You audit job postings before they go live. But when was the last time you reviewed the job descriptions for your existing employees?
California employment law doesn't distinguish between job postings for open positions and job descriptions for filled roles. Both must comply.
That's one job description. How many positions does your company have?
Job descriptions written before California's 2026 laws likely contain violations. Here's what plaintiffs' attorneys are looking for:
Job descriptions without salary information violate SB 1162–even for positions you aren't actively hiring for.
Pay ranges that don't reflect current wages or total compensation (including bonuses, equity, benefits) under SB 642.
"Digital native," "high energy," "recent graduate"–terms that proxy for age discrimination under FEHA and ADEA.
Descriptions suggesting independent contractor treatment for employees, or exempt status for non-exempt roles.
Lack of required equal employment opportunity and reasonable accommodation language.
Any mention of training cost recovery or stay-or-pay provisions now violates AB 692.
"How many of your job descriptions have been reviewed for California 2026 compliance?"
If you haven't audited, you're exposed. Every job description is a potential PAGA claim.
Partial coverage = partial protection. Plaintiffs look for the weakest link.
Complete audit with documentation = defensible compliance posture.
PAGA covers all Labor Code violations – including job posting deficiencies like missing pay ranges. Job descriptions are increasingly common triggers.
Source: CA Labor & Workforce Development Agency
PAGA filings nearly tripled from ~3,700 in 2016 to over 10,000 in 2025. The average PAGA court settlement exceeds $1.1M.
Source: LWDA, Duane Morris Class Action Review
Average cost to defend an employment lawsuit ranges from $75K to settle to $250K if it goes to jury verdict.
Source: Employment law firm estimates
SafeReq analyzes both active job postings AND job descriptions on file. Get the same compliance screening for your existing position documentation.
Important: This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. SafeReq is a compliance screening tool, not a law firm. Consult with a licensed California employment attorney for specific legal guidance regarding your organization's compliance obligations and potential liability.