Compliance Considerations for When Your Company Reaches 50 Employees
The 50-employee mark is more than just a milestone; it’s also an important number for some major regulation requirements. Once your business has 50 full-time employees, various federal and state laws become mandatory, which can wreak havoc on your business if you don’t prepare for them. Here’s what your business needs to do to stay compliant once it reaches 50 full-time employees.

Health Insurance
While smaller businesses can choose to offer health insurance, it becomes a requirement once your business reaches 50 or more full-time or full-time equivalent employees. At that point, the Affordable Care Act designates your business as an applicable large employer (ALE). Any ALE is required to meet the employer shared responsibility provisions found in the Affordable Care Act. These provisions give ALEs two options:- Offer health coverage that the ACA deems “affordable and provides “minimum value” to full-time employees and their dependents
- Make a payment to the IRS any of the ALE’s full-time employees receive a premium tax credit for purchasing individual coverage on a Health Insurance Marketplace
Determining full-time equivalent employees
You may have noticed that threshold to be considered an ALE was set at 50 full-time or full-time equivalent employees. This means that you don’t need 50 strictly full-time employees to meet ALE designation if you have enough part-time individuals to qualify. Full-time employees include any worker who averages at least 30 hours of service per week in a calendar month. Full-time equivalent employees are a combination of individuals who do not meet full-time specifications, but whose combined work is determined to equate to that of a full-time worker. Per the IRS, there is a two-step process to determine the number of full-time equivalent employees at your business.- Combine the number of hours of service of all non-full-time employees for the month (do not include more than 120 hours of service per employee)
- Divide the total by 120
Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
Unlike the Affordable Care Act, the Department of Labor (DOL) does not look to full-time and full-time equivalent employees to determine which businesses must comply with FMLA. Instead, the DOL simply writes that “private employers with at least 50 employees are covered by FMLA.” FMLA also applies to businesses with fluctuating workforces as long as they had at least 50 employees for 20 or more total workweeks in the current or previous year. These employees must then meet the following stipulations to be eligible for FMLA:- Work for the employer for at least 12 months
- Work at least 1,250 hours during the 12 months before the start of leave
- Work at a jobsite where the employer has at least 50 employees within 75 miles
- The birth of a child and to bond with the newborn child within one year of birth
- The placement with the employee of a child for adoption or foster care and to bond with the newly placed child within one year of placement
- A serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of his or her job
- To care for the employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent who has a serious health condition