Remote Work Expense Reimbursement Laws by State 2026: Who Must Pay for Your Internet
- Who this is for: remote employees wondering if their employer must pay for internet and gear, and employers setting policy.
- The short answer: roughly a dozen states require reimbursing necessary business expenses; most states do not.
- The sharp point: California and Illinois are the two states that most clearly force internet and cell reimbursement, with prompt-payment rules around 30 days.
The most common remote-work question after taxes is blunt: does my boss have to pay for my internet? The answer is almost entirely about which state you work in. A small group of states put the cost of doing business on the employer by statute, and the rest leave it to company policy unless reimbursement is the only thing keeping your effective pay above minimum wage. This guide maps the mandatory-reimbursement states, isolates why California and Illinois are the sharpest, and flags the timing rules that decide when the money is actually owed. For the tax-free way to deliver it, pair this with our accountable plan guide.
In this article
What is the default rule on reimbursement?
The default rule across most of the United States is that no general law forces an employer to reimburse remote-work expenses. There is no broad federal statute requiring private employers to cover home internet, electricity, or office gear, so absent a state law the obligation comes from the employment contract or company policy, not from the government.
The one federal backstop is indirect. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), administered by the DOL WHD, does not require expense reimbursement directly, but it does forbid work-related costs from pushing an employee's effective wage below the federal minimum. So even in a no-reimbursement state, an employer cannot make a near-minimum-wage worker buy so much equipment that their real pay drops under the floor. That edge case aside, the action is all at the state level.
Q: I work remotely in Texas. Does my employer have to reimburse anything?
Generally no. Texas has no general expense-reimbursement statute, so reimbursement is governed by your employer's policy or your contract. The only floor is the FLSA minimum-wage rule, which would matter only if work costs dragged your effective pay below the legal minimum. Many Texas employers reimburse anyway as a retention measure, but they are not compelled to.
Which states require expense reimbursement?
A mandatory-reimbursement state is one whose labor code requires employers to repay employees for necessary business expenses, and roughly a dozen states fall into this group. The matrix below lists the states most consistently cited as having a reimbursement requirement, ranked by how strong and broad that requirement is in practice. The list and its scope shift as states amend their wage laws, so treat it as a map to verify, not a final word.
| State | Strength | Note (verify current statute) |
|---|---|---|
| California | Strong | Labor Code 2802; "all necessary" expenditures, broadly read |
| Illinois | Strong | Wage Payment and Collection Act 9.5; necessary expenditures within scope of employment |
| Massachusetts | Moderate | Wage law and state AG guidance on necessary expenses |
| Montana | Moderate | Requires indemnifying necessary expenditures |
| New York | Moderate | Reimbursement tied to wage and benefit rules; narrower than CA/IL |
| Pennsylvania | Moderate | Reimbursement obligations in certain circumstances |
| New Hampshire | Moderate | Statute on reimbursement of employee expenses |
| Iowa | Moderate | Reimbursement provisions under wage law |
| District of Columbia | Moderate | Reimbursement rule for necessary expenses |
| Others (varies by source) | Varies | Some lists add states with narrow or sector-specific rules; verify individually |
One distinction runs through every one of these statutes: whether the remote work was required or merely permitted. Most reimbursement laws bite hardest when the employer mandates remote work, because then the home internet, electricity, and equipment are unambiguously necessary to perform the job the employer assigned. When remote work is optional, an employee's preference, the necessary-expense argument weakens, and some states treat voluntarily-incurred home costs as the employee's own. In practice this means a fully remote role at a company with no office is the strongest case for reimbursement, while a hybrid worker who chooses to work from home on a flexible day has the weakest. Employers writing policy in mandatory states should assume that required remote work triggers the obligation and budget accordingly.
What unites the genuine mandatory states is the word necessary. The statutes do not require reimbursing every cost a remote worker incurs, only those necessary to perform the job. The fights are usually about what counts as necessary, which is where California and Illinois pull ahead because their laws read "necessary" expansively. The tax treatment of these reimbursements is a separate question our colleagues at CeoCult address for business owners.
Why are California and Illinois the strictest?
CA and IL are the two states whose statutes most clearly compel reimbursement of remote-work costs, including internet and cell phone, without a narrowing qualifier. California Labor Code Section 2802 requires employers to indemnify employees for "all necessary expenditures or losses incurred" in performing their duties, and courts read "all necessary" broadly.
The defining California precedent is Cochran v. Schwan's Home Service, which held that an employer must reimburse a reasonable percentage of an employee's personal cell phone bill used for work even if the employee has an unlimited plan and incurs no extra charge. That precedent is why a flat "we don't reimburse" policy is legally risky in California for any remote role. Illinois followed with a 2019 amendment to its IWPCA requiring reimbursement of "all necessary expenditures" within the scope of employment, the closest sibling to California's standard[1].
An employer must reimburse a reasonable percentage of an employee's cell phone bill used for work, even on an unlimited plan with no extra charge.
Holding of Cochran v. Schwan's Home Service, the California cell-reimbursement benchmarkMust an employer pay for home internet?
An employer must pay a reasonable share of home internet only where a reimbursement statute applies and the internet is necessary for the job, which most clearly means California and Illinois. In those states, home internet used to perform work is a reimbursable necessary expense, and the reimbursement covers a reasonable business-use percentage rather than the entire household bill.
Outside the mandatory states, home internet reimbursement is a policy choice, not a legal duty. Even within California, the employer reimburses the work-related portion, not your family's streaming, so a typical reimbursement is a percentage of the monthly bill. The cleanest way for any employer to handle it, mandatory state or not, is a substantiated accountable-plan reimbursement that satisfies both the legal obligation and the tax rules in one payment.
Q: My employer gives everyone a $50 monthly internet stipend. Is that enough in California?
Maybe, maybe not. A flat stipend satisfies California's Section 2802 only if it reasonably covers the actual necessary expense; if your real work-related internet and phone costs exceed it, the stipend can fall short and leave the employer exposed. The safer design is a stipend plus a true-up process that reimburses documented costs above the flat amount.
How fast must an employer reimburse you?
Where a statute applies, reimbursement must be made promptly, a standard most commonly read as roughly 30 days from the expense or from when the employee submits it. The exact deadline depends on the state, and some tie it to the next regular payroll cycle rather than a fixed day count.
| State | Promptness standard (verify) |
|---|---|
| California | Reasonable and prompt; tied to when expense is known |
| Illinois | Within 30 days of submitting supporting documentation |
| Most others | "Prompt" or next-payroll-cycle, per state wage rules |
The takeaway for employees is to submit expenses with documentation promptly, because the clock often starts when you submit, not when you incur. Keep dated receipts, note the business purpose, and file monthly. That habit also lines up exactly with what an accountable plan needs for the reimbursement to be tax-free, so doing it once serves both the legal and the tax requirement.
Audit your home office for reimbursable costs
Use the ergonomic and home office audit checklist to document the workspace and the expenses worth submitting.
Open the home office tools →Can unpaid expenses violate minimum wage?
Yes, unreimbursed work expenses can violate minimum wage when they pull a worker's effective pay below the legal floor, which is the FLSA backstop that applies even in no-reimbursement states. The principle is that an employer cannot shift so much of the cost of doing business onto a low-wage worker that the worker's real hourly earnings drop under the federal or state minimum.
In practice this rarely binds salaried remote professionals, whose pay sits far above minimum wage. It matters most for hourly remote roles near the wage floor, where required equipment, software, or connectivity costs can erode pay. These claims run through state W&H rules rather than the reimbursement statutes. Even there, the remedy is usually a wage-and-hour claim rather than a direct reimbursement order, so the mandatory-state statutes remain the stronger tool for most remote workers. Employers who want to avoid the whole question simply reimburse necessary costs as policy, which is increasingly standard regardless of state.
- Primary sources
- California Labor Code 2802, Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, US Department of Labor FLSA guidance, and state labor agency references
- Figures verified
- California 2802 "all necessary" standard, Illinois necessary-expenditure amendment, ~30-day promptness norm, FLSA minimum-wage backstop, reviewed May 2026
- Hedged
- The "~11 mandatory states" count and the moderate-strength entries vary by source and statute scope; not asserted as a fixed confirmed list for every state
- Reviewed by
- Vincent Couey, founder DeskDeploy
- Conflicts
- Educational content; no legal or affiliate relationships influence the figures above
- Last verified
- May 2026
Get the ergonomic and home office audit checklist
A one-page checklist to document your workspace, gear, and the recurring costs worth submitting for reimbursement.
Must my employer pay for internet when I work from home?
Which states require employers to reimburse expenses?
Does California require internet reimbursement for remote workers?
How long does an employer have to reimburse remote work expenses?
Is a flat remote-work stipend the same as reimbursement?
Bottom line
Whether your employer must pay for your internet comes down to your state. Roughly a dozen states require reimbursing necessary business expenses, but California and Illinois are the two that most clearly force internet and cell reimbursement, with promptness rules around 30 days. Most states leave it to policy, with the FLSA minimum-wage rule as the only federal floor. If you are in a mandatory state, submit documented expenses promptly and watch for flat stipends that undershoot your real costs. The cleanest delivery for any employer is a substantiated accountable plan that meets the legal duty and stays tax-free at once.
- California Legislative Information. Labor Code Section 2802, indemnification for necessary expenditures. leginfo.legislature.ca.gov verified 2026-05-29 return
- US Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division. Fair Labor Standards Act overview. dol.gov verified 2026-05-29 return
- Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, Section 9.5, reimbursement of employee expenditures. illinois.gov verified 2026-05-29 return