Equal Pay Law: The Equal Pay Act, Title VII, and Closing the Wage Gap Legally
Federal equal pay law operates through two primary statutory frameworks — the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 — each with distinct enforcement mechanisms, coverage standards, and remedial structures. Together, these statutes govern employer obligations when pay disparities exist between workers performing comparable work across gender, race, color, national origin, sex, and religion. Understanding how these frameworks interact determines which claims apply, which defenses are available, and what remedies an affected worker can pursue.
Definition and scope
The Equal Pay Act (29 U.S.C. § 206(d)) prohibits employers from paying workers of one sex less than workers of the opposite sex for "equal work" performed under similar working conditions in the same establishment. The statute is an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act, meaning FLSA coverage thresholds apply: employers engaged in interstate commerce or operating enterprises with annual gross revenues of at least $500,000 are covered (U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division).
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2) extends pay discrimination protections beyond sex to include race, color, religion, and national origin. Title VII is enforced by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and covers employers with 15 or more employees, a lower threshold than many state analogs but narrower than the FLSA's enterprise coverage. Workers alleging pay discrimination under Title VII must file an EEOC charge before pursuing federal litigation — a procedural requirement the EPA does not impose.
The combined scope of these statutes places equal pay obligations on a broad employer population. As detailed across the federal employment laws overview on this reference network, wage equity requirements intersect with workplace discrimination law, employee classification, and wage and hour law in ways that frequently produce overlapping legal exposure.
How it works
Equal Pay Act mechanics
An EPA claim requires a plaintiff to establish that:
- The employer pays different wages to employees of opposite sexes.
- The employees perform equal work — meaning substantially equal skill, effort, and responsibility.
- The work is performed under similar working conditions in the same establishment.
Once a plaintiff establishes this prima facie case, the burden shifts to the employer to prove one of four statutory affirmative defenses: (1) a seniority system, (2) a merit system, (3) a system measuring earnings by quantity or quality of production, or (4) any factor other than sex. The fourth defense — "any factor other than sex" — has been the subject of significant litigation. The Ninth Circuit's decision in Rizo v. Yovanovitch (9th Cir. 2021) held that prior salary history alone does not qualify as a factor other than sex, reflecting a judicial trend toward restricting that defense.
Title VII pay claims
Title VII pay claims proceed under either a disparate treatment theory (intentional discrimination) or a disparate impact theory (facially neutral policies producing statistically significant pay disparities across a protected class). Unlike the EPA, Title VII does not require a male comparator — a female plaintiff in a female-dominated workforce can still state a claim if intentional discrimination is shown. Compensatory and punitive damages are available under Title VII (42 U.S.C. § 1981a), capped by employer size: employers with 15–100 employees face a $50,000 cap; employers with 501 or more employees face a $300,000 cap per the EEOC's damages guidance.
Common scenarios
Equal pay disputes arise in patterned fact patterns that regulators and courts encounter repeatedly:
- Starting salary disparities: A company sets initial pay based on prior salary history or negotiation outcomes, producing a cohort of female employees hired at lower base rates than male peers in identical roles.
- Title inflation as cover: Employers assign senior-sounding titles to higher-paid male employees performing work materially identical to lower-paid female counterparts, attempting to defeat "equal work" comparisons.
- Market rate justifications: Employers invoke "market rate" or "competitive pay data" as a factor other than sex, a defense that survives EPA scrutiny only when the market data is applied through a documented, sex-neutral process.
- Race-based pay gaps under Title VII: A Black engineer and a white engineer in equivalent roles with equivalent performance histories receive different compensation — a Title VII disparate treatment claim independent of the EPA's sex-specific framework.
- Retaliation for pay inquiries: An employee discusses compensation with a colleague, prompting a demotion. Workplace retaliation protections under both Title VII and the National Labor Relations Act independently cover this conduct.
Decision boundaries
The EPA and Title VII are not mutually exclusive — plaintiffs routinely plead both. However, the strategic differences are material:
| Factor | Equal Pay Act | Title VII |
|---|---|---|
| Protected characteristic | Sex only | Sex, race, color, religion, national origin |
| Comparator required | Yes (opposite sex) | No (intentional discrimination claims) |
| EEOC charge required | No | Yes |
| Statute of limitations | 2 years (3 if willful) | 180/300 days to file EEOC charge |
| Remedies | Back pay, liquidated damages | Back pay, compensatory, punitive (capped) |
| Employer size threshold | FLSA enterprise coverage | 15+ employees |
The filing deadline distinction is operationally significant. EPA claims can be filed directly in federal court within 2 years of the discriminatory paycheck (3 years for willful violations) under 29 U.S.C. § 255. Title VII claimants who miss the EEOC charge deadline — 180 days in non-deferral states, 300 days where a state agency exists — lose federal court access entirely.
State-level equal pay statutes in California, Colorado, Illinois, and New York impose requirements beyond federal minimums, including salary history bans, pay transparency mandates, and broader comparator definitions that eliminate the "same establishment" limitation. Practitioners and employers operating across state lines must account for this layered regulatory environment. The EEOC complaint process and DOL enforcement and investigations pages provide procedural detail on agency-level enforcement channels.
Equal pay obligations do not exist in isolation. They connect directly to pregnancy and parental rights at work, age discrimination in employment, and executive compensation law, each of which generates its own pay equity exposure. The nationalemploymentlawauthority.com reference network maps these intersections across the full scope of U.S. employment law.
References
- Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d) — Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute
- Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 — Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute
- U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission — Equal Pay/Compensation Discrimination
- U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division — Equal Pay Act
- EEOC Guidance on Compensatory and Punitive Damages under Title VII
- 29 U.S.C. § 255 — Statute of Limitations, Portal-to-Portal Act — Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute
- 42 U.S.C. § 1981a — Damages in Cases of Intentional Discrimination — Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute