WARN notices and layoff law in Kentucky
The federal WARN Act gives most workers at companies with 100 or more employees 60 days' written notice before a mass layoff. Kentucky follows the federal WARN Act only. Kentucky does not post a public WARN list online; its agency WARN page is at kcc.ky.gov.
Kentucky layoff notice, at a glance
Federal WARN
100+ employees, 60 days' written notice
Kentucky state law
Follows federal WARN only
Public notice list
Not published online
If notice is skipped
Back pay + benefits for the missing days, up to 60
If your employer skipped required WARN notice, you may be owed back pay and benefits for the missing days, up to 60. There are narrow exceptions (genuinely unforeseen circumstances, disasters), and most layoffs don't qualify.
This is general information, not legal advice. If you think you were owed notice, an employment attorney can tell you whether you have a claim, often with a free first consultation.
Kentucky WARN FAQ
How much notice must an employer give before a layoff in Kentucky?
The federal WARN Act requires employers with 100 or more employees to give 60 calendar days' written notice before a mass layoff or plant closing. Kentucky follows the federal WARN Act only. If they skip required notice, they can owe back pay and benefits for the missing days.
Does Kentucky publish a public WARN list?
Kentucky does not post a public WARN list online. The state agency's WARN page is at kcc.ky.gov, and notices can often be requested from the agency.
Does Kentucky have its own layoff-notice law beyond federal WARN?
No. Kentucky follows the federal WARN Act only (100+ employees, 60 days' notice). This is general information, not legal advice.
Keep going
The full WARN guide
How the 60-day rule works, who's covered, and what you're owed if it's violated.
File for unemployment in Kentucky
The official Kentucky portal, the waiting week, and what to have ready.
WARN in another state
The official notice list and layoff law for every other state.
Reviewed June 2026. WARN rules and state laws change; confirm the current details on the official Kentucky site (kcc.ky.gov) or with an employment attorney before relying on them.