In 2024, California enacted the most significant reforms to PAGA since the law passed in 2004. Here’s what changed — and what didn’t.
Stricter Standing
Under the reforms, an employee generally must have personally experienced each of the violations they seek to represent, narrowing the scope of some claims.
Cure Processes
The reforms expanded the ability of employers — especially smaller ones — to cure certain violations, including some wage-statement errors, before or after a notice is filed, potentially reducing exposure.
Penalty Adjustments
Penalties were recalibrated to reward compliance: employers who took proactive steps before a claim can see penalties reduced substantially, while those who fix problems quickly after notice also benefit from reductions. Employers who ignore violations still face the full weight.
More Early Resolution
The updated framework encourages earlier settlement and adds tools like injunctive relief.
The Bottom Line
PAGA remains a powerful accountability tool. The reforms make it more balanced, but they do not eliminate an employer’s liability for genuine, uncured violations — violators still pay.
This is general information from the Workers Rights Compliance Alliance, not legal advice. Think you’ve experienced violations like these? Use the free Wage Claim Builder to itemize what you may be owed, or report the business confidentially. Filing is free, retaliation is illegal (Labor Code §98.6), and your immigration status does not matter.

