The Workers Rights

Top 3 Ways Your Health & Pay Rights Are Changing on July 1, 2026 

health & pay rights

(C): Unsplash

July 1, 2026, isn’t simply another date on the calendar; it’s a day that results in a serious shake-up of your Health & Pay Rights. At least one of these three is happening to your wallet, whether you work in Chicago, have employer-provided health insurance or a job that pays you into a health insurance plan. So what’s changing and what does it entail for you? And what are your options if your employer isn’t complying with the new rules?

Quick Facts

What’s ChangingThe New RuleWho It Affects
Chicago Minimum WageRises to $17.05/hourChicago workers
Cook County Minimum WageRises to $15.40/hourCook County workers
Cap on ACA Health AffordabilityA maximum of 9.96% of household incomeThe employer health plans that have employees as their participants.
Federal Overtime Salary ThresholdDrops back to $684/week ($35,568/yr)Salaried workers nationwide

1. Minimum Wage Hikes in Chicago and Cook County 

Among the most clear-cut of any new law this cycle is the July 1 2026, pay changes for those working in Chicago or Cook County.

New York City residents: Your minimum wage goes up to $15.00 per hour.Residents of other cities: Your minimum wage will increase to the local rates.

Cook County employees: Your pay rate jumps to $15.40 an hour.

One of the most obvious workers’ rights victories of the summer was on July 1, 2026. The rule is straightforward: If your first paycheck from the new rate has not already been issued, your employer is breaking the city and county ordinance. It’s your right to report it.

What to do: Next pay stub up. Review hourly pay rate. If it’s incorrect, record it and report it to the Chicago Department of Business Affairs and the Cook County Human Rights Commission.

2. The ACA Health Insurance Affordability Cap Rises to 9.96% 

One of the largest changes in healthcare in July 2026 is that we’ve seen the affordability threshold of the ACA (Obamacare) increase to 9.96% of household income.

In other words, your employer is not allowed to charge you more than 9.96% of your household income for their lowest self-only plan. When they do, they are subject to tough federal “shared responsibility” penalties, and that’s where the IRS comes into the picture.

This is one of the fundamental Health & Pay Rights protections that millions of workers are unaware of. This is a change in employment law that will impact family budgets more than ever before for those already under financial strain due to healthcare expenses.

What to do: Work out 9.96% of your household income. Compare your current monthly payment with your employer (times by 12). If the annual cost is greater, speak to your HR department or benefits advisor to find out what you can do.

3. Federal Overtime Salary Threshold Rolls Back 

It’s the opposite of this one. The U.S. Department of Labour just made a quiet, but significant, change to the federal overtime exemption salary threshold: $684 per week, $35,568 per year

This is much lower than the up-to-date higher levels that were proposed in the last few years. What it means is that your employer can now legally say that you are classified as an overtime-exempt employee with a much lower wage, which means that you won’t receive overtime pay even if you put in 50+ hours per week.

The exception? If your state has a higher minimum standard, such as California or Washington, your state law supersedes the federal standard. This is one of the hottest debated July 1 2026, health changes and pay changes together, as it takes away Health & Pay Rights protections for a significant number of mid-level salaried employees.

What to do: Do a search on Google for the overtime exempt salary threshold in your state. If you are subject to the federal rollback, check with HR about your job classification – or seek employment attorney advice if you believe you’ve been misclassified.

Where Does Your State Stand on Overtime Pay? 

RuleBefore July 1After July 1, 2026
Chicago Minimum Wage$16.20/hr$17.05/hr ✅
Cook County Minimum Wage$14.70/hr$15.40/hr ✅
ACA Affordability Cap9.12%9.96% ✅
Federal OT Exempt Threshold~$844/week (proposed)$684/week ❌

Bottom Line

Your Health & Pay Rights are constantly changing, and July 1, 2026, is a critical date. Two of the three changes listed above are to your benefit — a higher wage floor and a lower level health insurance affordability cap. The third – overtime rollback – is actually one of the workers’ major steps back. The first step to the protection of what you’ve earned is knowing where you stand.

Stay informed. Review your pay stub. Know your thresholds.

Stay Updated On Health & Worker Benefits

Are Your Medicaid Benefits Safe?
Check out the emergency steps to verify your health insurance account.

What Will Meta Workers Lose?
Find out how severance changes could affect pay and health coverage.

Checked Your Insurance Records Yet?
Get to know how factory workers can verify social insurance details.

Why Are Nomads Losing Benefits?
Explore why healthcare gaps are pushing remote workers to quit.

Read Previous

Top 3 US States Leading the Nation in Fastest Job Growth Rates 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x