Employee Handbook Requirements by State: Georgia, Florida & Indiana (2026)

An outdated employee handbook is worse than no handbook at all. It creates the illusion of compliance while leaving you exposed. If your handbook references old wage rates, missing leave policies, or doesn't address state-specific rules — it's a liability, not a protection.

If your business operates in Georgia, Florida, and Indiana (like many of our clients do), you're navigating three different sets of employment laws simultaneously. Each state has unique requirements that must appear in your employee handbook — or at minimum be communicated in writing to employees.

Here's everything you need in 2026, organized by state with a universal checklist at the end.

Federal Policies Every Handbook Needs (All States)

Regardless of which state your employees work in, these federal policies should be in every handbook:

Policy Law Applies When
Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO)Title VII, ADA, ADEA15+ employees
Anti-Harassment / Anti-DiscriminationTitle VII15+ employees
Family & Medical Leave (FMLA)FMLA50+ employees
Reasonable Accommodation (Disability)ADA15+ employees
Pregnancy AccommodationPUMP Act / PWFAAll employers
At-Will Employment StatementCommon lawAll employers (best practice)
USERRA / Military LeaveUSERRAAll employers
COBRA Continuation CoverageCOBRA20+ employees

Georgia-Specific Requirements

Georgia is an employer-friendly state with relatively few mandates beyond federal law — but there are important ones:

Requirement Details Threshold
Immigration ComplianceMust include notice of compliance with Georgia's immigration work authorization law10+ employees
Jury Duty LeaveMust allow time off; cannot require use of PTO; protected from terminationAll employers
Voting LeaveUp to 2 hours unpaid leave for voting if schedule doesn't permit voting before/after workAll employers
Family Care Act (Sick Leave)Employees may use earned sick leave to care for immediate family members25+ employees
Drug Testing PolicyIf you test, policy must be in writing with 60-day advance notice to employeesIf drug testing
Day of RestCannot require work on more than 6 consecutive days without employee consentAll employers
Withholding RateFlat 5.39% for 2026 (down from 5.49%). Reference current rate in handbook pay sectionAll employers

Florida-Specific Requirements

Florida has fewer employment mandates than many states, but the recent additions (especially E-Verify) are significant:

Requirement Details Threshold
E-Verify ComplianceMust use E-Verify for all new hires; document in handbook hiring procedures25+ employees
Minimum Wage NoticeFlorida minimum wage is $15.00/hr as of Sept 30, 2025. Must be posted and referencedAll employers
Jury Duty LeaveEmployee cannot be fired for jury service; no requirement to payAll employers
Domestic Violence LeaveUp to 3 days leave per year for DV victims (court, safety planning, counseling)50+ employees
Clean Indoor Air ActSmoking policy required; define designated smoking areas or full prohibitionAll employers
No State Income TaxFlorida has no state income tax — clarify in pay section that only federal taxes applyAll employers
Workers' Comp CoverageRequired for all employers with 4+ employees (construction: 1+ employee)4+ employees

Indiana-Specific Requirements

Indiana has some unique provisions — especially around jury duty penalties and lactation accommodation — that trip up employers who assume it follows the same rules as neighboring states:

Requirement Details Threshold
Jury Duty Leave (Criminal Penalties)Indiana imposes criminal penalties for retaliating against employees for jury service. This is stricter than most statesAll employers
Indiana Civil Rights ActProhibits discrimination based on race, sex, religion, national origin, disability, ancestry, veteran status6+ employees
Lactation AccommodationMust provide break time and a private facility (not a bathroom) for nursing mothers25+ employees
Emergency Responder LeaveMust allow leave for volunteer firefighters and emergency responders during emergenciesAll employers
School Activity LeaveMay not discipline employees who attend their child's school conference or activityAll employers
Minor Employee BreaksEmployees under 18 must receive 1-2 breaks per shift (30 min for 6+ hour shifts)If employing minors
State Income Tax / County Tax3.05% state rate + county tax (varies). Handbook should reference both withholding typesAll employers

Multi-State Handbook: How to Structure It

If you have employees in all three states, don't create three separate handbooks. Instead:

  1. Core handbook: Cover all federal policies and company-wide rules (attendance, benefits, code of conduct, IT/social media, etc.)
  2. State addenda: Create a Georgia Addendum, Florida Addendum, and Indiana Addendum with state-specific policies
  3. Acknowledgment form: Have employees sign acknowledging receipt of both the core handbook AND their state addendum
  4. Review annually: Laws change — schedule a handbook review every January

Key rule: You must comply with the laws of the state where the employee physically works — not where your business is headquartered. A Georgia-based company with an employee in Florida must follow Florida law for that employee.

The Universal Handbook Checklist

✅ What Every Handbook Should Include

  • ☐ Welcome message & company overview
  • ☐ At-will employment statement
  • ☐ EEO / Anti-discrimination policy
  • ☐ Anti-harassment policy (with reporting procedure)
  • ☐ ADA / Reasonable accommodation policy
  • ☐ FMLA policy (if 50+ employees)
  • ☐ Pregnancy & lactation accommodation (PUMP Act)
  • ☐ Pay practices (pay schedule, overtime, deductions)
  • ☐ PTO / Vacation / Sick leave policy
  • ☐ Jury duty leave
  • ☐ Military / USERRA leave
  • ☐ Workers' compensation notice
  • ☐ Drug & alcohol policy (if testing)
  • ☐ IT / Social media / Acceptable use policy
  • ☐ Workplace safety (OSHA compliance)
  • ☐ Disciplinary / Corrective action procedures
  • ☐ Separation / Termination procedures
  • ☐ State-specific addendum (GA / FL / IN)
  • Signed acknowledgment form

FAQ

Is an employee handbook legally required?

No federal law requires private employers to have a handbook. However, many federal and state laws require specific policies to be communicated in writing. A handbook is the safest, most organized way to do this — and it's your strongest defense in employment disputes.

Do I need different handbook policies for different states?

Yes. If you have employees in multiple states, you must follow the laws where each employee physically works. The best approach is a core handbook with state-specific addenda.

How often should I update my employee handbook?

At minimum, annually — typically in January when new laws take effect. Also update whenever employment law changes, when you expand to new states, or when company policies change. Always have employees sign an updated acknowledgment.

Don't Build Your Handbook Alone

BlueWave HR helps multi-state employers build compliant handbooks through iSolved People Cloud. From state-specific policy templates to electronic acknowledgment tracking, we make handbook management effortless.

Get a Free HR Compliance Review
📘 HR Compliance Employee Handbook Georgia Florida Indiana Multi-State 2026
Share
BW

BlueWave HR provides full-service payroll and human capital management for small and mid-size businesses, powered by iSolved People Cloud. With 10 years of experience serving businesses in Canton, GA, Fort Lauderdale, FL, and Indianapolis, IN, we deliver enterprise-grade technology with the personal touch of a local team.

🔔 Compliance Alerts

What do you need to stay on top of?

We track compliance changes, tax updates, and industry rules for our clients. When something changes in your world, we'll send you a heads up.

Pick your topics:

You'll only hear from us when something changes in your selected topics.
No sales emails. No weekly digests. Unsubscribe with one click.

You're in the loop!

We'll only reach out when something changes in your selected topics. No spam — that's a promise.