LeaveCalc / Maternity leave / Weeks & pay by state

Maternity leave calculator

Enter your due date, state, and wage to see how many weeks you get, how much of that is paid in 2026, and how federal FMLA job protection fits around it.

Free & anonymous Runs in your browser — nothing uploaded All 50 states + D.C. 2026 state paid-leave figures

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Assumes birth on your due date and a single, continuous leave. Real dates, eligibility, and combined-leave limits depend on your employer, your medical certification, and your state's exact rules — see the linked state calculator for the full formula.

Not legal or benefits advice. This is an unofficial planning estimate, not a claim determination. Every state figure here is pulled from that state's own LeaveCalc calculator — use the "Full state calculator" link in your results for the exact formula, eligibility rules, and official source.

How maternity leave actually works in the U.S.

There is no federal law guaranteeing paid maternity leave. What every eligible U.S. worker gets is the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA): up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave per year, for your own serious health condition (including pregnancy and childbirth recovery) or to bond with a new child — but only if your employer is covered and you personally meet the tenure and hours tests. Use the FMLA eligibility calculator to check in 30 seconds.

On top of FMLA, 14 states plus Washington D.C. run their own paid family and/or medical leave insurance programs that replace part of your wages while you're out. They're not identical: some (California, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Hawaii) pay a disability-style benefit for the weeks immediately before and after birth, then a separate bonding benefit afterward; others (Washington, Massachusetts, Colorado, Oregon, Connecticut, Minnesota, Delaware, Maine, D.C.) run one combined medical-and-family program. New York's Paid Family Leave pays the bonding portion; the short pre/post-birth disability piece runs through a separate, much smaller state program not modeled on this page.

StateTypical paid weeks*2026 max weekly benefit
Washingtonup to 16 (18 in some cases)$1,647
California18$1,765
New York12 (bonding only)$1,228.53
New Jersey22$1,119
Coloradoup to 12 (16 in some cases)$1,448.02
Oregonup to 12 (14 in some cases)$1,692.16
Massachusetts18$1,230.39
Connecticutup to 12 (14 in some cases)$1,016.40
Rhode Island18$1,150
Delaware12$900
Minnesota18$1,423
Maine12$1,249.12
Washington D.C.14$1,190
Hawaii10 (no paid bonding)$871

*Vaginal birth, this page's typical model — see the calculator above for your exact dates and dollar estimate, and each state's own page for its full duration rules.

In the other 37 states and territories, there is no state-mandated paid maternity leave at all in 2026. Your only guaranteed protection is unpaid FMLA (if you qualify). Some employers voluntarily offer paid parental leave or short-term disability (STD) insurance that covers part of your pay during recovery — check your employee handbook or HR, since this varies entirely by employer and isn't tracked by any state calculator.

FAQ

Is maternity leave paid in the US?

Only if your state runs one of the 14 paid-leave programs above, or your employer voluntarily pays you (STD, parental leave policy, PTO). Federal FMLA itself is unpaid — it only protects your job, not your paycheck.

How many weeks do I get?

It depends entirely on where you live and work. In the 14 paid-leave states it's typically 10–22 weeks of paid leave (see the table above); everywhere else it's whatever your employer offers, plus up to 12 weeks of unpaid FMLA protection if you're eligible.

Can I start before my due date?

In California, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Hawaii, and Washington D.C., yes — their disability/prenatal benefit can start a few weeks before birth if you stop working early for a pregnancy-related reason. Most other state programs only start paying once the baby arrives (though you may be able to use FMLA or PTO before that).

What if my state isn't listed as a paid-leave state?

You still may have FMLA job protection if you're eligible — check with the eligibility calculator. Beyond that, ask HR whether your employer offers short-term disability or a paid parental leave policy; there's no state backstop to rely on.

Sources: U.S. Department of Labor — FMLA (Fact Sheet 28). Each state's exact 2026 benefit formula, duration rules, and official source are on that state's own LeaveCalc page, linked from your results above.