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NE · jury-duty pay

Jury duty pay in Nebraska

What happens to your pay and your job if you're summoned in Nebraska — with the statute behind each answer. Verified against a primary source on June 16, 2026.

At a glance

Employer payNo state employer-pay mandate
Job protectionProtected
Court per-diem$35/day
Status Verified

JurorPay summarizes state-by-state jury-duty pay rules and job-protection statutes. This is procedural civic-duty information, not legal advice. Statutes change; verify directly with your state court, employer HR, or a licensed attorney before relying on this summary.

Not required

Will your employer pay you?

In Nebraska, no state law requires your employer to pay your wages during jury service (federal law protects your job, not your pay). Nebraska does not require an employer to pay separate wages, but Neb. Rev. Stat. 25-1640 prohibits subjecting an employee to discharge, loss of pay, loss of sick leave, loss of vacation time, or any other penalty for jury-duty absence; the employer may reduce the employee's pay by an amount equal to any compensation (other than expenses) paid by the court. Net effect: regular pay is protected, less the court fee.

Primary source · verified June 16, 2026

No state mandate

How much, and for how long?

No state-mandated employer pay. You may still be paid voluntarily, under a contract, or under a collective-bargaining agreement — check your employer's policy. The court pays a separate per-diem (see the court-pay card).

Primary source · verified June 16, 2026

Protected

Can you be fired for serving?

Your job is statutorily protected. Nebraska law prohibits firing, threatening, or penalizing you for responding to a jury summons or serving. Federal law (28 U.S.C. §1875) adds the same protection for federal-court service.

Primary source · verified June 16, 2026

$35/day

What does the court pay you?

The court pays jurors $35 per day. Each grand or petit juror receives $35 per day; mileage at the rate provided in Neb. Rev. Stat. 81-1176 for each mile necessarily traveled. Paid by the county. (Neb. Rev. Stat. 33-138)

Primary source · verified June 16, 2026

Editor's note on this state

Statutory text obtained from the official nebraskalegislature.gov domain via search-result snippets; direct page fetch (WebFetch and curl) timed out repeatedly, so exact text rests on the official-domain snippet rather than a clean full-page render. 25-1640 functions as a pay-protection rule (no net loss less court fee) rather than a pure wage mandate.

Sources for Nebraska

Each figure links to the primary source we read it from. The federal baseline is 28 U.S.C. §1875 — it protects your job during federal-court service but does not require pay.

How Nebraska compares on court per-diem

Court-paid daily fee, ranked across all states with a single statewide figure. Nebraska is highlighted.

Petit-juror per-diem paid by the court (first/standard day), ranked. 9 jurisdictions set per-diem locally (county-by-county or pegged to minimum wage) with no single statewide figure, and are omitted here rather than shown as a guessed amount. Where a state pays a higher rate for extended service, this chart shows the standard day rate. See each state page for the full schedule and citation.

Other states with similar rules

Check another state

Same answer, any jurisdiction.

51 jurisdictions — all 50 states + the District of Columbia.

Editorial review

An employment attorney from our review pool is being onboarded to sign off on the jury-leave and anti-retaliation summaries. Until that review is complete, every figure on the site links directly to the state legislature or court primary source so you can verify it yourself. We will publish the reviewer's name, bar number, state, and profile here once secured — and never a placeholder name.