Nebraska employers must accommodate religious practices unless it creates "substantial cost or burden" — a higher standard since the Supreme Court's 2023 Groff v. DeJoy ruling.
Published May 9, 2026
## Religious accommodation in employment in Nebraska
Title VII + Nebraska state law require employers to accommodate sincere religious beliefs unless accommodation creates substantial cost or burden. The Supreme Court's June 2023 ruling in **Groff v. DeJoy** dramatically raised the standard for employers to deny accommodation.
## Federal protections — Title VII
**Coverage:**
- Employers with 15+ employees
- Employment agencies
- Labor unions
- Federal employees
**Protected:**
- Religious beliefs (any sincere religious belief)
- Religious observances + practices
- Includes traditional religions
- Includes lesser-known religions
- Sometimes includes "strongly held" non-religious beliefs
## What requires accommodation
**Common religious accommodations:**
**Schedule:**
- Sabbath observance (no work on holy day)
- Religious holidays (off requested days)
- Daily prayer breaks
- Time for religious observance
**Dress / appearance:**
- Religious attire (hijab, yarmulke, turban, etc.)
- Beards / facial hair
- Hair covering / length
- Religious jewelry / symbols
**Conduct:**
- Refusing to participate in certain tasks
- Religious objection to handling certain products
- Refusing to violate religious tenets
- Religious dietary restrictions
**Religious leave:**
- Religious holidays
- Pilgrimage time
- Mourning observances
- Religious retreats
**Other accommodations:**
- Modified job duties
- Job swap with willing coworker
- Voluntary substitutes
- Workplace religious expression
## Sincere religious belief
**Required:**
- Sincerely held
- Religious in nature
- Belief specific to practice/conduct
**NOT required:**
- Doctrinally orthodox
- Recognized religion
- Logically consistent
- Same as religion's mainstream view
- Approved by religious organization
- Long-held belief (recent conversions covered)
**Employer can question sincerity:**
- Inconsistent observance
- Selective application
- Recent / convenient adoption
- Limited basis to challenge
## Groff v. DeJoy (2023) — the new standard
**Old "de minimis" standard (Hardison, 1977):**
- Employer denied if accommodation imposed "more than de minimis cost"
- Easy bar for employers to meet
- Most accommodations could be denied
**New "substantial increased costs" standard (Groff, 2023):**
- Must show "substantial increased costs in relation to the conduct of its particular business"
- Much higher bar
- Considers facts + circumstances of business
- More accommodations now required
**Practical effect:**
- Many employer denials now actionable
- Co-worker preferences often insufficient
- Mere inconvenience insufficient
- Specific cost analysis required
## What's NOT undue hardship
**Per Groff + EEOC:**
- Co-worker animosity (without more)
- Mere customer preferences
- Hypothetical disruption
- Speculative concerns
- Other employees' grumbling
- Voluntary substitution available
- Slight scheduling adjustments
## What IS undue hardship
**Generally still:**
- Direct threats to safety
- Inability to perform essential functions
- Substantial increased costs (well-documented)
- Significant impact on co-workers
- Substantial business disruption
- Violations of valid CBA
- Mandatory regulatory requirements
## Common scenarios
**Sabbath / Sunday work:**
- Major issue post-Groff
- Many cases now allow accommodation
- Voluntary swaps with coworkers preferred
**Religious dress / appearance:**
- Generally must accommodate
- Safety / hygiene exceptions narrow
- Customer preference NOT enough
**Refusing to participate:**
- Healthcare workers + abortion / euthanasia / contraception
- Pharmacy workers + certain medications
- Religious workers + same-sex marriage services
- Generally must accommodate if reasonable
**Religious expression:**
- Religious symbols at desk
- Religious materials in personal areas
- Discussing religion with willing coworkers
- Generally protected
## Process
**1. Notify employer of need:**
- Inform of religious practice
- Inform of conflict with work
- Request specific accommodation
- IN WRITING preferred
**2. Interactive process:**
- Employer should engage
- Discuss possibilities
- Document discussions
- Reach reasonable solution
**3. Implementation:**
- Try accommodation
- Adjust as needed
- Monitor effectiveness
**4. If denied — internal appeal:**
- HR / management review
- Document specific reasons for denial
- Sometimes gets reversed
**5. If still denied — EEOC charge:**
- 180/300-day deadline
- ${s.name} state agency parallel
- Right-to-sue letter
**6. Lawsuit:**
- 90 days from right-to-sue
- Federal court
- Plus state court (state law)
## Damages
**Title VII:**
- Lost wages (back pay + front pay)
- Reinstatement
- Compensatory damages
- Punitive damages (capped: $50K-$300K based on size)
- Attorney's fees + costs
**State law:**
- Often higher caps / no caps
- Sometimes treble damages
- ${s.name} may have specific provisions
## Special situations
**Religious organizations:**
- "Ministerial exception" — employees who minister
- Religious-organization exemption
- Limited religious-discrimination claims by ministers
- Doesn't apply to non-ministerial roles
**Employers with religious mission:**
- Can prefer co-religionist hiring (limited)
- BFOQ (bona fide occupational qualification)
- Carefully limited exceptions
**Government employers:**
- First Amendment plus Title VII
- Higher protections
- ${s.name} constitutional + federal protections
**Vaccine mandates (post-COVID):**
- Religious exemption requests significant
- Sincerity challenges common
- Alternative accommodations often required
## State law often broader
**${s.name} may have:**
- Lower employer-size threshold
- Stronger interactive process
- Higher / no damage caps
- More remedies
- Specific protected categories
- ${s.name}-specific religious exemptions
## Common employer mistakes
- Refusing to engage in interactive process
- Citing co-worker dislike alone
- Demanding specific religious documentation
- Treating accommodations inconsistently
- Imposing on accommodation requesters
- Retaliating after request
- Documenting religion-related decisions in writing
## Common employee mistakes
- Failing to communicate needs in writing
- Not engaging in interactive process
- Quitting before accommodation considered
- Failing to suggest reasonable alternatives
- Demanding specific accommodations only
- Not documenting interactions
- Missing EEOC deadline
## What you should do
If you face religious accommodation issues at work in Nebraska: communicate request in writing, engage in interactive process, document everything, and file EEOC charge within 180-300 days if denied. Many Nebraska employment attorneys handle these cases on contingency. Post-Groff, many denials are now actionable that weren't before.
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*This guide is general information about federal + Nebraska law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Religious accommodation cases are fact-specific. Talk to a licensed Nebraska employment attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.