How it works Pricing Blog Changelog Coverage
State Law

California Pay Transparency Law (SB 1162): Guide

California SB 1162 pay transparency law salary range requirements

California Senate Bill 1162 (SB 1162) is one of the most comprehensive pay transparency laws in the United States. Signed by Governor Newsom and effective January 1, 2023, it expanded California's existing pay equity requirements to mandate salary disclosure in all public job postings and imposes significant reporting obligations on large employers.

Who does SB 1162 apply to?

SB 1162 creates two distinct tiers of obligation:

⚠ Remote roles are fully covered. If a position can be performed by someone located in California — even if your company has no California office — SB 1162 applies to that posting.

What must job postings include?

Employee and applicant rights

SB 1162 also grants rights beyond job postings:

💰 Civil penalties: $100–$10,000 per violation, assessed by the California Labor Commissioner. Each non-compliant posting is a separate violation. For employers with large volume job ad programmes, exposure can escalate quickly.

Pay data reporting requirement (100+ employees)

Employers with 100 or more employees covered by federal EEO-1 reporting must submit annual pay data reports to the California CRD by the second Wednesday of May each year. Reports must include:

Failure to file: civil penalty of up to $100 per employee for the first year, $200 per employee for subsequent years.

California city and county variations

Employer checklist

How RoleComply helps

RoleComply scans every job posting on your careers page daily against SB 1162 requirements. If a salary range is missing, ambiguous ("competitive salary"), or falls outside the documented pay scale, RoleComply flags it before a regulator does — and suggests the specific fix needed.

Frequently asked questions

Does SB 1162 apply if I have no California employees? Yes, if the role can be performed remotely by a California resident, the law applies to that posting regardless of where your company is headquartered.

Can I post different ranges for California vs. other states? Technically yes, but it is administratively complex and can signal pay inequity. Most employers choose one inclusive range that satisfies the strictest requirement.

What counts as a pay scale? The salary or hourly wage range the employer "reasonably expects to pay." It must be a genuine range — not $1 to $1,000,000.

Legal disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Pay transparency laws are complex and subject to change. Consult qualified legal counsel before making compliance decisions. RoleComply monitors law changes automatically, but always verify requirements with an attorney for your specific situation.

Related articles

Join Beta

Start scanning your jobs today

Stay ahead of every pay transparency law change — automatically.

Join Beta