some states and cities, the law now covers more types of discrimination, gives workers more time to file a claim, and makes it easier to bring certain cases forward. Awareness has grown alongside those changes, especially around retaliation, as more workers understand that the law protects them when they report unfair treatment.
As Jessica C. Rosales, an attorney at Phillips & Associates, a New York-based employment law firm tracking these developments, has observed: “The increase in discrimination and retaliation filings reflects a workplace where employees are more aware of their legal rights and more willing to challenge unfair treatment.”
For employers, the challenge is less about any one rule than the growing variation from one jurisdiction to another. A company operating across multiple cities or states may face very different standards depending on location.
The Future of Employment Law in the U.S.
Looking ahead, employment law in the United States is likely to become more layered, with states and cities continuing to add protections where federal law is narrower or has not yet acted. That includes areas such as paid leave, workplace safety, and rules for emerging technologies.
Federal law will remain the foundation, but it is now operating alongside a growing body of state and local legislation that is shaping workplace rights more directly in many parts of the country.
Over time, those local laws may do more than address immediate needs. They may also help influence future national policy by creating models that spread beyond the jurisdictions where they began.