Bill

Bill > AB1158


WI AB1158

WI AB1158
A state minimum wage, allowing the enactment of local minimum wage ordinances, and granting rule-making authority. (FE)


summary

Introduced
03/13/2026
In Committee
03/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
03/23/2026

Introduced Session

2025-2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Currently, the state minimum wage law requires that employers pay the applicable minimum wage set in statute to their employees. Under that law, the current minimum wage for non-tipped employees is $7.25 per hour and for tipped employees is $2.33 per hour. This bill raises the minimum wage for non-tipped employees and for tipped employees. However, the bill establishes a longer timeline for small employers to be required to pay the same minimum wage as large employers. Under the bill, a “small employer” is defined as one that employs 50 or fewer employees. The bill raises the minimum wage to $15 per hour for non-tipped employees of large employers on the effective date of the bill and by $1.25 per hour on each successive January 1 until 2030, when it is set at a standard minimum wage of $20 per hour. The bill raises the minimum wage to $7.50 per hour for tipped employees of large employers on the effective date of the bill and by 50 cents per hour on each successive January 1 until 2031, when it is set at a minimum of $10 per hour. Thereafter the tipped minimum wage generally is set at one-half the standard minimum wage. The bill raises the minimum wage to $15 per hour for non-tipped employees of small employers on the effective date of the bill and by 75 cents per hour on each successive January 1 until 2034, when it is set at the standard minimum wage then in effect. The bill also raises the minimum wage to $6.50 per hour for tipped employees of small employers on the effective date of the bill and by 50 cents per hour on each successive January 1 until 2034, when it is set at one-half the standard minimum wage then in effect. The table below illustrates the progression of the minimum wage between the current minimum wage and January 1, 2034. Upon Current adoption Non- $7.25 Large $15.00 tipped Small $15.00 $7.25 Tipped $2.33 Large Small $2.33 Jan. 1, Jan. 1, Non- $20.00 Large $20.00 + CPIa tipped Small $18.75 $18.00 Tipped $9.50 Large $10.00 Small $8.50 Beginning on January 1, 2031, and annually thereafter, the bill requires the Department of Workforce Development to annually revise the minimum wage for most employees established under the bill by determining the percentage difference between the consumer price index for the preceding year and the consumer price index for the year before the preceding year, adjusting the minimum wage then in effect by that percentage difference, and rounding that result to the nearest multiple of five cents. If the consumer price index for the preceding year has not increased over the consumer price index for the year before the preceding year, DWD will not revise the minimum wage for most employees. DWD must publish the revised minimum wage in the Wisconsin Administrative Register and on DWD’s website. The bill also provides that if the minimum wage generally for employees, as revised, is not at least $20 per hour, DWD must revise it to $20 per hour beginning on January 1, 2031. The bill also repeals 1) a provision that requires DWD to promulgate rules governing the counting of tips or similar gratuities toward payment of the minimum wage; 2) provisions setting specific meal and lodging allowances; and 3) provisions establishing minimum wages for minor employees, opportunity employees, agricultural employees, and others and instead requires DWD to establish the minimum wage for those employees by rule. Finally, current law prohibits a city, village, town, or county from enacting and administering an ordinance establishing a minimum wage. The bill eliminates that prohibition. For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.

AI Summary

This bill significantly increases the state's minimum wage, with different timelines and rates for "large employers" (those with more than 50 employees) and "small employers" (those with 50 or fewer employees), and also for tipped employees versus non-tipped employees. For non-tipped employees of large employers, the minimum wage will rise to $15 per hour upon the bill's enactment, then increase by $1.25 each year until reaching $20 per hour in 2030, after which it will be adjusted annually based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI), a measure of inflation. Small employers will also see their non-tipped employees' minimum wage start at $15 per hour but will have a longer phase-in period, reaching the standard minimum wage by 2034. Tipped employees of large employers will see their minimum wage increase from the current $2.33 to $7.50 per hour upon enactment, gradually rising to $10 per hour by 2031, and then generally set at half the standard minimum wage, also subject to CPI adjustments. Tipped employees of small employers will have a similar, but slightly slower, progression, reaching half the standard minimum wage by 2034. The bill also grants the Department of Workforce Development (DWD) the authority to establish minimum wages for specific categories of workers, such as opportunity employees and agricultural employees, through rulemaking, and repeals existing provisions related to meal and lodging allowances and specific minimum wages for minor and agricultural workers. Crucially, this bill also removes the current prohibition on cities, villages, towns, or counties from enacting their own local minimum wage ordinances, allowing for local wage standards to be established.

Committee Categories

Labor and Employment

Sponsors (43)

Clint Anderson (D)* Margaret Arney (D)* Mike Bare (D)* Brienne Brown (D)* Ryan Clancy (D)* Angelina Cruz (D)* Karen DeSanto (D)* Ben DeSmidt (D)* Joan Fitzgerald (D)* Russell Goodwin (D)* Kalan Haywood (D)* Francesca Hong (D)* Andrew Hysell (D)* Alex Joers (D)* Tara Johnson (D)* Karen Kirsch (D)* Darrin Madison (D)* Renuka Mayadev (D)* Maureen McCarville (D)* Tip McGuire (D)* Vincent Miresse (D)* Supreme Moore Omokunde (D)* Lori Palmeri (D)* Christian Phelps (D)* Pricilla Prado (D)* Amaad Rivera-Wagner (D)* Ann Roe (D)* Joe Sheehan (D)* Christine Sinicki (D)* Lee Snodgrass (D)* Ryan Spaude (D)* Angela Stroud (D)* Shelia Stubbs (D)* Lisa Subeck (D)* Sequanna Taylor (D)* Angelito Tenorio (D)* Randy Udell (D)* Robyn Vining (D)* Tim Carpenter (D),  Dora Drake (D),  Chris Larson (D),  Kelda Roys (D),  Mark Spreitzer (D), 

Last Action

Failed to pass pursuant to Senate Joint Resolution 1 (on 03/23/2026)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...
Loading...