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Gender Pay Gap and Discrimination Lawyers in California's Tech Industry

The gender pay gap continues to affect working women in the tech industry, impacting compensation, advancement, and long-term financial stability. Despite progress in recent years, gender pay disparities and unequal pay remain common, even when women perform equal work with the same job title, education level, and responsibilities as their male counterparts.

Hershey Law represents California tech employees facing gender discrimination, wage discrimination, and retaliation. If you experience unequal pay, hostile work environments, or adverse actions after speaking up, our attorneys help you seek fair compensation and protect your legal rights under California law.

Our Legal Services for Gender Discrimination in Tech

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Equal Pay and Salary Discrimination Claims

California’s Equal Pay Act requires employers to provide equal pay for substantially similar work, regardless of gender. In tech, this means women software engineers, developers, designers, and product managers must be paid fairly compared to male counterparts performing the same job duties under similar conditions.

Gender wage gap cases often involve:
  • Same job title but unequal pay
  • Similar skills, effort, and responsibility with different compensation
  • Wage differences not justified by seniority, merit, or production
We help employed women gather pay records, job descriptions, and internal data to support claims involving unequal pay, wage disparities, and violations of pay equity laws.

Harassment and Hostile Work Environments

Gender-based harassment reinforces gender norms and stereotypes, contributing to workplace discrimination and unequal treatment. In tech workplaces, women may experience exclusion, inappropriate comments, or retaliation after reporting misconduct.

California law requires employers to maintain a workplace free from harassment and discrimination. When employers fail to act, employees may pursue legal remedies for workplace discrimination and retaliation.

Promotion and Leadership Barriers

The gender pay gap persists in part because women are underrepresented in higher paying jobs and leadership roles. Women are less likely to be promoted to positions such as vice president or senior management, even when they have the same education, experience, and performance history.

These barriers contribute directly to:
  • Persistent gender pay gaps
  • Lower median earnings for women
  • Reduced long-term earning potential
We help tech employees challenge discriminatory promotion practices and advocate for equal access to advancement opportunities.

Retaliation After Speaking Up

Employees who report wage discrimination or gender bias may face retaliation, including demotion, negative reviews, or termination. California law protects workers who assert their rights related to pay equity and gender discrimination.

If your employer retaliated after you raised concerns about the gender wage gap or unequal pay, you may have a legal claim.

Who We Help in the Tech Industry

Software Engineers and Coders

Women in technical roles often experience wage disparities despite working in higher-skill positions within the labor market.

Designers and Product Managers

These roles may involve similar responsibilities across teams but unequal pay due to discriminatory practices or opaque compensation structures.

Women Overlooked for Promotions

Occupational segregation and biased advancement criteria can limit access to leadership roles and higher pay.

Startup Employees With Limited HR Oversight

Startups may lack pay transparency or formal compensation policies, increasing the risk of pay inequities.

Remote and Hybrid Workers

Remote work does not eliminate wage discrimination. Women balancing caregiving responsibilities or work-life balance may still face unequal pay.

Common Gender Pay Gap Issues in Tech

Unequal Pay for Equal Work

Women continue to earn less than men for equal work. Data comparing median earnings and average gross hourly earnings shows wage differences even among year-round working women with the same education level.

Under California law, wage discrimination is unlawful when pay differences are based on gender rather than legitimate factors.
Employee holding their severance pay letter. When should severance pay be paid

Pay Transparency and Wage Secrecy

Pay secrecy policies can conceal pay inequities and allow the gender pay gap to persist. California’s pay transparency laws help employees verify whether they are being paid fairly and prohibit retaliation for discussing wages.

Occupational Segregation and Job Characteristics

Women tend to be concentrated in lower paying jobs or roles with limited advancement, while men dominate higher paying technical positions. These job characteristics contribute to ongoing wage disparities even within the same industry.

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Long-Term Financial Impact

Pay inequities affect retirement savings, career mobility, and long-term financial security. Over the past few years, wage disparities have contributed to reduced economic output and widened gaps in women’s earnings over time.

Service Areas

We represent tech employees across California, including

Why Tech Employees Choose Hershey Law

Protect Your Career in California Tech

If you are experiencing gender discrimination, unequal pay, or retaliation in the tech industry, you do not have to navigate it alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What laws protect employees from unequal pay in California?

California’s Equal Pay Act and anti-discrimination laws require equal pay for equal work and prohibit retaliation for asserting wage rights.

Pay stubs, job titles, job duties, education level, performance reviews, and internal compensation data.

No. Even women with a college degree and the same education level as male coworkers may experience wage differences.

Yes. Employees may pursue legal claims for wage discrimination and related retaliation.