by Amy Angel, Barran Liebman LLP
Oregon has one of the most expansive and complex leave frameworks in the United States, making compliance a critical focus for HR professionals and employers. This in‑depth guide is designed to help HR, people operations, and compliance leaders understand and manage Oregon leave requirements with confidence—supporting employees while reducing legal and operational risk.
Oregon requires covered employers to provide a wide range of job‑protected and, in some cases, paid leave, including unpaid family and medical leave, Paid Family and Medical Leave benefits, paid sick leave, and leave related to domestic violence, military service, and public or civic duties. Employers must also comply with Oregon‑specific entitlements such as Veterans Day leave, bone marrow donor leave, religious observance leave, and unique protections like emergency responder, search‑and‑rescue, and Olympic Games leave.
This guide explains who is covered, which employees are eligible, how long leave may last, and the purposes for which leave must be granted. It also addresses intermittent and reduced‑schedule leave, employee notice and documentation requirements, employer notice obligations, and how Oregon leave laws interact with federal requirements and employer leave policies. HR teams will also gain clarity on prohibited employer actions, safety accommodations, and training considerations to ensure leave requests are handled consistently and in compliance with state law.
In this guide, learn about:
- Leaves of absence
- Family and medical leave
- Family military leave
- Paid family and medical leave
- Paid sick leave
- School activities leave
- Jury duty leave
- Juvenile court attendance leave
- Crime victim leave
- Domestic violence leave and accommodation
- Covered employers
- Employee eligibility
- Length and purpose of leaveIntermittent or reduced schedule leave
- Employee notice and documentation requirements
- Employer notice requirements
- Interaction with other laws and policies
- Prohibited actions
- Safety accommodations
- Military leave
- Veterans Day leave
- Bone marrow donor leave
- Religious observance leave
- Legislative leave
- State board or commission leave
- Workers’ compensation leave
- Emergency responder leave
- Search-and-rescue volunteer leave
- Volunteer firefighters leave
- Olympic Games leave
- Training
- Future developments
Want to see more?
Our guide equips HR professionals with the practical insight needed to design compliant leave programs, support employees through protected absences, and confidently manage Oregon’s complex leave of absence requirements in a rapidly evolving regulatory environment.
For full access to Other leaves: Oregon, sign up for an HR and Compliance Center subscription today.
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About the author

Barran Liebman LLP
Barran Liebman LLP assists employers, human resource professionals, in-house counsel, business executives and business owners in the Northwest, as well as across the United States. They are dedicated to representing employers and helping them with their employment law and labor management needs.
Barran Liebman’s employment attorneys specialize in a number of different areas such as employment advice, employment litigation, higher education compliance and litigation, labor relations and employee benefits. They focus exclusively on employment and labor law across several different practice areas and represent employers in employment matters, such as sexual harassment, collective bargaining, and wrongful discharge.
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