Most people don’t think about employment law until something goes wrong at work. Maybe you were fired without explanation. Maybe a manager’s behavior crossed a line. Maybe your last few paychecks didn’t add up. These aren’t just workplace frustrations. They may be legal violations, and an employment law firm exists specifically to handle them.
An employment law firm represents workers (and sometimes employers) in disputes involving wages, discrimination, harassment, wrongful termination, and workplace rights. If something has happened at your job that felt wrong or unfair, there’s a reasonable chance the law is on your side – and a firm can tell you quickly whether that’s true.
Common Situations Where an Employment Law Firm Helps
Wrongful Termination
Being fired ‘at will’ is legal in most states – but there are important exceptions. If you were fired because of your race, gender, age, disability, religion, or national origin, or because you reported illegal activity, that’s wrongful termination. Employment lawyers deal with this daily.
Workplace Discrimination
Discrimination doesn’t always look like an outright slur or a denied promotion. It can be subtle – consistently passed over for opportunities, excluded from meetings, or held to different standards than colleagues. If a protected characteristic (age, gender, race, disability, religion) is a factor in how you’re treated, that’s actionable.
Sexual Harassment
Harassment at work takes two main forms: quid pro quo (a supervisor making job benefits contingent on sexual favors) and hostile work environment (a workplace made unbearable through pervasive inappropriate conduct). Both are illegal. An employment firm can advise whether what you experienced meets the legal threshold.
Wage Theft and Unpaid Overtime
This is more common than most people realize. Employers misclassifying workers as independent contractors, failing to pay overtime, shaving hours from timesheets, or not paying minimum wage are all wage violations. Employment lawyers often recover these amounts quickly – and sometimes with additional penalties for the employer.
Retaliation
If you reported discrimination, filed a workers’ comp claim, or raised a safety concern and your employer responded by demoting, reassigning, or firing you – that’s retaliation. It’s illegal regardless of whether your original complaint was ultimately proven valid.
Non-Compete and Contract Disputes
Employment contracts, non-disclosure agreements, and non-compete clauses are often far broader than they should be. An employment attorney can review what you signed and tell you what’s actually enforceable – which is often far less than employers imply.
Key Employment Laws These Firms Work With
| Law | What It Covers | Who It Protects |
| Title VII (Civil Rights Act) | Race, color, religion, sex, national origin discrimination | Employees at companies with 15+ employees |
| Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) | Age-based discrimination | Workers 40 and older |
| Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) | Disability discrimination, failure to accommodate | Employees with qualifying disabilities |
| Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) | Minimum wage, overtime, child labor | Most US workers |
| Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) | Job-protected leave for medical/family reasons | Employees at companies with 50+ employees |
| Equal Pay Act | Pay discrimination based on gender | All employees |
| OSHA / Whistleblower Protection | Workplace safety reporting retaliation | All US workers |
How Employment Lawyers Get Paid
There are three common fee structures, and which one applies depends on your case type:
| Fee Type | How It Works | Best For |
| Contingency Fee | You pay only if you win (typically 25-40%) | Discrimination, wrongful termination, harassment |
| Hourly Rate | Billed per hour worked on your case | Contract disputes, employer-side cases |
| Flat Fee | Set price for a specific service | Contract review, demand letters |
Signs You Should Call an Employment Lawyer Today
You were fired shortly after filing a complaint, taking leave, or reporting misconduct.
Your employer asked you to sign a severance agreement you don’t fully understand.
You’re being paid less than colleagues doing the same work for reasons you can’t explain.
Your workplace has become hostile and HR hasn’t taken meaningful action.
You believe your employer violated a specific agreement in your employment contract.
What to Bring to Your First Consultation
Most employment law firms offer free initial consultations. Come prepared with: any written employment contract or offer letter, performance reviews, emails or messages documenting the issue, HR complaint records if filed, pay stubs and timesheets if it’s a wage claim, and a clear written timeline of events. The more organized your information, the faster an attorney can assess your case.












