Equal Pay: Pay Equally Now, or Pay Much More Later

It may come as a surprise to many New York employers that as many as five separate federal, state, and local laws prohibit pay differences between male and female (and non-binary) employees performing equal jobs: (1) the Equal Pay Act; (2) Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; (3) the New York State Equal Pay Act; (4) the New York State Human Rights Law; and (5) the New York City Human Rights Law. The penalties for violations can add up, quickly reaching into the tens of thousands of dollars per employee, on top of unwanted publicity involving allegations of sex discrimination.

Equal pay between the sexes is an issue that is garnering increased attention, propelled in part by news about pay differentials across industries. As of 2017, nationally female employees earned only 80 percent of their male counterparts, though New York was nearest to parity (88 percent) of all 50 states. At the same time, state and local governments have been enacting laws intended to narrow the pay gap. There is even an annual Equal Pay Day, which seeks to increase public awareness of the issue.

With this increased attention to equal pay issues and enormous potential liability, it is crucial that employers act quickly to identify and fix equal pay violations.

What Is an Equal Pay Violation?



Broadly stated, equal pay laws prohibit an employer from paying employees of different sexes at different rates for the same job. The mantra is “equal pay for equal work.” Specifically, equal pay is required where two jobs require equal skill, effort, and responsibility (i.e., equal duties) and are performed under similar working conditions. “Equal,” in this context, does not mean “identical.” It is enough if skill, effort, and responsibility are substantially equal. Equal pay laws apply to both exempt and non-exempt employees, in all industries, and at all levels of a business.

To make out a violation of equal pay laws, an employee need only show that she performs or performed equal work as an opposite-sex employee (the “comparator”) in the same establishment—which can be the entire business, covering the whole country, in some cases—and was paid less than the comparator. The comparator need not even be employed at the same time as the complaining employee, as predecessors and successors count, too. Notably absent from the required proof is any element of intentionality, willfulness, malice, etc., unless the plaintiff wants punitive damages. Generally, the pay disparity itself is enough. Under federal law, a plaintiff can go back up to two years (three years if the violation was willful); under New York law, six years.