Employee Uniforms
Question: May I require my employees to wear a particular uniform?
Answer: California law allows employers to require employees to wear particular types of clothing or uniforms to work. If an employer requires non-exempt employees to wear a uniform, the employer must pay for and maintain it for the employee. What constitutes a “uniform” is not always clear.
According to the California Labor Commissioner, the term “uniform” includes any apparel and/or accessories of distinctive design or color. An employer may prescribe the weight, color, quality, texture, style, form, and make of a “uniform” required to be worn by employees. When an employer simply requires employees to wear “basic wardrobe items which are usual and generally usable in the occupation,” the clothing is not a uniform. For example, specifying that employees wear white shirts, dark pants, and black shoes and belts, all of unspecified design, does not constitute a “uniform.” The employer is not required to pay for that clothing or its maintenance. If the required clothing can double as street clothes, it is probably not a “uniform.”
Some safety equipment or protective apparel must be worn by employees as a matter of law. Proper safety equipment such as goggles, gloves or other accessories or apparel must always be provided by the employer if they are required by a regulation of the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.
How is maintenance of a uniform handled?
In addition to the cost of the uniform, the employer must provide non-exempt employees with reasonable maintenance of the uniforms. The employee can either maintain the uniform itself, or pay the employee a weekly maintenance allowance of an hour’s pay at minimum wage, provided that an hour’s pay is a reasonable estimate of the time necessary to maintain uniform properly. It is reasonable to require employees to maintain uniforms requiring minimal care, such as washing and tumble drying, without reimbursement; however, special care, such as ironing, dry cleaning or separate laundering because of heavy soiling or special color, must be reimbursed to non-exempt employees. An employer may never impose a financial burden on employees, with respect to purchasing or maintaining clothing, which would reduce the employees’ wage rate below the minimum wage.