Skip to content
Home Asset Management & Operations Minimum Wage to \$16.90: Impact on SoCal Retail Tenants

Minimum Wage to \$16.90: Impact on SoCal Retail Tenants

The Direct Labor Cost Impact

California’s minimum wage rises to \$16.90 per hour on January 1, 2026. While the 2.49% increase seems modest, the cumulative effect of years of wage growth is straining tenant operations—and landlords need to understand which tenants face the greatest pressure.

The direct impact is straightforward: higher labor costs for retailers with significant hourly workforces.

Fast food, casual dining, grocery, and service retail feel this most acutely. A restaurant with 20 hourly employees working 30 hours weekly sees annual labor costs increase by roughly \$15,000-\$20,000 from this single adjustment.

The Exempt Salary Threshold Jump

But indirect impacts may be larger.

The exempt salary threshold—minimum annual salary for overtime exemption—is calculated as twice minimum wage for full-time work.

At \$16.90 hourly, this threshold jumps to \$70,304 annually. Employees earning between the previous \$68,640 threshold and this level must either receive raises or be reclassified as hourly workers eligible for overtime.

This creates management cost pressure beyond hourly wages.

Assistant managers, shift supervisors, and department heads often fall in this salary range. Reclassifying them introduces overtime exposure; raising salaries maintains classification but increases fixed costs.

Sector-Specific Wage Premiums

Sector-specific implications are even more dramatic.

Healthcare workers at large systems must receive \$24-25 per hour by July 2026. Fast food maintains its \$20+ floor, subject to Fast Food Council adjustments.

These premiums create wage competition—workers migrate toward higher-paying industries, forcing all retailers to raise compensation.

Action Steps

Identify your most labor-intensive tenants—restaurants, service retailers, grocers.

Review tenant financials where available. For vulnerable tenants, consider proactive conversations about lease flexibility before distress emerges.

Let us help assess tenant wage pressure exposure across your portfolio.

Contact us: (213) 880-8107 | francisco.williams@williamscap.ai | williamscapitaladvisors.com

Share this Article

Latest Posts

Curbside Infrastructure: The 2026 Standard

Curbside pickup started as a pandemic fix. Now it's a permanent expectation—and the infrastructure required to support it has gone from improvised to institutional. Properties without dedicated lanes, covered canopies, and technology integration are losing tenants to those that have it. Here's what the 2026 standard looks like.

Section 179 and Bonus Depreciation for PropTech Investments

PropTech investments in robotics, sensors, and automation don't just modernize your properties — they can dramatically reduce your tax burden. Section 179 and bonus depreciation allow commercial property owners to front-load deductions into the year of purchase, improving cash flow and strengthening after-tax returns. Here's what you need to know before deploying technology capital.
No results found.

Request Property Evaluation

* Marked fields are required.