May 28, 2026
What to Do If Your Employer Denied Your Reasonable Accommodation in California
When you are managing a medical condition and still showing up every day, asking for a reasonable accommodation is not a burden on your employer. It is your legal right. You thought carefully about what you needed and put the request in writing. Maybe it was a modified schedule while you recovered from surgery, extra breaks to manage your blood sugar, remote work on the days you have therapy, or a quieter workspace because the open floor plan is making your anxiety worse. Whatever the request was, it was reasonable, and you followed the process the way you were supposed to.
Then your employer responded in a way that left you without answers. A flat no with no explanation. Weeks of silence that felt deliberate. A counteroffer that does nothing for the condition you are actually dealing with. Being denied reasonable accommodation in California does not just leave you in a difficult position at work. It can feel like the place you spend most of your life has decided your health simply does not matter. That feeling is valid, and it may also point to a serious violation of California law.
The protections California gives employees in this situation are stronger than anywhere else in the country, and the standards your employer must meet are specific and enforceable. Frontier Law Center represents employees across the state when workplace decisions cross the line, and we have seen how these denials unfold. This guide walks through what the law requires from your employer, when a denial becomes illegal under the Fair Employment and Housing Act, and the steps that protect you from here.

What Counts as a Reasonable Accommodation Under California Law
A reasonable accommodation is any change to how, when, or where you work that lets you do your job while managing a medical condition.
California's Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA) covers any employer with five or more employees. That bar is much lower than the federal ADA. The EEOC's ADA enforcement guidance sets minimum standards, but FEHA goes further and defines disability more broadly on purpose. Qualifying conditions include:
- Anxiety, depression, and PTSD
- Diabetes and other chronic conditions
- Cancer
- Back and spinal injuries
- Autism and ADHD
- Long COVID
- Pregnancy-related disability
- Visual or hearing impairments
- Chronic migraines, fibromyalgia, and lupus
Common requests include modified schedules, remote or hybrid work, ergonomic equipment, and additional breaks. Others include reassignment to an open role, extended leave beyond FMLA or CFRA, and modified duties. Most cost the employer little or nothing.
Your employer does not have to grant the exact accommodation you asked for. They must engage with you and offer something that actually works. The only exception is if doing so causes real, proven hardship for the business.
The Interactive Process: What Your Employer Legally Owes You
Once you request a change tied to a medical condition, FEHA kicks in. Your employer must engage in what the law calls the interactive process. This is a two-way dialogue about what adjustments can work for both of you.
A proper interactive process looks like this. Your employer acknowledges your request and asks clarifying questions. Any request for medical information stays limited to what the accommodation actually requires. Both sides explore options together, and your employer puts decisions in writing.
California Government Code Section 12940(n) makes skipping that dialogue a separate FEHA violation. Ignoring your request, issuing a fast denial, or demanding your full medical file before any conversation starts all qualify. Each stands alone as a violation, apart from the failure to accommodate itself.

When an Accommodation Denial Becomes Illegal in California
Not every denial is illegal. A denial may be lawful in two situations. First, your employer must have engaged in the interactive process. Second, they must show real evidence that the accommodation causes undue hardship or that you cannot do essential job functions even with it in place.
Most real-world denials do not look like that. The patterns below each carry weight as a failure to accommodate claim under California law.
If you recognize your situation above, your denied reasonable accommodation may be more than a frustrating HR decision. It may be a FEHA violation.
How Employers Try to Justify Denying Accommodations
California employers typically rely on one of three defenses when they deny an accommodation request. Knowing each one helps you spot when your employer is stretching the law.
When Frontier Law Center reviews a denied reasonable accommodation case, these three defenses come up again and again. Employers often raise them without the evidence needed to make them hold up in court.
What to Do Right After a Denied Reasonable Accommodation in California
If your employer denied your reasonable accommodation request, ignored it, or quietly worked around it, these steps protect your rights without escalating anything too early:
- Put the request in writing if you have not already. A short email naming your condition at a general level and describing what you need creates the paper trail California law looks for. You do not have to share your full diagnosis.
- Ask your employer in writing for the specific reason your accommodation was denied. That one email often produces the most important evidence in the case. If they refuse to answer, the silence itself is evidence.
- Save everything in a place your employer does not control. This includes the original request, the denial, follow-up messages, meeting notes, and performance reviews from before and after you disclosed. Your work email and laptop can disappear the day the relationship ends.
- Do not resign out of frustration. Leaving without a plan gives up leverage and shrinks your options. If the pressure feels unbearable, talk to Frontier Law Center before you decide anything.
How to Document a Failure to Accommodate Claim
The strongest failure to accommodate cases draw from the employer's own records. You want a pattern a jury can follow on paper.
Keep a private, dated log of every interaction tied to your accommodation. Record the date, who was involved, what was said, and what happened next.
If your employer later raises performance concerns, look at the timeline. Did reviews turn negative only after you disclosed your condition? Check when a Performance Improvement Plan appeared relative to your request. Ask whether your duties or schedule shifted without explanation. Timing matters under California law, and a clear pattern of adverse action following a denied reasonable accommodation can support more than one claim at once.

Retaliation After Asking for an Accommodation in California
Requesting an accommodation is a protected activity under FEHA. Your employer cannot legally retaliate against you for asking, even if the accommodation is later denied for a valid reason.
Retaliation is one of the most common patterns we see at Frontier Law Center. Any employment decision made shortly after an accommodation request can become evidence: cut hours, a sudden negative review, a first-ever PIP, a demotion, or termination during or after medical leave. Our posts on wrongful termination and wrongful termination versus retaliation explain how those claims interact.
If HR is pushing you to sign anything after a denied reasonable accommodation, slow down. Our guide on signing a severance agreement in California explains what you give up. Our post on what to do when HR ignored your complaint covers your options when the internal process has stalled.
When to Talk to Frontier Law Center
Most California employees wait too long after a denied reasonable accommodation. They try to work it out internally or sign a severance to stop the financial pressure. By the time they call an attorney, evidence is gone and deadlines have shrunk.
Contact Frontier Law Center when:
- Your request was denied without any real conversation
- No response has come from your employer in weeks
- Hours, duties, or your schedule shifted after you asked for an accommodation
- A Performance Improvement Plan arrived with no prior warning
- A severance offer landed with a tight deadline
Under FEHA, California employees generally have three years from the violation to file with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD). A right-to-sue letter then opens one more year. For federal employees, the EEOC has jurisdiction and runs on a much shorter timeline. Most California private-sector claims run through FEHA for that reason.
Frequently Asked Questions From California Employees
These are the questions California employees ask us most after a denied reasonable accommodation. If your situation is not covered below, a free call with Frontier Law Center can address the specifics.
Can My Employer Legally Deny My Reasonable Accommodation in California?
An employer can legally deny an accommodation in limited cases. They must have engaged in the interactive process. Then they must show real evidence of undue hardship or prove you cannot do essential job functions even with the accommodation in place. A flat denial or refusal without any real conversation does not meet that standard under FEHA.
How Long Does My Employer Have to Respond to an Accommodation Request?
California law does not set a specific deadline, but courts expect employers to act promptly and in good faith. Weeks of silence or stalling can count as a denial and a failure to engage in the interactive process.
What If My Employer Offered a Different Accommodation Than the One I Asked For?
Your employer can offer an alternative, but it must actually work for your condition. If it does not let you do your job or address the limitation your condition creates, it is not a lawful accommodation. This holds even if it looks reasonable on paper.
Can I Be Fired for Asking for a Disability Accommodation in California?
No, FEHA makes it illegal to fire, demote, cut hours, or discipline an employee for requesting an accommodation. If termination or discipline followed your request within weeks, the timing alone can support a retaliation claim.
What Evidence Do I Need to Prove My Employer Failed to Accommodate Me?
The strongest evidence is written. This includes your accommodation request, the denial or any non-response, follow-up emails, and your job description. Performance reviews from before and after the request also matter, along with any messages that reference your condition. A dated personal log backs all of it up.
Should I File with the CRD or Talk to a Lawyer First?
Talking to a lawyer first is almost always the stronger move. Frontier Law Center can review your claim, advise on timing, and help you avoid mistakes that limit your damages. The consultation is free and does not commit you to anything.
Not Sure If Your Denial Crossed the Line?
A denied accommodation request is not just a frustrating HR outcome. Under California law, it may be the start of a legal claim. Frontier Law Center represents employees across the state who were ignored, denied, or pushed out after asking for a change they were legally entitled to request. We work on a contingency basis, which means we don’t get paid unless we win.
The consultation is free. Nothing you say commits you to a case. And knowing where you stand costs you nothing. Talk to Frontier Law Center today to find out if you have a case.
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