All data is based on laws and policies in effect as of July 1, 2025.
The index is based on state policies in three dimensions: wages (40% of overall score); worker protections (35% of overall score); and rights to organize (25% of overall score).
View full spreadsheets of the data.
Wage policies
Do workers earn a wage that is sufficient to provide for them and their families? Among the data points in this dimension:
- Ratio of minimum wage to cost of living for a family of four.
- Ratio of tipped wage to minimum wage.
- Local control over minimum wages (lack of local control is often referred to as preemption, as the state overrides local rules).
- Extension of the minimum wage to farmworkers.
- Ratio of unemployment insurance (UI) benefits to cost of living for a family of four.
Worker protection policies
This dimension considers the quality of life for workers, especially women and parents. Among the data points in this dimension:
- Paid pumping breaks for breastfeeding workers.
- Mandates for equal pay.
- Paid family and medical leave; paid sick leave.
- Fair and flexible scheduling.
- Protection against sexual harassment in the workplace.
- Extension of workers’ compensation to farmworkers.
- Protections for domestic workers.
- Heat standards for outdoor workers.
- Warehouse worker protections.
- Child labor protections.
Right to organize policies
This dimension asks whether workers have the right to organize and bargain collectively. Among the data points in this dimension:
- State so-called “right-to-work” law (which suppresses union activity).
- Public teachers’ rights to collective bargaining and negotiate wages.
- Mandates for project labor agreements (PLAs): agreements that stipulate that contracts for public construction projects must go exclusively to unionized firms.
- Mandates for protection against wage-theft retaliation.
- Statewide policies on collective bargaining for public workers.