December 12, 2025
Labor Costs: Minimum wage hourly rates increase on January 1st
Labor Costs Increase in 2026
Minimum wage hourly rates increase on January 1st.
- $15.10 statewide
- $16.00 Rockland (more than 25 employees)
- $16.75 Portland
Only ten states and the District of Columbia will have a higher statewide minimum than Maine. New England minimum wages in 2026 include Massachusetts ($15), New Hampshire ($7.25), Rhode Island ($16), Vermont ($14.42), and Connecticut ($16.94 July 1, 2026). Unlike Maine, none of the other New England states have municipalities with separate minimum wage rates.
The statewide overtime salary threshold for 2026 is $45,300.32 a year or $871.16 a week. Maine is one of only five states (Alaska, California, New York, Washington state) that set a salary threshold above the federal level. NFIB opposes legislation (LD 599) pending final approval in Augusta that raises the salary threshold to $58,656 ($1,218 weekly).
Paid Family and Medical Leave (PFML) tax rates do not change in 2026 but the taxable salary cap increases to $184,500.
New Bills for 2026 Session
Hearings and work sessions will resume in January on new bills for 2026 and legislation carried over from the 2025 session.
Notable New Legislation
- Establish joint & several liability of contractors and subcontractors in the construction industry for violations of Maine labor laws (LD 2049)
For more information: https://legislature.maine.gov/
Maine Climate Action Annual Report
The Maine Climate Council’s annual report for 2025 indicates progress and shortcomings on achieving ambitious reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and carbon neutrality goals. Selected highlights include:
- 91% carbon neutral to date (goal: 100% by 2045)
- 44% renewable electricity generation (80% by 2030)
- 20,346 electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles (150,000 by 2030)
Despite “political headwinds” and consumer behavior, the Climate Council is maintaining a commitment to reducing the use of fossil-fuel powered vehicles. “By staying committed to bold goals, Maine will continue moving in the right direction: expanding access to clean, affordable transportation, building a resilient network that serves all communities, and ensuring that future generations inherit a healthy climate.”
NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.
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