A PAGA lawsuit lets a California employee sue their employer for civil penalties on behalf of the state itself, not just for their own unpaid wages. The employee filing the case is called the “aggrieved employee.” The employer is the defendant. Unlike most lawsuits, the case asks a court to award penalties that would otherwise belong to California’s own labor enforcement agency.
This matters because California decided, back in 2004, that it didn’t have enough inspectors to police every workplace in the state. So lawmakers deputized workers instead. PAGA turns an ordinary employee into a stand-in for the state’s own enforcement arm, with real financial consequences for employers who violate the Labor Code, even on technical or paperwork-level issues.
- What it is: A California law letting employees sue employers for civil penalties on behalf of the state for Labor Code violations.
- Who it applies to: Current or former California employees who personally experienced at least one Labor Code violation.
- When it matters: When wage statement errors, missed breaks, unpaid overtime, or similar violations affect a workforce, not just one person.
- Key exception: 2024 reforms now require plaintiffs to have personally experienced each violation they sue over, within a one-year window.
- Practical takeaway: PAGA cases start with a mandatory notice to a state agency, not a court filing, and that notice triggers strict deadlines on both sides.
What Is a PAGA Lawsuit?
A PAGA lawsuit is a civil action that lets an aggrieved employee recover penalties for California Labor Code violations on behalf of themselves, other employees, and the state, standing in for the Labor and Workforce Development Agency. The acronym stands for the Private Attorneys General Act, and the name describes exactly what it does: it deputizes private citizens to act as attorneys general enforcing labor law.
What matters here is who the money is actually for. PAGA doesn’t exist to recover an individual’s unpaid wages. It exists to penalize the employer for violating the law, the same way a state agency would. Unpaid wages can still be recovered, but usually through a separate wage claim filed alongside or before the PAGA action, not through PAGA penalties themselves.
Why California Created PAGA
Before 2004, the Labor and Workforce Development Agency was solely responsible for investigating and penalizing Labor Code violations. Budget constraints and limited staffing meant many violations went uninvestigated entirely. The legislature concluded that giving private citizens the right to sue, and a financial incentive to do it, would close that enforcement gap. The law has expanded dramatically since then, with filings increasing more than 400% in its first decade alone.
How Does PAGA Work?
A PAGA case starts with a mandatory notice to the LWDA and the employer, gives the state and the employer a chance to act first, and only becomes a lawsuit if neither resolves the issue. This sequencing is what separates PAGA procedurally from almost every other type of employment claim.
The pattern is familiar: the employee files notice, the LWDA gets a window to decide whether it wants to pursue the case itself, the employer gets a chance to cure certain violations, and if none of that resolves the dispute, the employee can file in court representing the broader group of “aggrieved employees.”
Stepping Into the State’s Shoes
Once a PAGA lawsuit is filed, the plaintiff is technically suing as a proxy for the state, not purely on their own behalf. That’s why a PAGA settlement can’t simply be agreed to privately between the worker and the employer. Courts must approve PAGA settlements, and a portion of any recovery is required by law to go to the state itself rather than the workers.
How Penalties Get Split
Under the 2024 reforms, workers now keep 35% of any penalty recovery, up from 25% under the original law, with the remaining 65% going to the state. Successful plaintiffs can also recover attorney’s fees and court costs separately from that split.
Who Can File a PAGA Claim?
Any current or former California employee who personally experienced at least one Labor Code violation within the relevant one-year period can file a PAGA claim, and may pursue civil penalties for violations affecting other employees too. The personal-experience requirement is one of the most significant changes from the 2024 reform package.
The legal term for a worker who personally experienced a Labor Code violation and therefore has standing to bring a PAGA claim, both for themselves and, in many cases, on behalf of other similarly affected workers.
This is the core principle: before the 2024 reforms, courts allowed a plaintiff to sue over violations they never personally experienced, as long as they’d suffered at least one violation themselves. That rule is gone. A plaintiff now needs to have personally experienced each category of violation they’re pursuing on a representative basis, and that experience has to fall within PAGA’s one-year statute of limitations.
Standing for Nonprofit Legal Aid Organizations
One narrow exception survived the reforms. PAGA actions brought by nonprofit legal aid associations with at least five years of PAGA litigation experience are exempt from the new personal-experience standing rule, preserving the older, broader standing concept for that specific category of plaintiff.
Common Labor Violations Under PAGA
The most frequently cited PAGA violations involve unpaid minimum wage, missed meal and rest breaks, inaccurate wage statements, unpaid overtime, and unreimbursed business expenses. Many of these violations are easy for an employer to commit without realizing it, which is part of why PAGA exposure tends to surprise smaller businesses.
| Violation Type | Common Trigger |
|---|---|
| Wage statement errors | Missing required information like pay rate breakdowns or pay period dates |
| Meal and rest break violations | Failing to provide or properly document required breaks |
| Unpaid overtime | Miscalculating overtime rates or misclassifying exempt employees |
| Expense reimbursement | Failing to reimburse necessary work-related expenses |
What matters here is how technical some of these violations can be. A wage statement missing a single required field, even if every employee was actually paid correctly and on time, can support a PAGA claim. That technical exposure is exactly what critics of the law point to when arguing it incentivizes lawsuits over paperwork rather than genuine worker harm.
How These Claims Often Surface in Practice
Wage and hour disputes outside California follow a similar underlying pattern even without PAGA’s specific mechanism. The Dairy Queen biweekly pay dispute in New York, which produced a multimillion-dollar judgment over how frequently workers were paid, shows how a single payroll practice can expose an employer to liability across an entire workforce, not just one employee’s claim. California employers facing PAGA exposure are often confronting the same kind of systemic policy issue, just channeled through a different legal mechanism.
How to File a PAGA Lawsuit
Filing requires submitting an online notice to the LWDA describing the violations, waiting through a mandatory review period, and then filing the lawsuit in court if the matter isn’t resolved. A PAGA case can’t simply be filed directly in court the way most employment claims can.
- Document the violation: pay stubs, schedules, wage statements, written policies
- Consult an employment attorney to evaluate standing and the strength of the claim
- Submit the PAGA notice online through the LWDA’s filing portal, paying the required filing fee
- Serve the notice on the employer via certified mail
- Wait through the LWDA’s review period before filing in court, if the matter isn’t resolved
The practical implication is this: filing fees apply at this stage, currently $75 for a new PAGA notice, payable online, with a fee waiver process available for employees who qualify. Skipping the notice step entirely, or filing it incorrectly, can derail a case before it ever reaches a courtroom.
Arbitration Agreements Complicate the Picture
Many employment contracts include arbitration clauses, and the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in Viking River Cruises v. Moriana held that an employee’s individual PAGA claim can be compelled to arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act. The California Supreme Court later pushed back in Adolph v. Uber Technologies, ruling that an employee who arbitrates their individual claim doesn’t necessarily lose standing to pursue the broader, non-individual PAGA claims in court. The result is an unsettled, actively litigated area where the specific facts of an arbitration agreement can significantly change how a PAGA case unfolds.
PAGA Notice Requirements
Before filing suit, an aggrieved employee must submit written notice to the LWDA and the employer identifying the specific Labor Code sections violated, along with supporting facts and legal theories. A vague or boilerplate notice gives the employer grounds to challenge the claim’s adequacy before it even reaches trial.
- The specific Labor Code provisions alleged to have been violated
- Sufficient facts and legal theories supporting each alleged violation
- Identification of the employer or employers involved
- Service on the employer via certified mail, separate from the online LWDA filing
This is the core principle: filing through the LWDA’s online portal does not, by itself, count as serving the employer. The employee has to separately serve the employer according to statutory requirements, and missing that step can undermine the entire notice process regardless of how thorough the LWDA filing was.
What Happens After Notice Is Filed
The LWDA has a limited window, generally 65 days, to decide whether it wants to investigate and pursue the case itself. If the agency declines, or the window passes without action, the employee gains the right to file a civil lawsuit. This is also when the employer’s opportunity to cure certain violations becomes most relevant.
PAGA Penalties Explained
PAGA penalties generally range from $25 to $200 per aggrieved employee per pay period, depending on the violation type and whether the employer took steps to comply or cure the issue. Because penalties accumulate per employee and per pay period, even modest per-violation amounts can compound into large total exposure across a workforce.
| Scenario | Penalty Impact |
|---|---|
| Standard violation, no mitigating action | Baseline penalty applies per employee per pay period |
| Isolated, non-recurring violation | Reduced to $50 per employee per pay period |
| Employer took reasonable steps before notice | Penalty capped at 15% of the statutory amount |
| Employer took reasonable steps within 60 days of notice | Penalty capped at 30% of the statutory amount |
| Violation fully cured | No penalty owed for the cured violation |
The practical implication is this: the higher $200 penalty tier is now much harder to reach than it used to be. It only applies if a court or agency found the same employer practice unlawful within the prior five years, or if a court finds the employer’s conduct was malicious, fraudulent, or oppressive, the same standard used for punitive damages elsewhere in California law.
What Counts as “Reasonable Steps”
Reasonable steps generally include periodic payroll audits, distributing lawful written policies, training supervisors on Labor Code compliance, and taking corrective action once an issue is identified. Critically, the existence of a violation despite these efforts doesn’t automatically defeat the reasonable-steps defense. Courts look at the employer’s overall compliance posture, not just whether a mistake happened.
The “Cure” Process in Detail
Curing a violation means more than just fixing the underlying policy going forward. It generally requires making each aggrieved employee whole, paying back wages going back three years from the notice, plus 7% interest, any liquidated damages required by statute, and reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. Employers with fewer than 100 employees have an expanded path: they can submit a confidential cure proposal directly to the LWDA within 33 days of receiving a notice. Larger employers instead request an early evaluation conference once a lawsuit is filed, which can pause discovery while the parties test the strength of the claims and the adequacy of any proposed cure.
PAGA vs. Class Action Lawsuits
PAGA actions and class actions both let one plaintiff represent a broader group, but PAGA doesn’t require formal class certification and recovers civil penalties rather than direct compensation for the group’s losses. The two mechanisms often address the same underlying employer conduct through very different procedural paths.
| Feature | PAGA Action | Class Action |
|---|---|---|
| Certification required | No | Yes |
| What’s recovered | Civil penalties, split between workers and the state | Direct compensation for the class’s actual losses |
| Arbitration impact | Individual claim can be compelled to arbitration; representative claim status is contested | Class waivers in arbitration agreements are generally enforceable |
| Pre-suit requirement | Mandatory LWDA notice and waiting period | No equivalent government notice requirement |
This is the core principle: a class action requires a judge to certify that the group’s claims are similar enough to be litigated together, a meaningful hurdle that filters out weaker or overly diverse claims. PAGA skips that step entirely, which is exactly why critics call it a “pseudo-class action” with lower procedural barriers but penalty exposure that can rival or exceed a comparable class action.
Why Employers Fought Harder Against PAGA Specifically
Class action waivers in arbitration agreements have generally been enforceable under the Federal Arbitration Act for years. California courts, however, treated PAGA claims differently, refusing to enforce waivers of PAGA standing because PAGA was understood as a law enforcement mechanism standing in for the state itself, not an ordinary private dispute. That distinction is precisely what made Viking River Cruises such a significant decision when it allowed individual PAGA claims to be split off into arbitration after all.
Recent Changes to PAGA Laws
California’s 2024 reforms, enacted through AB 2288 and SB 92, represent the most significant restructuring of PAGA since it became law in 2004, touching standing, penalties, cure rights, and court management authority. The changes were negotiated specifically to head off a ballot initiative that would have repealed PAGA entirely.
- Stricter standing: plaintiffs must have personally experienced each violation pursued
- New penalty caps tied to an employer’s “reasonable steps” toward compliance
- Expanded cure rights, now including meal/rest break, overtime, and expense reimbursement violations
- Worker penalty share increased from 25% to 35%
- Injunctive relief added as an available remedy, not just civil penalties
- Courts explicitly authorized to limit evidence or scope to keep a case manageable for trial
The practical implication is this: these reforms apply to PAGA notices submitted on or after June 19, 2024, with the cure and early evaluation procedures taking effect later that year. Cases tied to notices filed before that date are generally governed by the older rules, which means two PAGA cases filed just months apart can operate under meaningfully different legal frameworks.
Why a Repeal Effort Almost Succeeded
Business groups gathered more than 700,000 signatures for a ballot measure that would have replaced PAGA entirely with exclusive Labor Commissioner enforcement, eliminating the private right to sue. That measure was withdrawn from the November 2024 ballot specifically because the legislature passed AB 2288 and SB 92 first, suggesting both sides viewed reform as preferable to an uncertain ballot fight.
What’s Still Unsettled
The interaction between PAGA and arbitration agreements remains an active area of litigation following Viking River Cruises and the California Supreme Court’s response in Adolph v. Uber Technologies. Whether an employee who arbitrates their individual claim keeps standing to pursue the broader representative action in court, and whether trial courts must stay those court proceedings while arbitration plays out, continue to be litigated case by case rather than settled by a single clear rule.
Key Takeaways
- PAGA lets employees recover civil penalties on behalf of the state, not direct compensation for their own losses.
- Since the 2024 reforms, plaintiffs must have personally experienced each violation they pursue on a representative basis, within a one-year window.
- A mandatory LWDA notice, not a court filing, is always the first step in a PAGA case.
- Penalties now range from $25 to $200 per employee per pay period, with caps available to employers who took reasonable compliance steps.
- Unlike class actions, PAGA doesn’t require formal certification, but workers and the state split any penalty recovery.
- Arbitration agreements can split off an employee’s individual PAGA claim, but the fate of the broader representative claim remains an actively litigated question.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does PAGA apply outside of California?
PAGA only applies to California employees and California Labor Code violations. Workers in other states must rely on their own state’s wage and hour laws or federal protections like the FLSA, which don’t include PAGA’s specific civil penalty mechanism.
Can an employer settle a PAGA claim directly with the employee without court involvement?
Generally no. PAGA actions can’t simply be settled privately between the employee and employer. Any settlement must be submitted to the court for approval, since part of the recovery belongs to the state.
Can a former employee still file a PAGA claim after leaving the job?
Yes, in most cases, since the personal-experience standing requirement under the 2024 reforms generally requires the violation to fall within PAGA’s one-year statute of limitations, regardless of employment status.
Can an arbitration agreement completely block a PAGA lawsuit?
It depends on the agreement and the specific claim. Following Viking River Cruises, an individual PAGA claim can often be compelled to arbitration, while the fate of the broader representative claim remains a contested, actively litigated issue.
Can you recover unpaid wages through a PAGA claim?
Yes, generally. Workers can pursue a separate wage and hour claim or lawsuit to recover unpaid wages directly, since PAGA itself is limited to civil penalties rather than personal compensation.
What’s the difference in cure rights for small versus large employers?
Employers with fewer than 100 employees can submit a confidential cure proposal to the LWDA within 33 days of a notice. Larger employers instead request an early evaluation conference after a lawsuit is filed.
Are union employees covered by PAGA?
Yes, construction industry employees covered by a qualifying collective bargaining agreement that meets specific statutory requirements, including wage and PAGA-waiver provisions, can be exempt from PAGA under a separate carve-out.
Is there still a way to reach the higher $200 penalty tier after the reforms?
Yes, the higher $200 per-employee, per-pay-period tier still exists, but it now requires a prior court or agency finding of an unlawful policy, or proof the employer’s conduct was malicious, fraudulent, or oppressive.
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