Verified against official state labor departments Updated for 2026

Kansas Voting Leave Law (2026)

Whether Kansas gives you time off to vote, how many hours, and whether that time is paid.

Paid leave required Verified Jul 6, 2026

Kansas gives you up to two consecutive hours of paid leave to vote unless you already have two consecutive non-working hours. The employer may choose the time, as long as it does not fall during your regular lunch period.

Voting leave in Kansas

Time off required?
Yes
Paid?
Paid
How much time
Up to 2 hours
Advance notice
Employer sets timing

Good to know

Most voting-leave laws only apply when your work schedule does not already leave you enough time to vote, often two or three consecutive non-working hours while the polls are open. Where leave is required, the employer can usually decide whether you take it at the start or end of your shift. Early voting and mail-in ballots can change what applies to you. This is general information, not legal advice.

Common questions

Kansas voting leave FAQ

Does Kansas give you time off to vote?
Yes. Kansas gives you up to two consecutive hours of paid leave to vote unless you already have two consecutive non-working hours. The employer may choose the time, as long as it does not fall during your regular lunch period.
Is voting leave paid in Kansas?
Yes. Kansas requires the time off to be paid, within the limits set by law.
Do I have to tell my employer in advance?
In Kansas, the notice rule is: Employer sets timing. Check the statute for the exact wording.
Where can I confirm the official rule?
The governing law is Kan. Stat. § 25-418. You can find your state election office through Vote.gov, 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.