Nevada At-Will Employment Explained: What Your Boss Can and Can’t Do

By Milan Chatterjee | Founding Attorney, Milan Legal

Nevada employee learning about at-will employment rights after being terminated

One of the biggest misconceptions about employment law in Nevada is that an employer can fire an employee “for any reason at any time.”

Employees hear the phrase “at-will employment” so often that many assume they have no legal protections if they lose their job. As a result, workers who experience discrimination, retaliation, or other unlawful treatment sometimes decide not to seek legal advice because they believe nothing can be done.

The reality is more nuanced.

Nevada is an at-will employment state, but that does not give employers unlimited authority to terminate employees for unlawful reasons. State and federal laws continue to protect workers from discrimination, retaliation, and other prohibited employment practices.

Understanding what at-will employment actually means and what it does not mean can help employees recognize when a termination may violate the law.


What Does “At-Will Employment” Mean?

At-will employment generally means that either the employer or the employee may end the employment relationship at any time, with or without advance notice, and for almost any lawful reason.

This flexibility allows employers to make business decisions without having to establish “just cause” in every situation. Likewise, employees are generally free to resign without providing a lengthy notice period.

However, the key word is lawful.

At-will employment does not eliminate the legal protections created by state and federal employment laws. Employers still must comply with laws that prohibit discrimination, retaliation, and other unlawful employment practices.

Understanding that distinction is critical.


What Your Employer Can Legally Do

Many employment decisions that feel unfair are not necessarily illegal.

For example, an employer may decide to eliminate a position because of restructuring, reduce staff during an economic downturn, or terminate an employee whose performance no longer meets expectations.

Employers may also change schedules, reassign job duties, or implement new workplace policies provided those decisions do not violate employment laws or employment contracts.

Although these decisions can be frustrating, they often fall within an employer’s legal authority under Nevada’s at-will employment doctrine.


What Your Employer Cannot Legally Do

While employers have broad discretion in managing their workforce, there are clear legal boundaries.

An employer generally cannot terminate an employee because of a protected characteristic such as race, sex, religion, national origin, disability, pregnancy, or age.

Likewise, employers generally cannot punish employees for reporting workplace discrimination, participating in investigations, requesting legally protected leave, or engaging in other activities protected by law.

When a termination appears connected to one of these protected activities, the issue may no longer be simply an at-will employment decision. Instead, it may involve wrongful termination or unlawful retaliation.

Wrongful Termination Is an Important Exception

One of the most significant exceptions to at-will employment involves wrongful termination.

Wrongful termination occurs when an employee is fired for a reason prohibited by law.

For example, an employee who is terminated shortly after reporting sexual harassment or filing a workplace discrimination complaint may have legal claims despite Nevada’s at-will employment doctrine.

Similarly, an employee fired after requesting a reasonable disability accommodation or reporting wage violations may also have legal protections.

Every situation depends on the specific facts, which is why legal evaluation is so important.

Employment attorney explaining Nevada at-will employment law to an employee

Retaliation Is Often Mistaken for At-Will Employment

Retaliation claims are among the most misunderstood areas of employment law.

Employees frequently report workplace problems in good faith only to experience sudden changes in how they are treated. Hours are reduced, disciplinary actions increase, promotions disappear, or employment ends altogether.

Some workers assume these actions are simply part of Nevada’s at-will employment system.

However, if the employer’s actions were motivated by the employee’s protected activity, retaliation laws may apply.

Understanding the difference between lawful management decisions and unlawful retaliation often requires careful analysis of workplace records, timing, and communications.

Workplace Discrimination Remains Illegal

At-will employment does not allow employers to discriminate against employees.

Nevada and federal laws continue to prohibit employment decisions based on protected characteristics.

Discrimination may occur during hiring, promotions, discipline, compensation decisions, or termination.

Employees who suspect discrimination should preserve relevant records and understand that administrative agencies such as the Nevada Equal Rights Commission may play an important role in protecting their rights.

How NERC Fits Into Employment Claims

Many employees first learn about the Nevada Equal Rights Commission after they lose their jobs.

NERC investigates many discrimination and retaliation complaints throughout the state and often serves as the first step in pursuing employment claims.

Nevada also maintains a work-sharing agreement with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), allowing many complaints to be processed through both agencies.

Understanding these procedures can be critical for preserving legal rights and meeting filing deadlines.

Documentation Can Make a Difference

Employees who believe they were unlawfully terminated should preserve relevant documentation whenever possible.

Emails, text messages, performance evaluations, disciplinary notices, internal complaints, and witness information often become valuable evidence when evaluating employment claims.

Creating a timeline of important events may also help establish whether protected activity occurred shortly before adverse employment actions.

Although every case is different, thorough documentation frequently strengthens an employee’s ability to evaluate potential legal claims.

When Should You Speak With an Employment Attorney?

Employees often wait until after unemployment benefits have been processed or after finding another job before seeking legal advice.

Unfortunately, waiting too long can create unnecessary challenges. Important deadlines may pass, documents may become more difficult to obtain, and witness memories may fade.

If you believe your termination involved discrimination, retaliation, harassment, whistleblower activity, or another unlawful reason, consulting an employment attorney sooner rather than later can help you understand your options.

Early legal guidance also helps employees distinguish between lawful at-will employment decisions and terminations that may violate Nevada or federal law.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Nevada generally follows the at-will employment doctrine, allowing employers or employees to end the employment relationship at any time for any lawful reason.

In many cases, yes. However, employers cannot terminate employees for unlawful reasons such as discrimination or retaliation.

At-will employment allows employers to terminate employees for lawful reasons. Wrongful termination occurs when a firing violates state or federal law, such as discrimination or retaliation.

No. Employees may still have legal claims if their termination involved discrimination, retaliation, harassment, whistleblowing, or other unlawful conduct.

If you believe your termination may have violated employment laws, consulting an attorney promptly can help you understand your rights and preserve important legal claims.

Conclusion

Nevada’s at-will employment doctrine provides employers with broad authority to manage their workforce, but that authority has important legal limits. Employers cannot terminate employees for discriminatory, retaliatory, or otherwise unlawful reasons simply because Nevada is an at-will state.

Understanding those limits can help employees recognize when they may have legal rights after losing their jobs.

If you believe your termination involved discrimination, retaliation, harassment, or another violation of employment law, Best Employment Attorney represents employees throughout Las Vegas, Reno, and Nevada in workplace disputes. Contact our office today to discuss your situation and learn how we may be able to help.

Milan Chatterjee

Milan Chatterjee

Milan Chatterjee is a Nevada employment attorney representing both employees and employers across Las Vegas, Reno, and Northern Nevada. As former Associate Compliance Counsel at Las Vegas Sands Corp., a Fortune 500 hospitality company, Milan advised senior leadership on employment compliance, internal investigations, and litigation strategy across global operations. He uses that in-house perspective to anticipate how major Nevada employers approach termination decisions, document creation, and litigation defense โ€” and to dismantle those strategies for the employees and smaller employers he represents today. His practice covers wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, wage and hour disputes, and HR compliance under NRS Chapter 608, NRS 613, Title VII, FLSA, and the ADA.

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