What Employment Law Copilot Does
The Employment Law Copilot helps workers and small business owners understand their rights and obligations under federal and state employment laws. It covers the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and state-specific protections that often go beyond federal minimums.
This copilot provides actionable guidance on wage and hour violations, which the Department of Labor estimates cost American workers over $15 billion per year in stolen wages. It explains the difference between exempt and non-exempt employees under the FLSA salary threshold (currently $35,568/year for the standard exemption under the DOL's overtime rule), calculates potential back pay for overtime violations, and walks you through the complaint process with your state labor board or the federal Wage and Hour Division. According to the Economic Policy Institute, wage theft exceeds all robberies, burglaries, and motor vehicle thefts combined in dollar terms, making it the largest form of theft in America.
For discrimination and harassment claims, the copilot explains the EEOC filing process, including the critical 180-day deadline (or 300 days in states with a Fair Employment Practices Agency). The EEOC's charge statistics show that over 81,000 discrimination charges were filed in fiscal year 2023, with retaliation (55.8%), disability (37.2%), and race (33.7%) as the most common bases. It helps you understand what constitutes a hostile work environment under legal standards, not just common understanding, and what documentation you need to build a credible claim. Employment discrimination attorneys typically charge $300 to $500 per hour, and many cases require $5,000 to $20,000 in legal fees before reaching resolution.
The copilot also covers non-compete agreements, which are undergoing massive changes as states like California, Minnesota, and Oklahoma have banned them entirely while the FTC has pursued federal restrictions. If you are dealing with a non-compete, the Business Formation Copilot can also help you understand how entity structure affects restrictive covenants. For workplace injuries and OSHA safety violations, the copilot covers whistleblower protections and retaliation claims. The Employee Handbook Copilot helps employers build compliant policies that prevent many of the disputes this copilot helps workers navigate.
Example Conversation
Common Use Cases
| Use Case | What You Get | Typical Professional Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Wrongful termination analysis | Assessment of your claim's strength, applicable statutes, and filing deadlines | $300-$500 attorney consultation |
| Wage theft / overtime calculation | Back pay estimates, FLSA and state law analysis, and complaint filing guidance | $200-$400 initial consultation |
| EEOC complaint preparation | Step-by-step filing instructions with documentation checklist and deadline tracking | $1,000-$3,000 attorney filing |
| Non-compete review | Enforceability analysis based on your state's current law and recent court decisions | $500-$1,500 attorney review |
| Severance negotiation | Clause-by-clause analysis of severance agreement terms and counteroffer strategy | $500-$2,000 attorney review |
| FMLA eligibility check | Qualification analysis, employer obligation breakdown, and reinstatement rights | $200-$400 consultation |
| Discrimination documentation | Evidence organization, timeline building, and comparator identification | $1,000-$2,500 case preparation |
| Independent contractor misclassification | ABC test and economic reality test analysis with reclassification guidance | $300-$800 attorney review |
Wage theft is the single largest form of theft in America, yet most workers do not know their rights. The Economic Policy Institute estimates that workers lose $50 billion annually to wage theft, more than all property crimes combined. The copilot helps you determine whether you are properly classified as exempt or non-exempt using the DOL's duties tests, whether your employer is violating meal and rest break requirements (which vary dramatically by state, with California requiring a 30-minute unpaid meal break for shifts over 5 hours), and whether you are owed overtime for hours worked over 40 per week. In California alone, the Labor Commissioner recovered over $338 million in unpaid wages in recent years.
Severance agreement review is another high-value use case. Most employers present severance agreements on a "take it or leave it" basis with tight deadlines (though workers over 40 get 21 days to consider under the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act, and workers terminated in a group layoff get 45 days). The copilot helps you understand what you are giving up, particularly broad non-disparagement clauses, overly wide non-compete provisions, and releases of potential claims that may be worth more than the severance offered. According to SHRM, typical severance is 1-2 weeks per year of service, but this is a starting point for negotiation, not a ceiling.
Independent contractor misclassification affects an estimated 10-30% of employers who misclassify workers according to the Department of Labor. If you are classified as an independent contractor but your employer controls when, where, and how you work, you may be entitled to overtime pay, unemployment insurance, workers' compensation, and employer-paid payroll taxes. The copilot analyzes your situation under both the federal economic reality test and your state's test (California's ABC test under AB 5 is the strictest in the nation).
For related legal issues, the Employee Handbook Copilot helps employers build policies that prevent these disputes. The Tenant Rights Copilot can help if job loss threatens your housing stability. The Small Claims Copilot is useful for recovering smaller amounts of unpaid wages where hiring an attorney is not cost-effective.
How It Works
Step 1: Describe your workplace situation. Tell the copilot your state, employer size, job classification, how long you have worked there, and the specific issue you are facing. Whether it is unpaid overtime, a hostile work environment, or a non-compete dispute, these details determine which federal and state laws apply to your case. The copilot applies threshold analysis automatically: Title VII and the ADA require 15+ employees, ADEA requires 20+, and FMLA requires 50+ within 75 miles.
Step 2: Get a legal analysis of your situation. The copilot identifies which statutes protect you, explains the legal standards for your type of claim (including the burden-shifting framework from McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green for discrimination cases), and assesses the strength of your position based on the facts you provide. It flags critical deadlines like the EEOC's 180/300-day filing window or your state labor board's statute of limitations. Missing these deadlines can permanently bar your claim, regardless of its merits.
Step 3: Build your documentation. The copilot helps you organize your evidence, create a timeline of events, identify witnesses, and prepare the materials needed for complaints or legal proceedings. The EEOC emphasizes that strong documentation, including contemporaneous notes, saved communications, and witness contact information, is often the difference between a successful and unsuccessful charge. Good documentation is also what convinces an attorney to take your case on contingency.
Step 4: Take informed action. Based on your situation, the copilot recommends next steps: whether to file with the EEOC, your state labor board, or seek an attorney through the American Bar Association's referral service or your local bar association. It helps you draft complaint letters, prepare for mediations, and understand what to expect at each stage of the process. Many employment claims can be resolved through the EEOC's mediation program, which the EEOC reports resolves cases in an average of 84 days.
Visit our How It Works page to learn more about the technology behind all our copilots.
Why Employment Law Copilot Beats ChatGPT
ChatGPT
Employment Law Copilot
Employment law changes rapidly. The FLSA overtime threshold has been debated and adjusted multiple times in recent years. State legislatures are passing new protections for workers constantly, from paid sick leave laws to salary transparency requirements to non-compete bans. A generic AI tool cannot keep up with these changes and frequently provides outdated guidance that could cause you to miss filing deadlines or misunderstand your rights.
The stakes in employment cases are also high enough that accuracy matters enormously. Missing an EEOC filing deadline by even one day can permanently bar your claim. Misclassifying yourself as exempt when you are non-exempt means leaving thousands of dollars in overtime pay on the table. Signing a severance agreement without understanding its waiver of ADEA claims means you may lose the right to bring an age discrimination claim worth far more than the severance.
The Employment Law Copilot is built for this specificity because employment law is where getting it 90% right is the same as getting it wrong. See the full comparison across all categories, or explore how we compare to other AI tools.
Who Employment Law Copilot Is For
Workers who believe they have been wrongfully terminated. If you were fired and suspect retaliation, discrimination, or breach of contract, this copilot helps you evaluate whether you have a viable legal claim and what steps to take immediately to protect your rights. The EEOC received over 81,000 charges in FY 2023, with retaliation as the number one basis. Time is critical because filing deadlines start running from the date of termination.
Employees dealing with wage and hour violations. If you are not being paid overtime, your employer is taking illegal deductions, or you suspect you are misclassified as an independent contractor, the copilot calculates what you may be owed and explains how to recover it. The FLSA allows recovery of up to 2 years of back wages (3 years for willful violations), plus liquidated damages equal to the back wages owed, effectively doubling your recovery.
People facing workplace discrimination or harassment. Whether based on race, gender, age, disability, religion, national origin, pregnancy, or other protected characteristics, the copilot explains the legal standards, documentation requirements, and complaint processes specific to your situation. The Supreme Court's Faragher/Ellerth framework means that documenting your complaints through proper channels is critical to holding your employer liable.
Workers reviewing non-competes or severance agreements. Before signing away your rights, understand what the agreement actually requires and whether its restrictions are enforceable in your state. The FTC has estimated that non-competes suppress worker wages by approximately $296 billion per year nationwide. Many non-competes are far broader than what courts will actually enforce, and the copilot identifies provisions that may not survive judicial scrutiny.
Small business owners navigating compliance. Employment law applies to employers too. The copilot helps small business owners understand their obligations under the FLSA, ADA, FMLA, and state employment laws to avoid costly violations and lawsuits. According to the Hiscox Guide to Employee Lawsuits, the average employment claim costs $160,000 to defend and settle, with companies employing fewer than 500 people being the most frequent targets.
Gig workers and freelancers questioning their classification. If you work for a single company, follow their schedule, and use their tools but are classified as an independent contractor, you may be misclassified. The IRS, DOL, and state agencies are increasingly cracking down on misclassification, and the copilot helps you understand your rights to benefits, overtime, and unemployment insurance.
Related Copilots
Explore specialized legal and workplace tools for related needs:
Employee Handbook Copilot - If you are an employer, build compliant workplace policies that prevent the disputes employees bring to this copilot. A well-drafted handbook is your strongest defense against discrimination and wrongful termination claims.
Business Formation Copilot - If you are starting a business after leaving a job, understand how your entity structure interacts with non-compete obligations and former employer relationships.
HR Copilot - Day-to-day HR compliance guidance for managers and HR professionals navigating employee relations, performance management, and workplace investigations.
Consumer Rights Copilot - For workplace issues that cross into consumer law, such as employer fraud, identity theft with employee data, or improper credit reporting by former employers.
Tenant Rights Copilot - Job loss often creates housing instability. Understand your rights regarding lease obligations, eviction protections, and emergency rental assistance programs.
Small Claims Copilot - For recovering smaller wage amounts, unreturned tools or equipment, or other employment-related disputes under your state's small claims limit.
Looking for help in a different area? Browse our complete copilot directory or visit our pricing page for plan details.
Pricing and Value
Free Plan: Get basic answers about employment rights, understand at-will employment, and learn about common workplace violations. Includes up to 5 conversations per month. No credit card required.
Pro Plan ($29/month): Unlimited conversations, detailed claim analysis with statutory citations, damage calculations with employer-size caps, EEOC filing guidance with deadline tracking, severance agreement review, non-compete enforceability analysis, independent contractor classification assessment, and documentation templates. This costs less than 5 minutes of a typical employment attorney's time at $300-$500 per hour.
Enterprise: Solutions for legal aid organizations, HR departments, and employment law firms seeking to scale client intake and case evaluation. Includes API access, custom workflows, and white-label deployment. Contact us for pricing.
The Cost of Not Knowing Your Rights: The average employment discrimination case costs $10,000 to $50,000 in attorney fees to litigate through trial according to Nolo's legal research. Even initial consultations run $300 to $500. But the cost of not acting is often higher: the DOL reports that workers lose billions annually to wage theft, and the EEOC secured over $665 million for discrimination victims in FY 2023 alone. At $29/month, the Pro plan helps you understand your rights, build documentation, and determine whether your case justifies professional representation, all for less than a single hour with most employment attorneys.
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