Kansas Employment Discrimination Settlement Calculator
Estimate what a Kansas workplace-discrimination claim might be worth. Kansas's own anti-discrimination law provides little or no compensatory/punitive money damages, so the FEDERAL Title VII cap ($50k–$300k by employer size) controls your emotional-distress + punitive recovery. Back pay and front pay remain uncapped. This is an estimate of the legal ceiling and a realistic settlement range — not a prediction or an offer.
An estimate of the legal ceiling — not a prediction or an offer.
This estimates the maximum damages a Kansas employment-discrimination claim could reach and a realistic settlement range. Most charges settle for far less. It is not legal advice, and RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm.
Realistic settlement range
$17,250 – $53,500
Kansas · most cases settle below the legal maximum
Back + front pay
$30,000
never capped
Comp/punitive cap
$50,000
federal cap
Statutory maximum (ceiling)
$55,000 – $80,000
economic (uncapped) + capped emotional-distress/punitive
The cap reduced emotional-distress + punitive from $100,000 to $50,000.
This is a statutory-ceiling estimate, not a prediction. The vast majority of discrimination charges settle for far less than the legal maximum — EEOC-mediated resolutions commonly land in the low five figures, and fewer than ~5% of charges ever reach a jury. Strength of evidence, your duty to look for new work (which offsets back pay), and attorney fees all move the real number.
You generally must first file a charge with the EEOC or your state agency BEFORE you can sue — and the deadline is short. Missing it can end the claim entirely.
Discrimination damages have four parts: back pay and front pay (lost past and future wages — never capped), compensatory damages for emotional distress, and punitive damages for egregious conduct. Federal law caps the last two together at $50k–$300k by employer size; Kansas follows its own rule. You generally pursue the higher of the two. This is an estimate of the legal ceiling and a realistic settlement range, not legal advice, a prediction, or an offer. RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm.
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Kansas's Discrimination Damage Cap
Kansas's own anti-discrimination law provides little or no compensatory/punitive money damages, so the FEDERAL Title VII cap ($50k–$300k by employer size) controls your emotional-distress + punitive recovery. Back pay and front pay remain uncapped.
Kansas's own law provides little or no compensatory or punitive money damages, so the federal Title VII cap controls that part of your recovery. The Kansas Act Against Discrimination covers employers with 4+ employees but caps non-economic 'pain, suffering and humiliation' damages at just $2,000 (K.S.A. 44-1005(k)) and bars punitive damages entirely. With state recovery limited to back pay, equitable relief, and the $2,000 cap, Kansas plaintiffs almost always rely on FEDERAL Title VII/ADA (federal $50k-$300k comp+punitive cap) for substantial damages; the state law offers no cap advantage.
Remember that back pay and front pay are never capped in any state — the cap applies only to compensatory (emotional-distress) and punitive damages. Under Kansas Act Against Discrimination (KAAD), K.S.A. 44-1001 et seq., Kansas law reaches employers with 4+ employees — broader than the federal 15-employee floor. Punitive damages are available for egregious, willful discrimination.
How to File a Discrimination Charge in Kansas
Before you can sue, you generally must file a charge with the Kansas Human Rights Commission (KHRC) or the federal EEOC. File a complaint with the Kansas Human Rights Commission within 6 months (180 days) of the alleged discriminatory act (K.S.A. 44-1005(i)). Dual-filing with the EEOC under the worksharing agreement generally preserves the longer federal 300-day deadline for federal claims. The agency may investigate, offer mediation, or issue a right-to-sue notice. Filing on time is critical — missing the deadline usually ends the claim no matter how strong it is.
How the Estimate Works
No tool can predict a discrimination settlement. This estimator adds your back pay and front pay (lost wages, which are never capped), estimates emotional-distress damages from how serious the harm was, adds a punitive estimate if the conduct was egregious, then applies the binding cap — whichever is higher between Kansas's rule and the federal employer-size cap. Finally it shows a realistic settlement range, because the large majority of charges resolve well below the legal maximum. Use the personal injury settlement calculator for injury claims, or read your Kansas at-will employment guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Kansas cap discrimination damages?
Kansas's own anti-discrimination law provides little or no compensatory/punitive money damages, so the FEDERAL Title VII cap ($50k–$300k by employer size) controls your emotional-distress + punitive recovery. Back pay and front pay remain uncapped.
How much is a Kansas discrimination case worth?
No one can promise a number. A rough estimate adds your back pay and front pay (never capped), an emotional-distress figure, and — for egregious conduct — punitive damages, then applies the higher of Kansas's cap or the federal employer-size cap. In practice most charges settle in the low five figures through the EEOC or Kansas Human Rights Commission (KHRC); only a small fraction reach a jury. An employment attorney is the only way to value your specific case.
What is the federal cap and how does it compare to Kansas?
Federal law caps compensatory plus punitive damages together by employer size: $50,000 (15–100 employees) up to $300,000 (500+). Kansas's own law provides little or no compensatory or punitive money damages, so the federal Title VII cap controls that part of your recovery. You generally pursue whichever path pays more.
How long do I have to file in Kansas?
File a complaint with the Kansas Human Rights Commission within 6 months (180 days) of the alleged discriminatory act (K.S.A. 44-1005(i)). Dual-filing with the EEOC under the worksharing agreement generally preserves the longer federal 300-day deadline for federal claims.
Are back pay and front pay capped?
No. In every state, back pay and front pay are economic damages and are recovered in full — the caps apply only to compensatory (emotional-distress) and punitive damages. That is why the cap is not the whole story.
Is this calculator legal advice?
No. It is a free, rough estimate of the legal ceiling and a realistic range — not a prediction, an offer, or legal advice, and RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm. Consult a Kansas employment attorney about your case.
Disclaimer
This estimator is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice or a prediction of any outcome. RecordingLaw.com is not a law firm. Anti-discrimination law, including damage caps and employer-size thresholds, changes with legislation and court rulings; figures are current as of 2026-06-06. The value of a discrimination claim can only be assessed by a licensed attorney reviewing your specific facts.