Missouri Employment Law: Worker Rights and Employer Obligations
Missouri employment law governs the legal relationship between workers and employers operating within the state, establishing minimum standards for wages, workplace safety, anti-discrimination protections, and termination procedures. The framework draws from both Missouri statutes — principally the Missouri Revised Statutes — and federal law administered through agencies such as the U.S. Department of Labor and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). Disputes arising under this body of law are adjudicated in Missouri circuit courts or federal district courts depending on the claim type, and the regulatory structures that shape enforcement are detailed at Regulatory Context for the Missouri Legal System.
Definition and Scope
Missouri employment law encompasses the statutory and common-law rules that define employer obligations and worker entitlements in the employment relationship. The primary state statute is the Missouri Human Rights Act (MHRA), codified at Missouri Revised Statutes §§ 213.010–213.137, which prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, ancestry, age, and disability. Employers with 6 or more employees are subject to MHRA coverage — a threshold lower than the 15-employee minimum under the federal Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Missouri's minimum wage is set by the Proposition B ballot measure passed in November 2018 and codified at Missouri Revised Statutes § 290.502. As of 2023, the Missouri minimum wage stands at $12.00 per hour for most employers, indexed to inflation adjustments under the statute (Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations). Tipped employees may receive a cash wage of 50% of the standard minimum, provided tips bring total compensation to the full minimum.
Scope coverage and limitations: This page addresses employment law as it applies to private-sector and state-government employment within Missouri's geographic borders. Federal employment law applies concurrently in most circumstances; where federal and state law conflict, the standard more protective of the worker generally governs. Matters involving federal contractors subject to the Davis-Bacon Act, tribal-nation employers operating under sovereign immunity, or interstate commerce disputes governed exclusively by federal agency jurisdiction fall outside the scope of Missouri state employment law as described here. Agricultural workers and certain domestic workers have modified coverage under Missouri statutes.
How It Works
Missouri employment operates under the at-will doctrine by default. Under Missouri common law, either party may terminate the employment relationship at any time, for any lawful reason or no stated reason, absent a contract or statutory exception. Missouri courts recognize three principal exceptions to at-will termination:
- Public policy exception — termination that violates a clear Missouri public policy (e.g., firing an employee for filing a workers' compensation claim) is actionable under Missouri common law.
- Implied contract exception — employee handbooks, offer letters, or oral representations that create a reasonable expectation of continued employment may override at-will status.
- Statutory protections — federal and state anti-discrimination statutes, the Missouri Workers' Compensation Law (RSMo § 287.780), and whistleblower provisions prohibit retaliatory discharge in specific circumstances.
Wage and hour enforcement is administered by the Missouri Division of Labor Standards within the Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations (DOLIR). DOLIR investigates wage claims, enforces prevailing wage requirements on public works projects under RSMo Chapter 290, and oversees the Missouri Unpaid Wage Act. Workers must file wage complaints with DOLIR within 2 years of the violation for state claims.
Workplace safety is governed jointly. Missouri operates under the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) rather than a state plan; consequently, federal OSHA standards apply directly to most private-sector employers operating in Missouri. Missouri's Division of Labor Standards enforces safety requirements specific to minors, consistent with RSMo §§ 294.011–294.100 (Missouri Child Labor Law).
Unemployment insurance is administered by the Missouri Division of Employment Security (DES), funded by employer payroll taxes. Base period wage requirements, benefit duration (up to 20 weeks), and disqualification rules for misconduct are set by RSMo Chapter 288.
Common Scenarios
The employment law disputes most frequently processed through Missouri agencies and courts cluster into four categories:
- Discrimination and harassment claims — A worker alleging race, sex, or disability discrimination may file with the Missouri Commission on Human Rights (MCHR) within 180 days of the discriminatory act, or with the EEOC within 300 days. MCHR issues a "right to sue" letter that is prerequisite to filing a state civil action under the MHRA.
- Wrongful termination — A discharged employee asserting violation of a public policy exception files in Missouri circuit court. The Missouri Supreme Court's decision in Fleshner v. Pepose Vision Institute (2010) established that the public policy exception extends to employees reporting violations of law to supervisors, not only to external authorities.
- Wage theft and unpaid overtime — An employee whose employer fails to pay earned wages or misclassifies the worker as exempt from overtime may file administratively with DOLIR or pursue a civil claim. Federal overtime protections under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), enforced by the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division, apply concurrently where the employer meets the $500,000 annual revenue threshold.
- Workers' compensation disputes — Missouri's workers' compensation system, administered by the Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation, covers most employees injured on the job. Employers with 5 or more employees (or any employees in construction) are required to carry coverage. Disputes over benefit amounts or denial of claims are heard by administrative law judges within the Division, with appeals available to the Missouri Labor and Industrial Relations Commission and then to the Missouri Court of Appeals.
Decision Boundaries
The intersection of federal and state law creates classification boundaries that determine which enforcement pathway applies and what remedies are available.
State MHRA vs. Federal Title VII:
The MHRA's 6-employee threshold versus Title VII's 15-employee threshold means employers with 6–14 employees face state liability under the MHRA but not federal Title VII exposure. Damages under the MHRA are capped: compensatory damages are limited and punitive damages require proof of actual malice, while federal Title VII caps combined compensatory and punitive damages at $300,000 for employers with 501 or more employees (42 U.S.C. § 1981a).
Employee vs. Independent Contractor:
Missouri does not apply a single universal test for worker classification. The Missouri Department of Revenue, DOLIR, and federal agencies each apply distinct multi-factor analyses. Misclassification exposes employers to back payroll taxes, unemployment insurance liability, and OSHA enforcement. The IRS 20-factor behavioral control test and the FLSA economic realities test coexist with Missouri's common-law right-to-control standard.
Covered vs. Exempt Employees (Overtime):
The FLSA's white-collar exemptions — executive, administrative, professional — require workers to receive a salary of at least $684 per week (raised from $455 per week effective January 1, 2020, per U.S. Department of Labor Final Rule 29 CFR Part 541) and meet duties tests. Missouri does not maintain a separate overtime exemption standard; state law defers to federal FLSA classifications.
Arbitration Agreements:
Missouri courts enforce pre-dispute arbitration agreements in employment contracts under the Federal Arbitration Act. An employee subject to a valid arbitration clause waives access to Missouri circuit courts for covered claims, though MCHR administrative filings remain available regardless of arbitration agreements. The scope of arbitration clauses — particularly class action waivers — continues to be refined through Missouri appellate decisions tracked in the Missouri Court of Appeals system.
For a broader orientation to how this area fits within the Missouri legal landscape, the Missouri Legal Services Authority index provides access to related subject areas including Missouri Civil Rights Law, Missouri Administrative Law, and Missouri Business Law.
References
- Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations (DOLIR)
- Missouri Commission on Human Rights (MCHR)
- Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation
- Missouri Division of Employment Security (DES)
- Missouri Revised Statutes Chapter 213 — Missouri Human Rights Act
- Missouri Revised Statutes Chapter 287 — Workers' Compensation Law
- Missouri Revised Statutes Chapter 288 — Employment Security
- Missouri Revised Statutes § 290.502 — Minimum Wage
- U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
- U.S. Department of Labor — Wage and Hour Division
- Federal OSHA — Occupational Safety and Health Administration
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