Last updated: January 2026
Federal law says you can hire your kids. Your state might disagree. Here's how to navigate the conflict and why most CPAs recommend sticking to home-based admin work for children under 16.
If you've researched hiring your children in your family business, you've probably seen this reassuring line from the Department of Labor:
"Children employed by their parents in a trade or business are exempt from the FLSA's minimum age requirements."
Sounds simple. But here's what the articles don't always mention: your state may not have the same exemption.
And when federal and state laws conflict, the stricter standard applies.
This is where many well-intentioned parents get into trouble.
The Federal vs. State Disconnect
Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), federal law allows:
- Children of any age to work for a parent-owned business
- No restrictions on hours or times of day
- No work permit required
The only limit: no hazardous work (manufacturing, mining, operating dangerous equipment).
Sounds great. But your state likely has additional rules that override the federal exemption.
Examples of stricter state laws:
| State | Key Restriction |
|---|---|
| California | Work permits required for all minors under 18, including those working for parents. Exception only if child is unpaid and being "trained." |
| Connecticut | No exemption for family businesses in restaurants. Children under 16 cannot work in food service, even for parents. |
| New York | Work permits required. Minors under 14 cannot be employed except in specific circumstances. |
| Washington | Among the strictest in the nation. Limits 14-15 year olds to 16 hours/week during school. Work permits required. |
| Missouri | Family businesses exempt only if parent has "direct control" over the child employee. |
The bottom line: you cannot assume the federal exemption protects you. You must check your state's specific requirements.
Real Case: The Connecticut Pizza Shop
In 2011, Michael and Migdalia Nuzzo, owners of Clinton's Grand Apizza in Connecticut, were visited by a state Department of Labor officer. Their crime? Having their children (ages 8, 11, and 13) help out at the family pizzeria.
The kids weren't paid. They didn't operate machinery. They didn't miss school. For short periods of time, they "watched, learned, and assisted their parents in the creation of New Haven-style pizza."
Under federal law, this was perfectly legal.
Under Connecticut state law, it wasn't. Connecticut prohibits minors under 16 from working in restaurants, with no exception for family-owned businesses.
The Nuzzos sued, claiming the law violated their constitutional rights as parents. Legal experts gave them slim chances. As one employment attorney explained: "Kids clearing the table at home is one thing. At a restaurant, it's another."
The case highlights a critical point: "There are no loopholes" when it comes to state labor laws applied to businesses, even family ones.
Why States Are Stricter
State child labor laws exist because:
- Workplace hazards: Restaurants have deep fryers, sharp knives, and hot stoves. Retail stores have heavy equipment. Even "safe" tasks put children in environments designed for adults.
- Education protection: States enforce compulsory school attendance. Work that interferes with education, even for family businesses, can result in truancy violations.
- Public-facing work: Many states restrict minors from customer-facing roles, handling money, or working during certain hours, regardless of who owns the business.
- Enforcement consistency: States can't easily verify parent-child relationships during inspections. Applying rules uniformly prevents abuse.
The CPA Recommendation: Home-Based Admin Work Under 16
Given the legal complexity, most CPAs and tax professionals who work with family businesses make a conservative recommendation:
For children under 16, stick to home-based administrative work.
Here's why this is the safest approach:
1. It avoids most state restrictions
When your child works from your home office, filing documents, organizing digital files, helping with your website, appearing in marketing photos, you're not operating in a regulated workplace. There's no public exposure, no equipment hazards, no customer interaction.
Most state labor laws focus on workplaces: restaurants, retail stores, offices, job sites. Home-based work for a parent's business is largely outside this scope.
2. It's easier to document
The IRS wants to see legitimate work. Administrative tasks done at home are:
- Easy to supervise
- Easy to photograph and document
- Easy to assign reasonable wages
- Low risk for injury or liability
3. It matches what kids can actually do
Let's be honest: a 10-year-old isn't going to be a productive restaurant server or retail associate. But they can shred documents, organize files, sort inventory, help with simple data entry, and appear in marketing content.
Matching the work to the child's actual abilities makes the wages more defensible and the arrangement more legitimate. See our complete list of 50+ legitimate tasks by age.
4. It keeps you out of "gray areas"
When your child works at a physical business location, you're subject to:
- State work permit requirements
- Hour and time-of-day restrictions
- Workplace safety inspections
- Possible customer complaints
None of this applies when your 12-year-old spends 3 hours on Saturday organizing your digital receipts at the kitchen table.
When Can Kids Work at the Business Location?
Generally, 16 and older is the safer threshold for work at a physical business location. At this age:
- Most state restrictions ease significantly
- Work permits (if required) are easier to obtain
- Hour restrictions are less severe
- More tasks become legally permissible
Even then, check your state's specific rules. Some states still restrict:
- Night work (after 10 PM)
- Work during school hours
- Specific tasks (operating equipment, serving alcohol, etc.)
State-by-State: Where to Check
Before hiring your child for any work, check:
- Your state's Department of Labor website: Search "[Your State] child labor laws family business"
- Work permit requirements: Does your state require permits for minors working for parents? California does. Texas doesn't.
- Occupation restrictions: What work is prohibited at what ages?
- Hour limitations: Even if federal law has no limits, your state might cap weekly hours
Resources:
- DOL State Labor Offices
- YouthRules! State Information
Penalties for Getting It Wrong
Violating state child labor laws, even unknowingly, can result in:
- Civil penalties: Fines up to $10,000+ per violation, per child
- Criminal penalties: For willful violations, possible imprisonment
- Lost deductions: The IRS may disallow wages if the employment itself was illegal
- Reputational damage: Investigations make local news
The Nuzzo family wasn't fined; they received a warning. But their case made national headlines and led to an expensive lawsuit. Not every family will be so lucky.
The Safe Path Forward
Here's the approach that keeps you compliant with both federal and state law:
For children under 14:
- Home-based administrative work only
- Keep it simple: organizing, shredding, basic computer tasks
- No work at physical business locations
- Document everything with the complete payroll checklist
For children 14-15:
- Continue to favor home-based work
- If state allows and permits are obtained, limited work at business location may be possible
- Stay within state hour restrictions
- Avoid any equipment, customer service, or tasks your state restricts
For children 16-17:
- More flexibility, but still check state rules
- Obtain work permits if required
- Avoid hazardous work (still federally prohibited until 18)
- Document hours and pay carefully
For all ages:
- Pay at least state minimum wage
- Keep detailed time and task records
- Never pay cash; use checks or direct deposit
- When in doubt, consult a local attorney or CPA familiar with your state's laws
Learn what records to keep for the IRS and use our Tax Savings Calculator to estimate your potential savings.
The Bottom Line
Federal law gives family businesses a lot of flexibility. State law often takes it away.
The safest strategy, and the one recommended by most CPAs, is to keep younger children doing administrative work from home, where state labor regulations rarely apply.
Once your children are 16+, you have more options. Until then, play it safe. The tax benefits aren't worth a state labor investigation.
If you're an S Corp owner, you may also want to explore the Family Management Company strategy to maximize your savings.
Kids Payroll helps you document wages, track hours, and stay compliant so you can focus on teaching your kids about business, not worrying about which laws apply.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about child labor laws. Laws vary significantly by state and change over time. Consult an attorney or CPA in your state before hiring minor children in your business.