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Getting fired right before your bonus pays out feels like a setup. One week you are on track for a payment you worked all year to earn. The next week you are cleaning out your desk, and HR is acting like that money never existed.
The timing is rarely an accident. Employers sometimes terminate workers just before a bonus payout to avoid paying what was earned. Whether that is legal in California depends on the type of bonus, what your employment contract says, and why you were fired.
This post covers what California law says about earned wages versus a discretionary bonus, when a pre-bonus firing crosses into wrongful termination, what to do if you are dealing with unpaid wages, and when it makes sense to call an employment lawyer.
In many cases, yes. California treats bonuses as wages when they are tied to work the employee already performed. Under California Labor Code Section 200, the definition of wages includes amounts paid for labor, and that covers bonuses earned through performance, sales, or hitting defined targets.
This matters because earned wages cannot be forfeited just because you no longer work there on payday. If you completed the work that triggered the bonus, the money belongs to you. Your employer cannot keep it by firing you the week before the check clears.
The harder question is whether your bonus counts as earned. That depends on how the bonus was structured and what your employment contract actually says about it.
A non-discretionary bonus is tied to specific, measurable conditions. You hit a sales quota. You closed a defined number of deals. You completed a project. The employer set the rules, you met them, and the bonus is owed. Non-discretionary bonuses are treated as earned wages under California law.
A discretionary bonus is one the employer can decide to pay or not pay based on their own judgment. There is no formula. No target. No promise. The classic example is a Christmas Bonus or holiday gift the company hands out based on how the year went. True discretionary bonuses are not considered earned wages because no specific performance triggered them.
California courts look at the substance of the bonus, not the label. An employer cannot avoid paying a non-discretionary bonus just by calling it a discretionary bonus in the handbook or bonus policy. If the bonus was promised, communicated, and tied to performance the employee already delivered, it is earned wages under the law, regardless of what the bonus plans call it.
The case that anchors this is Schachter v. Citigroup, Inc. The California Supreme Court made clear that compensation tied to work already performed is a wage, and wages already earned cannot be forfeited. That principle controls how courts read most bonus plans, bonus programs, and incentive structures across the state.
Sometimes. California is an at-will employment state, which means an employer can usually fire you for any reason or no reason. But at-will employment does not let an employer commit wage theft. Firing someone specifically to avoid an earned bonus payout is wage theft, and it can also support a wrongful termination claim.
The legal picture comes down to two questions. Was the bonus already earned at the time of termination? And was the firing itself wrongful?
If the bonus was earned, you are owed the money regardless of whether the termination was legal. The firing might have been perfectly legitimate, and your former employer still has to pay the bonus you completed the work for.
If the firing itself was wrongful, you may have a separate claim on top of the unpaid wages. Wrongful termination in California covers firings that violate public policy, breach an employment contract, or are motivated by discrimination or retaliation.
A pre-bonus firing crosses into wrongful termination when it violates the law or public policy. The most common scenarios are these.
A clean firing for legitimate reasons does not become wrongful termination just because the timing is bad for you. The question is whether the employer had a lawful reason or whether the bonus payout drove the decision.
This is the document that decides most cases. Pull out your offer letter, your employment contract, your bonus policy, and your employee handbook. Read the language carefully.
Look for terms like "you must be employed at the time of payment to receive the bonus" or "bonuses are not earned until paid." Employers use this language in bonus plans to argue that the money never vested and therefore cannot be owed. The same trick shows up in anniversary retention bonus agreements and bonus program documents that pretend a bonus is forfeitable when the work was already done.
California courts do not always enforce that language. If the bonus is tied to work you already completed, calling it unvested in the bonus policy does not change the underlying reality. The question a court will ask is whether you did the work that earned the bonus, not whether you happened to still be employed on payday.
Forfeiture clauses get scrutinized closely. The further the bonus structure looks like a delayed wage for past work, the harder it is for the employer to enforce a forfeiture provision. The closer it looks like a true discretionary bonus, the easier it is.
It depends on what type of claim you have.
If the only issue is unpaid wages from the missed bonus payout, you may recover the bonus itself plus interest. California Labor Code Section 203 also imposes waiting time penalties when an employer willfully fails to pay final wages on time. Those penalties equal one day of wages for every day the payment is late, up to 30 days. For a high earner, that adds up quickly.
If you also have a wrongful termination claim, the recovery can include lost wages going forward, lost benefits, emotional distress damages, and in some cases punitive damages. Discrimination and retaliation cases under the Fair Employment and Housing Act also allow recovery of attorney's fees.
If your employer required you to sign an arbitration agreement when you started, your case may need to go through private arbitration rather than court. That changes the procedure but not the underlying rights.
Stock options, restricted stock units, and similar equity tied to your employment contract follow their own vesting rules, which is why pulling every grant document matters as much as pulling the bonus policy.
Move quickly. The first few weeks after a termination shape the strength of any unpaid wages claim or wrongful termination case you might bring later.
The clock matters. Wage claims and wrongful termination claims have statutes of limitations, and waiting too long can cost you the case.
A true discretionary bonus has no preset formula, no announced target, and no promise tied to performance. The employer decides each year whether to pay anything at all. Courts look past the label and examine whether the bonus was actually tied to work performed. Calling something a discretionary bonus in the bonus policy does not make it so.
Usually not, if the Christmas Bonus is a true gift handed out at year-end with no formula behind it. But if the company has an established pattern of paying the same Christmas Bonus based on tenure, position, or performance, it can start looking like a non-discretionary bonus that qualifies as earned wages.
It depends on whether the bonus was earned before you quit. If you completed the work that triggered the bonus, you are likely owed the money even if you left before the bonus payout date. Forfeiture clauses tied to continued employment are not automatically enforceable when the bonus reflects work already done.
Under Labor Code Section 203, an employer that willfully fails to pay final wages owes the employee one day of wages for every day the payment is late, up to 30 days. The penalty applies to bonuses that qualify as wages, not just regular pay.
The deadline depends on the type of claim. Claims under the Fair Employment and Housing Act generally require filing a complaint with the California Civil Rights Department within three years of the termination. Wage claims for unpaid wages have a three-year statute of limitations, extended to four years if pursued as an unfair business practice. Contract claims tied to an employment contract have a four-year window when the contract is written.
Usually not, if the severance package included a release of claims. That is why having an employment lawyer review the severance package before signing matters so much. Some severance package agreements specifically carve out earned wages, but most do not, and a signed release can extinguish the right to sue for the bonus.
At-will status means your employer can fire you without cause. It does not let them steal wages you already earned. A wrongful termination claim becomes harder when there is no employment contract for a specific term, but the bonus itself remains owed if the work that earned it was completed.
An anniversary retention bonus is usually forfeitable if you are not employed on the anniversary date, because the entire point of the bonus is to reward staying. Stock options follow whatever vesting schedule the grant document sets. Both still get reviewed against the actual employment contract, because the way the documents are drafted can shift the analysis.
Our California employment lawyers at Bear Republic Law represent workers whose employers tried to time a firing around a bonus payout. We litigate these cases. We do not push clients into quiet settlements when the law and the facts call for a fight. If you were fired before an earned bonus paid out, contact our California employment lawyers today.
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