CounterGameplanFrom overwhelmed to prepared in 60 seconds.

Illinois Wage Theft Demand Letter

AI-powered help tailored to Illinois law — understand your rights and fight back.

If you live in Illinois and you're facing a wage theft demand issue, the state rules you fall under aren't quite the same as the rest of the country. Below we cover the IL statutes that apply, the agencies that enforce them, and the exact next steps Counter Gameplan helps you take.

Illinois by the Numbers

Minimum wage

$15.00/hour

State labor agency

Illinois Department of Labor

Statute of limitations

3 years

Federal overtime threshold

Over 40 hrs/week at 1.5×

Illinois minimum wage and overtime law

The current minimum wage in Illinois is $15.00/hour. Some cities and counties within Illinois set higher local minimums — check your specific jurisdiction before calculating what you're owed. Federal law (the Fair Labor Standards Act, or FLSA) requires overtime at 1.5× the regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek for most employees.

Wage theft in Illinois commonly takes the form of unpaid overtime, off-the-clock work, illegal paycheck deductions, misclassification as an independent contractor, and tip pool violations. Counter Gameplan organizes all of this into a clean, professional letter for you.

Filing a wage claim with the Illinois Department of Labor

The Illinois Department of Labor accepts wage claim filings from Illinois workers and investigates them at no cost to you. The agency has the authority to demand payroll records, issue findings, and order employers to pay back wages plus penalties.

In practice, a professional demand letter sent before filing the formal claim resolves a large share of wage disputes. Employers know that once a state agency opens an investigation, they face audit risk, statutory penalties, and potential liquidated (double) damages.

Statute of limitations in Illinois

You generally have 3 years to file a wage claim in Illinois. Federal FLSA claims have a 2-year window (3 years for willful violations). The clock starts on each individual paycheck — meaning every unpaid overtime hour is its own claim with its own deadline.

If you wait too long, you lose recovery on the older paychecks even if you're still owed for newer ones. This is why we recommend acting as soon as you've identified a pattern.

Common wage theft scenarios Illinois workers face

Five patterns account for most Illinois wage theft cases: (1) being asked to work "just a few minutes" before clocking in or after clocking out; (2) salaried "exempt" employees who don't actually meet the FLSA exemption tests; (3) tipped workers whose tips are pooled with non-tipped managers; (4) "independent contractors" who function as employees; and (5) final paychecks withheld or short on accrued PTO.

A demand letter that identifies the specific pattern, quantifies the dollar amount, and references both Illinois and federal law dramatically increases the odds of a fast settlement.

Retaliation protections under Illinois law

Retaliation for filing a wage claim — including being fired, demoted, or having your hours cut — is illegal under both federal law (FLSA §215(a)(3)) and Illinois state law. If retaliation happens, you can add a separate retaliation claim, which often increases the damages substantially.

Document everything in real time: text messages, emails, scheduling changes, performance reviews. Even small details become important evidence if a retaliation claim becomes necessary.

Official Illinois Resources

Authoritative government sources for further research and filing complaints.

Illinois Department of Labor

Find the DOL Wage & Hour Division local office for Illinois — handles federal FLSA claims and can refer to state agency.

U.S. Department of Labor — Wage and Hour Division

File a federal FLSA complaint — useful in parallel with state filing.

Illinois Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division

Report systemic wage fraud or employer-side abuse.

An employment attorney charges $150–$350/hr

$39.99one-time
Proprietary AI for your situationResults emailed in 60 secondsState-specific to Illinois

What you receive

FLSA + state law analysis
Formal demand letter to employer
DOL complaint filing guidance
Back pay + damages you may be owed

Frequently Asked Questions — Illinois

Quick answers to the most common Illinois questions on this topic.

What is the minimum wage in Illinois?

+

$15.00/hour. Some cities within Illinois have higher local minimums.

How do I file a wage claim in Illinois?

+

File with the Illinois Department of Labor. You can also file a parallel FLSA complaint with the U.S. Department of Labor.

How long do I have to act?

+

3 years under Illinois law. Each unpaid paycheck has its own clock.

Can my employer fire me for filing a wage claim in Illinois?

+

No. Retaliation is illegal under both federal law (FLSA §215) and Illinois statute. Retaliation creates a separate claim that often increases damages.

Should I send a demand letter before filing?

+

Usually yes. A professional letter that quantifies the amount owed and cites the applicable statutes resolves a large share of cases without ever reaching a formal investigation.

Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only. Laws vary and may have changed. Always verify current Illinois law before taking action. Counter Gameplan does not provide legal advice. For complex legal matters, consult a licensed attorney in Illinois.