Skip to contentSkip to main content
westviewlawpc

Front Pay vs. Back Pay

Back pay and front pay are two distinct lost-wages remedies in employment cases. Back pay covers what the employee should have earned from the date of the unlawful action up to the date of trial. Front pay covers projected lost earnings going forward, from trial into the future, when reinstatement is not a workable remedy.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Back pay covers wages and benefits lost from the date of the unlawful act to the date of trial, minus mitigation earnings.
  • Front pay covers projected future lost earnings, reduced to present value, awarded only when reinstatement is unworkable.
  • Pollard v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours (2001) 532 U.S. 843 confirmed that front pay does not count against Title VII compensatory caps because it is equitable relief.
  • FEHA at Gov. Code §12965 authorizes both with no statutory ceiling; attorney's fees and costs add on under §12965(c).

FEHA authorizes both at Gov. Code §12965(c) and 12965(b), and Title VII permits them at 42 U.S.C. §2000e-5(g). Back pay is more straightforward: lost wages, lost commissions, lost benefits, plus prejudgment interest, minus mitigation (what the employee actually earned or reasonably could have earned at another job).

Front pay is harder to calculate and is reserved for cases in which reinstatement is impossible (hostility between the parties, the position no longer exists, the employee took a different path). The court projects the wage gap forward over a reasonable horizon, often two to ten years depending on the case, and reduces the amount to present value. The Supreme Court in Pollard v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (2001) 532 U.S. 843 confirmed that front pay does not count against Title VII compensatory-damages caps because it is a separate equitable remedy.

Example: A 54-year-old project manager wins her age-discrimination case three years after her firing. Back pay covers her three years of lost wages and benefits (with mitigation offsets for the consulting work she picked up). Because the employer is hostile to her return, the court awards front pay for an additional four years at her old salary, reduced to present value. Together with attorney's fees under Gov. Code §12965(c), those are her core financial recovery.

Filing windows for the underlying claim apply: three years to the CRD under Gov. Code §12960; 300 days to the EEOC. A California employment discrimination lawyer can model the realistic damages range for your facts.

From our practice: We model damages at intake using three scenarios: a likely back-pay window if the case settles in 12-18 months, a litigated back-pay window through trial, and a discounted front-pay calculation assuming reinstatement fails. Clients who go into mediation with that range tend to settle for the high end of it. The plaintiffs who skip the math leave money on the table.

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

Westview Law
Fighting for Justice

40+ Years Combined Experience

Top 100 Verdict in California (2024). A real trial law firm that fights for results.

Schedule a Consultation →
Employment Law

Free Case Evaluation

Our California attorneys offer free, confidential consultations.

Get a Free Evaluation →
Case Results
Results That Matter

We Prepare Every Case for Trial

That’s why insurance companies take us seriously, and that’s how we maximize your recovery.

View All Results →

Free Consultation




    Contact Info

    📞
    (310) 906-4862Call for a free consultation
    📍
    1880 Century Park EastSuite 1100, Los Angeles, CA
    🕐
    Mon – Fri: 9am – 6pmWeekend consultations by appointment
    ✉️
    [email protected]Email us anytime

    Our Location

    Westview Law
    Statewide Representation

    Serving Employees Across California

    Wherever you work in California, our attorneys can take your case.

    Get a Free Evaluation →
    Resources
    Know Your Rights

    Not Sure Where You Stand?

    A free consultation is the fastest way to understand your options.

    Talk to an Attorney →
    linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram