Verified against official state labor departments Updated for 2026

Puerto Rico Paid Sick Leave Laws (2026)

Whether paid sick leave is required in Puerto Rico, who is covered, how it accrues, and where the law comes from.

Required by law Verified Jul 6, 2026

Puerto Rico requires paid sick leave. Required. Puerto Rico requires paid sick leave under its labor code.

Paid sick leave in Puerto Rico

Required by state law
Yes
Typical accrual
~1 hour per 30 hours worked
The rule
Required. Puerto Rico requires paid sick leave under its labor code.

Good to know

Paid sick leave and paid vacation are different things. This page covers sick leave. For whether unused vacation must be paid when you leave a job, see Puerto Rico PTO payout rules. This is general information, not legal advice.

Common questions

Puerto Rico paid sick leave FAQ

Does Puerto Rico require paid sick leave?
Required. Puerto Rico requires paid sick leave under its labor code.
Is there a federal paid sick leave law?
No. There is no general federal law requiring private employers to provide paid sick leave. Federal contractors are an exception, and the FMLA provides unpaid, job-protected leave for eligible employees.
How does paid sick leave usually accrue?
In states that require it, sick leave typically accrues at about 1 hour for every 30 to 40 hours worked, with an annual cap set by the law. The exact rate and cap vary by state.
Where can I find the official Puerto Rico rules?
The Puerto Rico Department of Labor publishes the official requirements, linked on this page.

David Scott compiles and verifies minimum wage rates, tipped wages, and overtime rules from official state and federal labor department sources, and re-checks every page when rates change. See how the data is sourced.