KEY POINTS
  • Fast-food workers in California at chains with more than 60 national locations now earn $20 an hour.
  • Other business owners, including restaurant operators not targeted in the law, are watching to see if they need to hike their wages to keep up with the shifting labor market.
  • The average wage for hourly food-service workers in California was $17.89 an hour, according to self-reported Glassdoor data from Oct. 1 to March 28.
An employee hands an order to a customer through a drive-thru window at a McDonald's restaurant in Oakland, California, April 9, 2020.

As fast-food chains in California start to pay their workers a higher minimum wage, other business owners across the state are watching to see whether they will have to raise their own pay to compete.

Starting Monday, fast-food workers in California at chains with more than 60 national locations earn $20 an hour, higher than the state's broader minimum wage of $16 per hour. The new pay floor stems from a state law passed in September, which also establishes a nine-person council that will determine future wage hikes and suggest other guidelines for labor conditions for the industry. There are more than half a million fast-food workers in the state, Gov. Gavin Newsom said when signing the bill into law.