If you were fired for an illegal reason, you have rights. The average wrongful termination settlement is $48,800 with a lawyer, and employees with legal representation have a 64% success rate. Learn if your termination was illegal and how to recover compensation.
Wrongful termination occurs when your employer fires you for an illegal reason in violation of federal or state law, or in breach of an employment contract. While most employment in the United States is "at-will"—meaning you or your employer can end the relationship at any time for any reason—the law creates important exceptions that protect workers from arbitrary and illegal firings.
It is illegal to fire someone because of their membership in a protected class. You cannot be fired because of your race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, sexual orientation, and gender identity), national origin, age (40 or older), disability, or genetic information. It is also illegal to fire you in retaliation for exercising your legal rights—such as reporting safety violations, filing discrimination complaints, taking medical leave, or blowing the whistle on illegal activities.
Wrongful termination also includes firings that violate employment contracts. If you have a written or implied contract guaranteeing employment for a certain period or requiring "good cause" for termination, your employer must comply with those terms. Additionally, firing someone in a way that violates public policy—such as firing an employee for refusing to commit perjury or for serving on jury duty—is illegal even in at-will states.
Many employees do not realize they have been wrongfully terminated because they assume at-will employment means their employer can fire them for any reason. This is not true. The law protects you from terminations based on discrimination, retaliation, contract violations, and violations of fundamental public policy. If you believe you were fired for an illegal reason, you may have a wrongful termination claim regardless of your state's at-will employment doctrine.
At-will employment is the default employment relationship in 49 states (Montana is the exception). It means that either you or your employer can terminate the employment relationship at any time, for any reason or no reason, with or without notice. Your employer does not need to provide a reason for firing you, and you do not need to give notice when you quit.
At-will employment gives employers significant flexibility. They can fire you because they do not like your attitude, because business is slow, because they found someone more qualified, or for no reason at all. They can also change your job duties, cut your pay, reduce your hours, or alter your benefits without your consent (though these changes may create other legal claims like constructive discharge or breach of contract).
However, at-will employment is not unlimited. Courts and legislators have recognized that completely unrestricted firing power would allow employers to violate fundamental rights and public policies. As a result, numerous exceptions to at-will employment have developed over time. These exceptions protect workers from terminations based on illegal discrimination, retaliation for exercising legal rights, violation of employment contracts, and actions that undermine important public policies.
Understanding at-will employment is important because many employers use it to discourage workers from pursuing legal claims. They may tell you "this is an at-will state" as if that ends the discussion. But at-will employment does not shield employers from liability for illegal terminations. If your firing violates federal or state anti-discrimination laws, retaliation protections, contract terms, or public policy, you have a wrongful termination claim even in an at-will state.
Courts have recognized three major categories of exceptions to at-will employment that protect workers from unfair termination.
The public policy exception prohibits employers from firing workers for reasons that violate fundamental public policy. This is one of the most important protections for at-will employees. Examples include firing you for refusing to commit an illegal act (like falsifying documents or committing perjury), exercising a legal right (like filing a workers' compensation claim, taking jury duty, voting, or serving in the military), performing a legal duty or obligation (like responding to a subpoena or reporting to jury duty), or reporting illegal activity or safety violations (whistleblowing). The public policy exception protects conduct that society views as essential to maintaining legal and ethical standards. Most states recognize this exception, though the specific policies protected vary.
The implied contract exception protects employees when employer conduct creates an implied promise of continued employment or requires "good cause" for termination. Even without a written contract, courts may find an implied contract based on employee handbooks stating employees will only be fired "for cause," verbal promises of job security or long-term employment, patterns of conduct (like progressive discipline policies consistently applied), length of service combined with positive performance reviews, and industry customs or practices. If your employer created an implied contract through these mechanisms and then fired you without good cause, you may have a breach of contract claim. However, many employers now include disclaimers in handbooks explicitly stating that employment remains at-will. Courts examine the totality of circumstances to determine whether an implied contract exists.
Some states recognize an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in employment relationships. This requires employers to deal fairly with employees and prohibits terminations in bad faith or motivated by malice. Examples include firing an employee to avoid paying earned commissions or bonuses, terminating someone shortly before pension benefits vest, firing an employee to replace them with a lower-paid worker after years of good service, or firing someone based on false accusations or fabricated performance issues. This exception is recognized in fewer states than the public policy or implied contract exceptions, but where it applies, it provides important protection against employer abuse of at-will employment.
States vary in which exceptions they recognize and how broadly they apply them. California, New York, and New Jersey recognize all three exceptions and apply them relatively broadly. Some states recognize only the public policy exception. Montana does not follow at-will employment at all—after a probationary period, employers must have "good cause" to terminate employees. Check with an employment lawyer in your state to understand which exceptions apply and how they might protect you.
Federal and state laws prohibit employers from firing workers for specific illegal reasons. Even in at-will states, these terminations violate the law and give you grounds for a wrongful termination claim.
Federal law prohibits firing someone because of their race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, sexual orientation, and gender identity), national origin, age (40 or older), disability, or genetic information. State laws often add additional protected categories like marital status, political affiliation, or veteran status. If you were fired because of membership in a protected class, you have a discrimination claim under Title VII, the ADA, the ADEA, or equivalent state laws.
It is illegal to fire someone for engaging in legally protected activity. This includes filing discrimination complaints with the EEOC or state agencies, reporting safety violations to OSHA, filing wage and hour claims or workers' compensation claims, taking FMLA leave or requesting disability accommodations, whistleblowing about illegal conduct, participating in investigations or testifying in legal proceedings, and opposing discrimination or harassment. Retaliation claims are the most common type of EEOC charge. If you were fired shortly after engaging in protected activity, timing alone can create a strong inference of retaliation.
Federal and state laws protect employees who report illegal activity, safety violations, fraud, environmental violations, and other misconduct. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act protects corporate whistleblowers. The False Claims Act protects employees who report fraud against the government. OSHA protects workers who report safety violations. Many states have comprehensive whistleblower protection statutes. If you were fired for reporting illegal or unethical conduct, you may have a wrongful termination claim and may be entitled to reinstatement, back pay, and other damages.
If you have an employment contract—written or implied—your employer must follow its terms. Contracts may require termination only "for cause," provide for specific termination procedures (like progressive discipline), or guarantee employment for a specific period. Firing you in violation of these contract terms is wrongful termination. Even employee handbooks can create enforceable contract terms if they promise certain procedures or protections.
You cannot be fired for exercising fundamental rights or performing civic duties. This includes serving on jury duty, voting, serving in the National Guard or reserves, complying with a subpoena, refusing to commit perjury or falsify records, reporting illegal activity (whistleblowing), or refusing to participate in illegal activities. Firing someone for these reasons violates public policy even if no specific statute prohibits it.
The amount you can recover in a wrongful termination case depends on your salary, how long you were unemployed, the type of wrongful termination, and the strength of your evidence. Statistics show that having a lawyer significantly increases both your chances of success and the amount you recover.
Back pay: Back pay: Lost wages from termination to judgment/settlement
Front pay: Front pay: Future lost earnings if you cannot be reinstated
Emotional distress: Emotional distress: Compensation for psychological harm
Punitive damages: Punitive damages: Punishment for egregious employer conduct
Attorney fees: Attorney fees: Often recoverable under employment laws
Get an estimated range for your wrongful termination case
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Important: This calculator provides estimates only. Actual case value depends on many factors including jurisdiction, specific facts, quality of evidence, and legal representation. Consult an employment lawyer for evaluation.
Proving wrongful termination requires establishing that your employer fired you for an illegal reason. The specific proof required depends on your type of claim.
To prove discrimination, you must show you are a member of a protected class, you were qualified for your position, you suffered an adverse employment action (termination), and the circumstances suggest discrimination. Evidence includes direct statements showing discriminatory intent, comparative evidence of similarly situated employees treated differently, suspicious timing (fired after complaining about discrimination), pretextual reasons that do not hold up under scrutiny, and statistical patterns showing disparate treatment.
To prove retaliation, you must show you engaged in protected activity (filing a complaint, reporting violations), your employer knew about the protected activity, you suffered an adverse action (termination), and there is a causal connection between the protected activity and termination. Timing is crucial—being fired shortly after protected activity creates a strong inference of retaliation. Courts recognize that few employers are foolish enough to admit retaliation, so circumstantial evidence is often sufficient.
To prove breach of contract, you must show an employment contract existed (written or implied), the contract required "good cause" for termination or guaranteed employment for a period, your employer terminated you, and the termination violated the contract terms. Evidence includes written contracts, employee handbooks, verbal promises documented in writing, patterns of conduct (progressive discipline always used), and length of service combined with positive reviews.
Strong evidence is critical to proving wrongful termination. Gather and preserve evidence immediately after termination.
Create a detailed timeline noting dates, times, people involved, and what happened leading up to and after your termination. Document protected activity (complaints, leave requests), employer responses, performance reviews and discipline, changes in treatment after protected activity, and the termination itself. The more documentation you have, the stronger your case.
The process for filing a wrongful termination claim depends on the type of claim.
Most employment lawyers offer free consultations. Get professional evaluation of your case before filing.
Discrimination and retaliation claims require filing with EEOC or state agency first.
While agency investigates, continue gathering evidence.
Most cases settle before trial. Negotiate from position of strength.
If settlement fails, lawyer files lawsuit in court.
Most cases settle during litigation, but some go to trial.
Important: Do not miss filing deadlines. Discrimination/retaliation claims have strict deadlines (180-300 days). Consult lawyer immediately to preserve all claims.
Wrongful termination claims have strict statutes of limitations. Missing a deadline permanently bars your claim.
Deadline: 180 days (300 days in deferral states)
Must file EEOC charge within this period. After Right to Sue letter, you have 90 days to file lawsuit. Most states are deferral states with 300-day deadline.
Deadline: 2-4 years (varies by state)
Written contracts typically 4 years, oral contracts 2 years. Check your state's statute of limitations for contract claims.
Deadline: 1-3 years (varies by state)
Depends on your state's statute of limitations for wrongful termination or tort claims.
Deadline: 2-3 years (federal), longer in some states
Fair Labor Standards Act allows 2 years (3 for willful violations). Some states allow longer periods.
Deadline: Varies by statute
Different whistleblower laws have different deadlines. Sarbanes-Oxley is 180 days. False Claims Act is 6 years. Check specific statute.
Consult employment lawyer within days of termination for free evaluation and to preserve all claims.
While not legally required, hiring an employment lawyer significantly increases your chances of success and the amount you recover.
Common questions about wrongful termination claims
Don't let an illegal firing go unchallenged. Employees with lawyers have a 64% success rate and recover an average of $48,800. Get a free case evaluation today.