April 21, 2026

HR Ignored My Complaint About Harassment - What to Do Next

When I filed my workplace harassment complaint with HR, I expected something to happen. I spent hours writing it up. I pulled the messages, noted the dates, named the people who had seen what I had seen, and walked into that meeting with my stomach in knots. I told someone I barely knew about one of the worst experiences of my working life and left believing the process was finally in motion.

Then nothing happened. No follow-up call. No investigation update. No acknowledgment that what I described was serious enough to address. The harasser still sits a few desks away, still shows up on my calendar, still copies me on emails as if nothing was ever said. Every interaction with leadership feels different now, colder, more clipped; like I have somehow become the problem rather than the person who reported one. I catch myself wondering whether I should have stayed quiet, whether speaking up made the job harder, and whether HR was ever really going to be on my side in the first place.

If any of that sounds familiar, you are not alone, and you are not out of options.

What most employees do not realize is that HR is not the final authority on what happens to you. California law gives you options that exist completely outside your employer's internal process, and those options are available right now regardless of how HR responded. At Frontier Law Center, we work with employees who have said exactly that: HR ignored my complaint, and I did not know where to go from there. This post explains your rights and what to do next.

California employee reviewing her options after HR ignored my complaint about harassment

Your Employer Has a Legal Duty to Act When You Report Harassment

Most employees assume HR exists to protect the company. That is often true in practice. Under California law, though, your employer's duty to respond to a harassment complaint is not optional. It is a legal requirement. When HR ignored my complaint is something you find yourself saying, that legal duty did not disappear with the silence.

California's Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), enforced by the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), requires employers to prevent harassment from occurring and respond promptly when an employee reports it. Employers must investigate the complaint, take corrective steps where needed, and document what they did. Employers who ignore reports or skip any part of that process face serious legal consequences, including liability for the original harassment and for failing to address it.

Your employer's silence is not an excuse. Harassment is not tolerated behavior under California law, and the failure to act is a violation in its own right.

Signs That HR Ignored My Complaint

Not every situation looks the same. Some employees never hear back at all. Others get a brief "under review" message and then nothing. Here are the most common signs your complaint is not getting the attention California law requires:

  • You filed and received no official response, no timeline, and no follow-up
  • The person you reported continues working in the same environment with no change
  • The ongoing harassment or repeated conduct continues with no intervention from your employer
  • You are the one who got reassigned, moved, or quietly excluded from meetings
  • HR called your complaint unfounded but never explained what the investigation involved

Any one of these signals is worth taking seriously. Together, they can support a legal claim that your employer failed its duty under FEHA.

 Employee experiencing unwanted physical contact from a coworker in the workplace

Flawed Investigation vs. No Investigation: What Is the Legal Difference?

There is a real legal distinction between an employer who investigates and reaches the wrong conclusion, and one who never genuinely investigates at all.

A flawed investigation means the employer made some documented effort. The process may have been incomplete or biased. The outcome may have been wrong. You can challenge that record, but the employer has something to point to.

No investigation at all means there is no documented review, no corrective action, and no response to the employee. Courts and the CRD check three things:

  1. Was the investigation prompt?
  2. Was it fair and impartial?
  3. Did the employer take corrective action afterward?

When an employer cannot answer yes to any of those, the gap in their record becomes part of your case. This is one of the most important reasons to start documenting the moment you realize HR ignored my complaint is not getting resolved: the date you filed, who you spoke to, what they said, and anything in writing. Save emails, texts, and any written communications from HR as soon as possible.

HR Ignored My Complaint: Your Next Steps

When HR ignores your complaint and internal escalation runs its course, the next move matters more than most employees realize. California gives you real options outside your employer's process, but the order in which you use them affects how strong your case is when it lands in front of a judge or across from defense counsel. Here are the three most important steps, in the order that actually protects you.

1. Talk to an Employment Attorney First

Most employees put this step off because they are unsure whether they have a real case, and they assume a lawyer only gets involved after a lawsuit is already on the table. That is not how plaintiff-side employment law works. A free consultation is how you find out whether what happened to you is legally actionable, what agency filings apply to your specific situation, and what the statute of limitations looks like on your particular claim. Getting this right at the start matters because the language used in your first official filing -  what you describe, what you leave out, which protected characteristics you name becomes part of the permanent record the rest of your case is built on.

At Frontier Law Center, we offer confidential, no-obligation case evaluations to California employees. We work exclusively on the plaintiff side, which means we only represent workers, never employers. If we take your case, we handle the agency filings with you, coordinate the timing so your deadlines are protected, and make sure your first move is the strongest one available.

2. File a Complaint with the California Civil Rights Department

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) is the state agency responsible for investigating workplace harassment and discrimination claims under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). A CRD complaint opens an independent government investigation that exists entirely outside whatever your HR department did or failed to do; you do not need HR to have responded or resolved anything before you file. Most employees have three years from the last act of harassment to file with the CRD, and for most cases we handle, this is the primary agency filing that preserves the right to pursue the claim in civil court.

3.  File a Complaint with the EEOC

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) handles federal harassment and discrimination claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. California employees have 300 days from the last act of harassment to file with the EEOC, which is a significantly shorter window than the CRD provides. In many situations, a dual filing with both agencies is the right move, and the CRD and EEOC have a work-sharing agreement that makes this straightforward when it is coordinated properly. Which agency to file with, when, and in what order depends on the facts of your case - which is why it is worth having that conversation with an attorney before the clock moves any further.

Manager dismissing an employee's concerns during a workplace meeting

Watch for Retaliation After You Report

Many employees fear that reporting harassment will make things worse. That fear becomes especially real when HR ignored my complaint and then conditions at work start to change. Retaliation after a harassment complaint is illegal under California and federal law. It still happens.

Retaliation does not always look like a termination. Watch for:

  • A sudden negative performance review after years of positive feedback
  • Being cut out of meetings or team communications
  • Reassignment to less favorable shifts or duties
  • A noticeable change in how your manager or colleagues treat you

Under California law, all of these can count as illegal retaliation when they follow a complaint. Write down what changed, when it changed, and who was involved. Our post on being fired after reporting sexual harassment covers the most common retaliation scenarios in detail, and our post on the difference between wrongful termination and retaliation breaks down how to tell which claim you may have.

What If the Harasser Is Your Manager or HR

Many employees feel stuck when the misconduct comes from a supervisor, a boss, or someone inside HR. In those situations, HR ignored my complaint is practically a foregone conclusion. When the only reporting channel available leads back to the harasser, reporting through normal internal channels can feel pointless.

California law accounts for this directly. Under FEHA, employers face automatic liability for hostile work environment harassment by a supervisor. You do not need to exhaust your employer's internal complaint process first. You do not need to have reported to HR at all to have a valid claim under California law.

If HR is the problem, go directly to the CRD or EEOC. You can also contact an employment attorney to move forward without making your work situation worse. Our post on repeated comments and hostile work environments breaks down what courts actually look for. If you have also experienced employee discrimination connected to the harassment, you can review your broader protections on our workplace discrimination page.

What California's FEHA Actually Gives You

California's FEHA goes further than federal law in several key areas. Here is what it provides:

  • Who it covers: All California employers with 5 or more employees
  • Filing deadline: 3 years from the last act of harassment to file a CRD complaint
  • What you can recover: Lost wages, emotional distress damages, and punitive damages in serious cases

Understanding what FEHA gives you matters. It is part of knowing what you are actually entitled to, not just what your employer told you during onboarding. If HR ignored my complaint, FEHA is the legal framework that gives you a path forward. The NCSL's overview of sexual harassment law also provides useful context on how California compares to other states.

Questions Employees Ask When HR Ignored My Complaint

These are the questions we hear most often from employees who filed and got no meaningful response. If your situation is not covered here, a free case evaluation is the fastest way to get a direct answer.

Can HR Legally Refuse to Investigate a Harassment Complaint?

No, under FEHA, California employers must take reasonable steps to investigate harassment complaints. Refusing to investigate, closing a complaint without a real review, or dismissing it with no explanation can each fail that legal duty. Whether that failure gives you an actionable claim depends on the facts of your specific situation.

What If the Person I Need to Report Is in HR?

You do not have to go through HR if HR is part of the problem. California law lets you file directly with the CRD or the EEOC. You can skip your employer's internal process entirely. An attorney can help you document your situation and take action without putting you in a worse position at work.

Is There a Difference Between the CRD and the EEOC?

​Yes, and here is the simplest way to think about it: one is a California agency, one is a federal agency, and you can file with both.

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) enforces California state law. It covers employers with 5 or more employees and gives you 3 years from the last act of harassment to file a complaint.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) enforces federal law. It covers employers with 15 or more employees and gives California employees 300 days to file.

In most cases, filing with one agency automatically cross-files with the other. Many employees file with both to keep all of their options open. If you are unsure which applies to your situation, that is exactly the kind of question a free case evaluation can answer.

Do I Have to Report to HR Before Taking Legal Action?

No, California law does not require an internal HR complaint before you can file with the CRD, the EEOC, or in court. While an internal complaint can strengthen the employer notice element of certain claims, employees who were afraid to report internally can still seek legal recourse.

What If I Filed a Complaint but Was Never Told What the Investigation Found?

Your employer does not have to share every detail of an investigation. But providing no follow-up at all is a serious red flag. You have a reasonable expectation that your complaint will be acknowledged and addressed. No response after filing can serve as direct evidence of a failure to investigate.

HR Is Not the Last Word - Call Frontier Law Center

When you find yourself saying HR ignored my complaint and I do not know what to do next, that is exactly where we come in. California law exists because employers do not always police themselves. The CRD and EEOC are there because internal HR processes are not always fair.

At Frontier Law Center, we represent California employees whose employers failed to respond to harassment the way the law requires. We are plaintiff-side only. If you are not sure whether your situation qualifies, a free case evaluation is the clearest next step. Call us for a confidential, no-obligation conversation about your options.

Attorney Advertising. The information on this page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every case is different.

Let's discuss.

HR Ignored My Complaint About Harassment - What to Do Next

HR ignored my complaint about harassment and nothing changed? California employees have options. Learn your rights and next steps with Frontier Law Center.

April 21, 2026

Call us now at (800) 437-7991 or chat with us.

Schedule a free consultation about how to proceed with your case.

Chat with us

When I filed my workplace harassment complaint with HR, I expected something to happen. I spent hours writing it up. I pulled the messages, noted the dates, named the people who had seen what I had seen, and walked into that meeting with my stomach in knots. I told someone I barely knew about one of the worst experiences of my working life and left believing the process was finally in motion.

Then nothing happened. No follow-up call. No investigation update. No acknowledgment that what I described was serious enough to address. The harasser still sits a few desks away, still shows up on my calendar, still copies me on emails as if nothing was ever said. Every interaction with leadership feels different now, colder, more clipped; like I have somehow become the problem rather than the person who reported one. I catch myself wondering whether I should have stayed quiet, whether speaking up made the job harder, and whether HR was ever really going to be on my side in the first place.

If any of that sounds familiar, you are not alone, and you are not out of options.

What most employees do not realize is that HR is not the final authority on what happens to you. California law gives you options that exist completely outside your employer's internal process, and those options are available right now regardless of how HR responded. At Frontier Law Center, we work with employees who have said exactly that: HR ignored my complaint, and I did not know where to go from there. This post explains your rights and what to do next.

California employee reviewing her options after HR ignored my complaint about harassment

Your Employer Has a Legal Duty to Act When You Report Harassment

Most employees assume HR exists to protect the company. That is often true in practice. Under California law, though, your employer's duty to respond to a harassment complaint is not optional. It is a legal requirement. When HR ignored my complaint is something you find yourself saying, that legal duty did not disappear with the silence.

California's Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), enforced by the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), requires employers to prevent harassment from occurring and respond promptly when an employee reports it. Employers must investigate the complaint, take corrective steps where needed, and document what they did. Employers who ignore reports or skip any part of that process face serious legal consequences, including liability for the original harassment and for failing to address it.

Your employer's silence is not an excuse. Harassment is not tolerated behavior under California law, and the failure to act is a violation in its own right.

Signs That HR Ignored My Complaint

Not every situation looks the same. Some employees never hear back at all. Others get a brief "under review" message and then nothing. Here are the most common signs your complaint is not getting the attention California law requires:

  • You filed and received no official response, no timeline, and no follow-up
  • The person you reported continues working in the same environment with no change
  • The ongoing harassment or repeated conduct continues with no intervention from your employer
  • You are the one who got reassigned, moved, or quietly excluded from meetings
  • HR called your complaint unfounded but never explained what the investigation involved

Any one of these signals is worth taking seriously. Together, they can support a legal claim that your employer failed its duty under FEHA.

 Employee experiencing unwanted physical contact from a coworker in the workplace

Flawed Investigation vs. No Investigation: What Is the Legal Difference?

There is a real legal distinction between an employer who investigates and reaches the wrong conclusion, and one who never genuinely investigates at all.

A flawed investigation means the employer made some documented effort. The process may have been incomplete or biased. The outcome may have been wrong. You can challenge that record, but the employer has something to point to.

No investigation at all means there is no documented review, no corrective action, and no response to the employee. Courts and the CRD check three things:

  1. Was the investigation prompt?
  2. Was it fair and impartial?
  3. Did the employer take corrective action afterward?

When an employer cannot answer yes to any of those, the gap in their record becomes part of your case. This is one of the most important reasons to start documenting the moment you realize HR ignored my complaint is not getting resolved: the date you filed, who you spoke to, what they said, and anything in writing. Save emails, texts, and any written communications from HR as soon as possible.

HR Ignored My Complaint: Your Next Steps

When HR ignores your complaint and internal escalation runs its course, the next move matters more than most employees realize. California gives you real options outside your employer's process, but the order in which you use them affects how strong your case is when it lands in front of a judge or across from defense counsel. Here are the three most important steps, in the order that actually protects you.

1. Talk to an Employment Attorney First

Most employees put this step off because they are unsure whether they have a real case, and they assume a lawyer only gets involved after a lawsuit is already on the table. That is not how plaintiff-side employment law works. A free consultation is how you find out whether what happened to you is legally actionable, what agency filings apply to your specific situation, and what the statute of limitations looks like on your particular claim. Getting this right at the start matters because the language used in your first official filing -  what you describe, what you leave out, which protected characteristics you name becomes part of the permanent record the rest of your case is built on.

At Frontier Law Center, we offer confidential, no-obligation case evaluations to California employees. We work exclusively on the plaintiff side, which means we only represent workers, never employers. If we take your case, we handle the agency filings with you, coordinate the timing so your deadlines are protected, and make sure your first move is the strongest one available.

2. File a Complaint with the California Civil Rights Department

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) is the state agency responsible for investigating workplace harassment and discrimination claims under the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA). A CRD complaint opens an independent government investigation that exists entirely outside whatever your HR department did or failed to do; you do not need HR to have responded or resolved anything before you file. Most employees have three years from the last act of harassment to file with the CRD, and for most cases we handle, this is the primary agency filing that preserves the right to pursue the claim in civil court.

3.  File a Complaint with the EEOC

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) handles federal harassment and discrimination claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. California employees have 300 days from the last act of harassment to file with the EEOC, which is a significantly shorter window than the CRD provides. In many situations, a dual filing with both agencies is the right move, and the CRD and EEOC have a work-sharing agreement that makes this straightforward when it is coordinated properly. Which agency to file with, when, and in what order depends on the facts of your case - which is why it is worth having that conversation with an attorney before the clock moves any further.

Manager dismissing an employee's concerns during a workplace meeting

Watch for Retaliation After You Report

Many employees fear that reporting harassment will make things worse. That fear becomes especially real when HR ignored my complaint and then conditions at work start to change. Retaliation after a harassment complaint is illegal under California and federal law. It still happens.

Retaliation does not always look like a termination. Watch for:

  • A sudden negative performance review after years of positive feedback
  • Being cut out of meetings or team communications
  • Reassignment to less favorable shifts or duties
  • A noticeable change in how your manager or colleagues treat you

Under California law, all of these can count as illegal retaliation when they follow a complaint. Write down what changed, when it changed, and who was involved. Our post on being fired after reporting sexual harassment covers the most common retaliation scenarios in detail, and our post on the difference between wrongful termination and retaliation breaks down how to tell which claim you may have.

What If the Harasser Is Your Manager or HR

Many employees feel stuck when the misconduct comes from a supervisor, a boss, or someone inside HR. In those situations, HR ignored my complaint is practically a foregone conclusion. When the only reporting channel available leads back to the harasser, reporting through normal internal channels can feel pointless.

California law accounts for this directly. Under FEHA, employers face automatic liability for hostile work environment harassment by a supervisor. You do not need to exhaust your employer's internal complaint process first. You do not need to have reported to HR at all to have a valid claim under California law.

If HR is the problem, go directly to the CRD or EEOC. You can also contact an employment attorney to move forward without making your work situation worse. Our post on repeated comments and hostile work environments breaks down what courts actually look for. If you have also experienced employee discrimination connected to the harassment, you can review your broader protections on our workplace discrimination page.

What California's FEHA Actually Gives You

California's FEHA goes further than federal law in several key areas. Here is what it provides:

  • Who it covers: All California employers with 5 or more employees
  • Filing deadline: 3 years from the last act of harassment to file a CRD complaint
  • What you can recover: Lost wages, emotional distress damages, and punitive damages in serious cases

Understanding what FEHA gives you matters. It is part of knowing what you are actually entitled to, not just what your employer told you during onboarding. If HR ignored my complaint, FEHA is the legal framework that gives you a path forward. The NCSL's overview of sexual harassment law also provides useful context on how California compares to other states.

Questions Employees Ask When HR Ignored My Complaint

These are the questions we hear most often from employees who filed and got no meaningful response. If your situation is not covered here, a free case evaluation is the fastest way to get a direct answer.

Can HR Legally Refuse to Investigate a Harassment Complaint?

No, under FEHA, California employers must take reasonable steps to investigate harassment complaints. Refusing to investigate, closing a complaint without a real review, or dismissing it with no explanation can each fail that legal duty. Whether that failure gives you an actionable claim depends on the facts of your specific situation.

What If the Person I Need to Report Is in HR?

You do not have to go through HR if HR is part of the problem. California law lets you file directly with the CRD or the EEOC. You can skip your employer's internal process entirely. An attorney can help you document your situation and take action without putting you in a worse position at work.

Is There a Difference Between the CRD and the EEOC?

​Yes, and here is the simplest way to think about it: one is a California agency, one is a federal agency, and you can file with both.

The California Civil Rights Department (CRD) enforces California state law. It covers employers with 5 or more employees and gives you 3 years from the last act of harassment to file a complaint.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) enforces federal law. It covers employers with 15 or more employees and gives California employees 300 days to file.

In most cases, filing with one agency automatically cross-files with the other. Many employees file with both to keep all of their options open. If you are unsure which applies to your situation, that is exactly the kind of question a free case evaluation can answer.

Do I Have to Report to HR Before Taking Legal Action?

No, California law does not require an internal HR complaint before you can file with the CRD, the EEOC, or in court. While an internal complaint can strengthen the employer notice element of certain claims, employees who were afraid to report internally can still seek legal recourse.

What If I Filed a Complaint but Was Never Told What the Investigation Found?

Your employer does not have to share every detail of an investigation. But providing no follow-up at all is a serious red flag. You have a reasonable expectation that your complaint will be acknowledged and addressed. No response after filing can serve as direct evidence of a failure to investigate.

HR Is Not the Last Word - Call Frontier Law Center

When you find yourself saying HR ignored my complaint and I do not know what to do next, that is exactly where we come in. California law exists because employers do not always police themselves. The CRD and EEOC are there because internal HR processes are not always fair.

At Frontier Law Center, we represent California employees whose employers failed to respond to harassment the way the law requires. We are plaintiff-side only. If you are not sure whether your situation qualifies, a free case evaluation is the clearest next step. Call us for a confidential, no-obligation conversation about your options.

Attorney Advertising. The information on this page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every case is different.

FAQ's

How do I know if I should seek legal representation?

If you're facing an employment dispute, seeking legal representation is advisable.Signs include unfair treatment, discrimination, or wrongful termination. Schedule a consultation with us to discuss your situation and determine the best course of action.

What documents should I have when I speak with you?

When you consult with us, bring any relevant documents such as employment contracts, termination letters, pay stubs, and communication records with your employer. These documents help us better understand your case and provide informed advice.

What kind of damages can I recover if I win my case?

Damages in a successful employment dispute can include back pay, front pay, compensatory damages for emotional distress, and, in some cases, punitive damages. The specific damages depend on the nature of the case, and we will guide you through the potential outcomes during our discussions.

What happens at the beginning of the litigation process?

At the outset, we request your employee file from your employer. This file includes crucial documents like handbooks, personnel files, agreements, and communications. We review the file to assess the strengths and weaknesses of yourcase, typically taking 45-90 days.

What occurs during the pre-litigation stage?

In this stage, we analyze your employee file, conduct research, and draft a demand letter outlining potential claims to your employer. If negotiation is possible, we may resolve the case without filing a lawsuit. The pre-litigation stage can take 30-90 days or more, depending on case complexity.

What happens if negotiation fails during pre-litigation?

If negotiation isn't successful, or if the defendant is unwilling to negotiate, we move to the litigation stage, which can last 6 months to 2 years or more. It involves filing a lawsuit, engaging in discovery, and potentially proceeding to trial.

What does the litigation stage entail?

The litigation stage involves filing a complaint, engaging in discovery to gather evidence, and potentially going to trial if an agreement cannot be reached. The duration varies, lasting 6 months to 2 years based on case complexity.

Are there alternative dispute resolution options?

Yes, alternatives include arbitration and mediation. Arbitration is required if you signed an agreement with your employer, offering a faster resolution. Mediation is avoluntary process where both parties meet with a neutral third party to settle the case.

How does Frontier Law Center support clients throughout the process?

We keep you informed, answer your questions, and provide guidance and support at every step. Contact us anytime if you have concerns or queries. We are here to fight for your rights and help you navigate this challenging time.

Can you guarantee a specific timeline or outcome?

Every case is unique, and factors may affect timelines or outcomes. While we
strive to provide accurate estimates, there are no guarantees. We promise to keep
you informed, work efficiently, and strive for the best possible resolution.

Call us now at (800) 437-7991 or chat with us.

Schedule a free consultation about how to proceed with your case.

Chat with us