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Reviewed by David M. Safvati, Esq., California State Bar #326605 (verify)  ·  Updated May 28, 2026  ·  Attorney Advertising

Age Discrimination Lawyer in California

Employee-side representation for California workers aged 40 and older pushed out, passed over, or pressured to retire because of their age. Free, confidential case review.

Reviewed by: David M. Safvati, CA Bar #326605 (verify on calbar.ca.gov)

Attorney Advertising. Page reviewed by David M. Safvati, CA Bar #326605. This advertisement is the responsibility of Westview Law PC.

Statewide California representation. Westview Law PC handles age discrimination cases for California employees in every county. Consultations are free and confidential.

Top 100 CA Jury Verdicts 2024 Firm trial record
FEHA & ADEA Age claims dual-filed
Employee-side only Never represents employers
Statewide California All 58 counties served

What age discrimination means under California law

California protects workers aged 40 and older against employment decisions made because of their age. The state statute is Gov. Code §12940, the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), which lists age as a protected characteristic in subdivision (a). The parallel federal statute is the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. §621 et seq. Both laws prohibit hiring, firing, demoting, harassing, or denying promotions based on age. They cover terms and conditions of employment, including pay, training, schedule, and reduction-in-force selection.

This page is written for the California employee who was told the company wanted "fresh perspective," whose role was eliminated in a layoff that hit only employees over 50, who was replaced by someone substantially younger after years of strong reviews, or who was steered toward retirement after a new manager arrived. Westview Law PC represents California employees in FEHA and ADEA age cases through the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and federal and state courts.

The legal standards differ between FEHA and ADEA, and the difference matters. FEHA uses a "substantial motivating factor" causation standard under Harris v. City of Santa Monica (2013) 56 Cal.4th 203. ADEA requires "but-for" causation under Gross v. FBL Fin. Servs., Inc. (2009) 557 U.S. 167. The same facts can satisfy FEHA and still fail ADEA, which is one reason California employees over 40 generally have a stronger remedy in state court under FEHA.

The legal framework for a California age discrimination claim

FEHA prima facie elements

Under Guz v. Bechtel National, Inc. (2000) 24 Cal.4th 317, the employee establishes a prima facie age case by showing: (1) membership in the protected class (40 or older); (2) qualified for the position; (3) an adverse employment action; and (4) circumstances suggesting age was a motivating factor, such as replacement by a substantially younger worker or disparate treatment of older employees in a layoff. The framework comes from McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green (1973) 411 U.S. 792, adopted into California law by Guz.

Causation: FEHA vs ADEA

FEHA asks whether age was a "substantial motivating factor" in the decision. Harris v. City of Santa Monica (2013) 56 Cal.4th 203. ADEA asks whether age was the "but-for" cause, meaning the decision would not have happened without it. Gross v. FBL Fin. Servs., Inc. (2009) 557 U.S. 167. The FEHA standard is easier for the employee to meet. A jury can find FEHA liability even where the employer had legitimate reasons too, as long as age was a substantial factor in the decision.

Pretext and the Reeves standard

If the employer offers a non-age reason, the employee must show pretext. Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc. (2000) 530 U.S. 133 holds that the prima facie case plus disbelief of the employer's reason can support a finding of liability without separate proof of discriminatory intent. The fact finder can infer the real motive from the employer's lie. Reeves is heavily cited in California age cases at summary judgment.

Filing deadlines

CRD charge filing: three years from the last unlawful act under Gov. Code §12960(e). Civil suit: one year from the right-to-sue letter under Gov. Code §12965(c)(1)(C). EEOC charge for an ADEA file: 300 days because California has CRD as a deferral agency. After EEOC right-to-sue, 90 days to file in federal court.

How Westview Law builds a California age discrimination case

  1. Intake and timeline. Performance reviews going back five years, manager change history, headcount data for the role, and the ages of replacements and survivors of any reduction-in-force.
  2. Comparator analysis. Who else was eligible for the same role or layoff selection, and how were they treated. Statistical patterns drive disparate-impact analysis.
  3. CRD and EEOC charge filing. Dual-filed where ADEA and FEHA both apply. Strategic choice of which agency leads.
  4. Investigation and discovery. Email and HR-system productions, depositions of the decision-makers, expert statistical analysis where layoff demographics support it.
  5. Demand and mediation. Most age cases that resolve resolve at mediation after written discovery. The demand letter is built on the comparator and timing evidence.
  6. Litigation and trial. Westview Law tries FEHA cases to verdict in California superior court and federal district court when the case cannot be resolved short of trial.

12 scenarios where California age discrimination claims arise

Replacement by a substantially younger worker

Employee over 55 terminated, replaced within weeks by a worker in their 30s with less experience.

Reduction-in-force that hit only older employees

Layoff selection list skews 50-plus while the role remained.

Ageist comments from a new manager

References to "lifers," "old guard," "fresh blood," or "retirement age" in the months before termination.

Steered toward early retirement

Pressure conversations and a waiver-of-claims package presented under deadline.

Performance reviews flipped after a manager change

Years of "exceeds expectations" reviews replaced with sudden criticism after a younger supervisor took over.

Denied promotion in favor of a younger employee

Senior candidate passed over for an external hire 15 years younger.

Training opportunities denied

Older employee told the company is "investing in the future" of younger workers.

Pay cut at a reorganization

Older employees take the largest comp reductions in a "rightsizing."

Schedule and territory changes

Salesperson over 55 reassigned to a smaller territory after years of top performance.

Mandatory retirement informal policy

"Conversations" with employees turning 65 about transition timing.

Hostile age-based comments from co-workers

Repeated jokes about age, memory, or technology skill that HR refused to remedy.

ADEA waiver presented in a separation package

OWBPA-deficient release demanded under pressure.

9 forms a California age discrimination case takes

Discriminatory termination

Termination of a worker 40 or older where age was a substantial motivating factor.

Failure to hire

Older applicant qualified for the role rejected in favor of a substantially younger candidate.

Failure to promote

Senior candidate passed over without legitimate, non-age reasons.

Reduction-in-force selection

Layoff decisions that disproportionately fall on older employees.

Hostile work environment

Severe or pervasive age-based ridicule, slurs, or exclusion.

Retaliation for complaining

Adverse action after an internal or CRD age complaint, prohibited by section 12940(h).

Denial of training or development

Older worker excluded from advancement-relevant training given to younger peers.

Coerced retirement

Pressure tactics that produce a resignation that constructively functions as termination.

Disparate-impact policies

Facially neutral practices (last-in-first-out rules, skills tests, age-correlated criteria) that fall hardest on older workers.

Who can be held liable in a California age case

The employer entity

FEHA liability under section 12940(a). ADEA liability for employers with 20 or more employees.

Supervisors (limited)

Individual liability for harassment under section 12940(j); aiding and abetting under section 12940(i).

HR decision-makers

Aiding-and-abetting exposure when HR rubber-stamped a discriminatory action.

Parent corporations

Integrated-enterprise liability when corporate separateness fails.

Staffing agencies

Joint employer responsibility for the placement and the host worksite.

Successor employers

Where the acquirer continued the operation that produced the discrimination.

Client employers using contract labor

FEHA reaches a "person using the services of one or more employees."

Joint ventures and franchisors

Where the host or franchisor controlled the employment decisions at issue.

Damages in a California age discrimination case

Back pay and front pay

Back pay from the unlawful action through judgment. Front pay where reinstatement is not feasible, often two to five years of future earnings depending on the worker's tenure, role, and re-employment prospects. The mitigation duty applies.

Emotional distress and punitive

Emotional distress damages without a statutory cap on FEHA claims. Punitive damages available where the employer acted with malice, oppression, or fraud under Civ. Code section 3294 and a managing agent ratified the conduct. ADEA permits liquidated damages equal to back pay on willful violations under 29 U.S.C. section 626(b).

Attorney's fees

Recoverable to the prevailing FEHA plaintiff under Gov. Code §12965(c)(6). ADEA fee shifting under 29 U.S.C. section 216(b), incorporated through section 626(b).

Recovery range examples

Specific past results in age discrimination matters are confidential and reviewed with you during a consultation. The firm's verified public outcomes across its litigation practice include:

  • $146M jury verdict (commercial)
  • $11.4M judgment (real estate fraud)
  • $3.2M jury verdict (breach of contract; Top 100 CA Verdicts 2024)

See the full firm case record.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case depends on its specific facts.

Why California employees retain Westview Law for age cases

The seven steps of a California age discrimination case

  1. Consultation. Free, usually 30 to 45 minutes. Strongest if the employee still has access to performance reviews and personnel records.
  2. CRD or EEOC charge filing. CRD for FEHA, EEOC for ADEA, usually dual-filed. CRD filing within three years; EEOC within 300 days.
  3. Agency investigation. The agency may investigate, attempt to mediate, or issue a right-to-sue letter on request.
  4. Right-to-sue letter. CRD letter triggers the one-year clock for civil filing.
  5. Superior court complaint. Filed within one year of the right-to-sue letter. ADEA claims can be added in federal court.
  6. Discovery and mediation. Document discovery, depositions of decision-makers and comparators, expert statistical analysis where the data supports it. Most cases settle at mediation.
  7. Trial. Jury trial in superior court on FEHA claims; federal district court on ADEA. FEHA generally yields a stronger remedy because of the causation standard and the uncapped emotional-distress damages.

Statute-of-limitations warning

CRD charge: three years from the last unlawful act under Gov. Code section 12960(e). After the right-to-sue letter, one year to file in superior court under Gov. Code section 12965(c)(1)(C). EEOC ADEA charge: 300 days from the unlawful act because California is a deferral state. After EEOC notice of right to sue, 90 days to file in federal court under 29 U.S.C. section 626(e). Missing any deadline ends the claim. The clock starts on the date of the adverse action, not the date the employee learned the action was discriminatory.

Where California age discrimination cases are filed

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD), formerly the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH), is the state agency that processes FEHA charges. Filed charges trigger an investigation or a quick right-to-sue letter on request. CRD operates regional offices in Oakland, Fresno, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, and San Diego, plus a statewide intake line. After CRD issues the right-to-sue letter, the case goes to California superior court for the county where the unlawful act took place or where the employee resides.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) handles ADEA charges, with work-sharing into CRD. After EEOC issues the notice of right to sue, the case can be filed in one of four federal districts in California: the Northern District of California, the Eastern District of California, the Central District of California, or the Southern District of California. Plaintiffs usually keep FEHA cases in state court because of the broader causation standard, the uncapped damages, and the fee-shifting statute that favors the prevailing employee. The arbitration question, raised when an employer points to a signed arbitration agreement, is governed in California by Sandquist v. Lebo Automotive, Inc. (2016) 1 Cal.5th 233 on who decides class-arbitration availability, and by the broader body of Armendariz v. Foundation Health Psychcare Services, Inc. (2000) 24 Cal.4th 83 unconscionability law.

If you signed a separation agreement, do not destroy it. Federal OWBPA rules attached to ADEA waivers carry strict disclosure and consideration-period requirements. A defective waiver can be invalid.

Call (310) 906-4862 Open the consultation form

What about filing a CRD charge myself, or hiring a general-practice attorney?

The CRD intake portal is open to self-represented employees. A charge filed pro se will get processed and a right-to-sue letter will issue. The harder questions come after: which forum, which causes of action, what to plead, how to handle the arbitration motion, how to develop the comparator and statistical evidence. Age discrimination cases turn on the documentary record from performance reviews, HR notes, and email. A general-practice attorney can file the complaint; whether the file is built to survive summary judgment on the Reeves pretext analysis is a separate question. If the comparator evidence is clean and the timing tight, the case may be straightforward. If the employer ran a layoff with a written justification and the data is ambiguous, the case becomes a project. Pick the path that fits the facts.

Westview Law professional memberships

California age discrimination FAQ

Who is protected from age discrimination in California?

Employees aged 40 and older. FEHA covers age as a protected class under Gov. Code section 12940(a), and the ADEA covers workers 40 and older under 29 U.S.C. section 631(a). California state law applies to employers with five or more employees. ADEA applies to employers with 20 or more employees. There is no upper age limit under either statute. Federal age protection runs in parallel with FEHA, and California employees usually file both.

What is the difference between FEHA and ADEA age cases?

The causation standard. FEHA asks whether age was a "substantial motivating factor" under Harris v. City of Santa Monica (2013) 56 Cal.4th 203. ADEA asks whether age was the "but-for" cause under Gross v. FBL Fin. Servs., Inc. (2009) 557 U.S. 167. The FEHA standard is easier for an employee to meet. Damages also differ: FEHA emotional-distress damages have no statutory cap; ADEA permits liquidated damages on willful violations but does not allow uncapped compensatory damages.

What evidence proves age discrimination?

Direct evidence is rare. Most cases rely on circumstantial proof: replacement by a substantially younger worker, comparator employees treated more favorably, performance reviews that flipped after a manager change, ageist comments by decision-makers, and statistical patterns in layoff selections. Under Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc. (2000) 530 U.S. 133, the fact finder can disbelieve the employer's stated reason and infer discrimination from that disbelief plus the prima facie evidence.

What if I was laid off in a reduction-in-force?

RIF cases turn on selection criteria and demographics. If the layoff disproportionately hit workers over 40, that pattern can support disparate-impact analysis. If the employee's specific selection was driven by age-correlated criteria ("retirement-eligible," "long tenure," "highest comp") with no legitimate justification, the FEHA disparate-treatment claim can survive. Pull the headcount data for the role before and after, and the ages of who was kept versus who was let go.

I was offered a severance package with a release. Should I sign?

Not without counsel review. The federal Older Workers Benefit Protection Act (OWBPA) at 29 U.S.C. section 626(f) requires age-claim waivers to include specific disclosures (a 21-day consideration period for individual waivers, 45 days for group programs, a 7-day revocation period, written language meeting OWBPA standards). A waiver that does not meet OWBPA is invalid as to ADEA claims. The waiver may also affect FEHA claims if it is broad enough. Counsel review takes one or two consultations and can preserve the case.

What is "substantially younger" for replacement evidence?

Federal courts generally require an age gap of at least eight to ten years, though no rigid line exists. O'Connor v. Consolidated Coin Caterers Corp. (1996) 517 U.S. 308 holds that the replacement does not have to be outside the protected class; what matters is the age gap. A 55-year-old replaced by a 45-year-old can support an inference of age bias. A 55-year-old replaced by a 53-year-old generally cannot.

Can I bring a hostile-work-environment claim based on age?

Yes. FEHA recognizes age-based harassment under Gov. Code section 12940(j). The conduct must be severe or pervasive enough to alter the conditions of employment, the same standard that applies to sex or race harassment. Repeated jokes about memory, technology skill, "old guard," or retirement age from a supervisor or co-workers that HR failed to remedy can meet the standard.

What if my manager said something ageist but the termination decision came from someone else?

The "cat's paw" doctrine applies. If a biased manager influenced the decision-making process and the formal decision-maker relied on the biased input, the employer can be liable. Staub v. Proctor Hospital (2011) 562 U.S. 411 set the federal rule. California courts apply the same logic under FEHA. The discovery focus is on who fed the decision-maker information and what their motivations were.

Do I have to file with CRD before I sue?

Yes for FEHA. Administrative exhaustion is a prerequisite to a FEHA civil action. The CRD charge must be filed within three years of the last unlawful act under Gov. Code section 12960(e). After CRD issues the right-to-sue letter, the civil suit must be filed within one year. For ADEA, an EEOC charge is required within 300 days, followed by a 60-day waiting period or an EEOC notice of right to sue.

What if my employer says my job was eliminated, not me?

"Position elimination" is a common defense in age cases. The employee can rebut it by showing the role was filled by a substantially younger worker under a different title, the duties were redistributed among younger employees, or the position was re-posted shortly after. Replacement by transfer or duty reassignment counts. The defense fails when the documentary evidence shows the function continued under another name.

Does my arbitration agreement force me out of court?

Often, but not always. California courts review arbitration agreements for unconscionability under Armendariz v. Foundation Health Psychcare Services, Inc. (2000) 24 Cal.4th 83 and apply Sandquist v. Lebo Automotive, Inc. (2016) 1 Cal.5th 233 to questions about who decides class-arbitration availability. The Federal Arbitration Act applies to most agreements covering interstate-commerce employers. A finding of procedural and substantive unconscionability can invalidate an agreement. The motion practice on the arbitration question is the first significant fight in many cases.

How much can I recover in a California age case?

Recovery depends on the lost wages, the duration of unemployment or wage gap, the emotional-distress evidence, and whether punitive damages are available. Lost wages cover the period from termination through judgment, plus front pay where reinstatement is not feasible. FEHA emotional distress has no statutory cap. Punitive damages require malice, oppression, or fraud and a managing agent. Attorney's fees flow to the prevailing plaintiff under Gov. Code section 12965(c)(6). For a senior worker with strong tenure and a clear comparator record, multi-year wage damages plus emotional-distress damages drive most recoveries.

About the attorney responsible for this page

David M. Safvati is a California-licensed employment lawyer at Westview Law PC. The practice focuses on FEHA disparate-treatment cases, with age, disability, and pregnancy files forming the bulk of the docket. Education: Loyola Law School, J.D. Bar admissions: State Bar of California, admitted 2019; U.S. District Court for the Central District of California; U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California; U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California; U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California. CA Bar #326605 (verify on calbar.ca.gov). Member, California Employment Lawyers Association. Speaks on the FEHA causation standard after Harris v. City of Santa Monica and the strategic implications of Reeves pretext analysis at summary judgment.

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