If you were fired for something others weren’t fired for, or paid less than coworkers doing the same job, and the only real difference is that you’re part of a legally protected group—your employer may have violated the law.
This is called disparate treatment, and it’s one of the clearest—and most provable—forms of workplace discrimination.
At Kaplan Employment Law, we focus on holding employers accountable for unequal treatment. Whether you were terminated or underpaid, we help uncover the truth, expose pretext, and fight for your full legal rights.
Get Started – No fee unless we win.
What Is Disparate Treatment?
Disparate treatment happens when your employer treats you worse than similarly situated coworkers because of a protected characteristic like your:
- Race
- Sex or gender
- Disability
- Age (40+)
- National origin
- Religion
- Sexual orientation or gender identity
The two strongest types of disparate treatment claims involve:
- Being fired for conduct that others outside your protected class weren’t fired for
- Being paid less than coworkers outside your protected class doing the same job
These aren’t just unfair workplace practices—they’re illegal.