Oregon Paternity Leave

2026 Guide to Leave Benefits for Fathers

βœ… Paid Bonding Leave Available

πŸ“‹ Bonding Leave for Fathers

Paid Leave Oregon
Bonding Leave 12 weeks
Wage Replacement ~100%
Max Weekly Benefit $1,637

100% up to 65% SAWW (~$886/wk), then 50% above. 12 weeks + 2 additional for pregnancy/childbirth (14 total). One of the most generous state programs.

ℹ️ What About Medical Leave?

Birth mothers in Oregon may qualify for additional medical leave (up to 12 weeks) for pregnancy recovery on top of bonding leave. Fathers and non-birth parents qualify for bonding leave only.

See full Oregon maternity leave benefits →

πŸ›οΈ FMLA for Fathers in Oregon

Federal FMLA provides fathers with 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected bonding leave. FMLA is gender-neutral - fathers have the same entitlement as mothers for bonding with a new child.

Oregon's paid bonding leave runs concurrently with FMLA - you get paid during your FMLA-protected time, but it doesn't add extra weeks on top.

Eligibility: Employer with 50+ employees within 75 miles, 12+ months employed, 1,250+ hours worked in the past year.

πŸ”— How to Apply

Notify your employer at least 30 days before your planned leave date. File your state benefit claim through the official program.

Visit Oregon's Official Program Website →

πŸ“Š Paternity Leave Facts

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50% of Fathers Take Leave About half of first-time fathers now take some form of paid leave, up from just 23% before 1994.
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Average: Under 2 Weeks 64% of fathers who take leave take less than 2 weeks, largely because FMLA leave is unpaid. Paid programs lead to longer leaves.
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Proven Benefits Research shows paternity leave leads to better father-child bonding, improved maternal mental health, and longer breastfeeding duration.

Plan Your Oregon Paternity Leave

Build a personalized leave timeline with income estimates based on your state benefits, FMLA, and PTO.

Calculate My Leave Plan →

This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Benefit amounts and eligibility requirements change periodically. Always verify current details with your state's official program and your employer's HR department.