Small Business Employee Handbook: What to Include and How to Write One

67%
of employment lawsuits against small businesses cite inconsistent policy enforcement as a key factor
$2,000–$5,000
typical cost to have an employment attorney review and finalize a small business handbook
1 employee
the threshold at which a written employee handbook becomes a risk management necessity
Why the Employee Handbook Is a Legal Document, Not an HR Formality

An employee handbook does two legally important things: it creates a documented record of the policies employees were informed of, and it establishes the consistent standard against which employment decisions are measured. When an employer terminates an employee for attendance violations, the question courts ask is: was there a written attendance policy, was the employee given it, and was the policy applied consistently? Without a handbook, the answer to at least one of those questions is usually no.

For at-will employment states, a poorly written handbook can accidentally create implied employment contracts that limit your ability to terminate. This is why the disclaimer, “this handbook does not constitute an employment contract”, appears in virtually every professionally drafted handbook, and why you should not copy another company’s policies without having them reviewed for your state’s specific employment law.

Warning: Handbook policies that are not enforced consistently create more liability than no policy at allIf your handbook says employees will be terminated after 3 unexcused absences but you have allowed some employees 6 or 7 without action, you have created a pattern that contradicts your stated policy. Courts will use that pattern against you. Update policies to reflect what you actually enforce. Or enforce what your policies say.
What Every Small Business Handbook Must Include
Section What to cover Legal requirement? Common omission
At-will employment statement Employment is terminable by either party at any time Recommended in all states Missing or buried: should be prominent
Anti-discrimination / EEO policy EEOC protected classes, harassment, reporting procedure Required (15+ employees) No clear reporting chain named
Attendance and punctuality Start times, call-out procedures, tardiness definition No, but critical No defined procedure for calling out
PTO / leave policies Vacation accrual, sick leave, FMLA (50+ employees) Varies by state No carryover or payout-on-exit rules stated
Compensation and pay periods Pay schedule, overtime policy, expense reimbursement Recommended No defined overtime authorization process
Technology and social media use Company device policy, personal use limits, data ownership No, but increasingly critical Entirely absent in older handbooks
Disciplinary procedure Progressive discipline steps, termination triggers No, but protective No documented warning process
“A handbook written in legalese nobody reads is almost as risky as no handbook. Policies employees do not understand are policies employees cannot follow.”
How to Create Your Handbook Without Starting From Scratch
  1. Start with a SHRM or state HR association template. SHRM (Society for Human Resource Management) offers free and low-cost templates. Your state chamber of commerce often provides state-specific templates. These give you the baseline legal language and section structure to work from.
  2. Customize for your actual practices. The template will have placeholder policies. Replace every placeholder with what you actually do: your real PTO accrual rate, your actual pay periods, your specific call-out procedure. Generic policies that do not match real practice are worse than no policy.
  3. Have an employment attorney in your state review it. This is the one step most small businesses skip and later regret. A 2-hour attorney review ($300-$600) catches state-specific requirements, inadvertent contract language, and policy gaps that templates often miss. Do this before the first employee signs.
  4. Get a signed acknowledgment from every employee. The handbook is only evidence of notice if you can prove the employee received and read it. A signed acknowledgment form (one page: “I received the handbook, I understand it is not a contract, I will comply with its policies”) belongs in every personnel file.
  5. Review annually and update when laws change. Many states updated paid sick leave, pay transparency, and non-compete laws in 2023-2025. An outdated handbook that conflicts with current law is an active liability. Set a calendar reminder to review every January.
Tip: Keep the handbook short enough that people will actually read itA 50-page handbook is a legal document nobody reads. A 10-15 page handbook covering the 8-10 policies that matter most in daily operations is read, referenced, and actually followed. Save the detailed HR procedures for a separate operations manual. The handbook should answer the questions employees ask most often in their first 90 days.

Building your employee documentation alongside your handbook?

Read: How to Hire Employees →

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SBM Editorial Team
An independent small business publication by the team at World Consulting Group.
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