| Right-to-disconnect law | No statewide law |
| Electronic monitoring disclosure | Federal floor only |
| Expense reimbursement mandatory | Permissive (FLSA floor) |
| State personal income tax | Yes (3.05% top rate) |
Indiana has no right-to-disconnect statute and no pending bill in the Indiana General Assembly would create one. Remote and hybrid employees in Indiana rely on individual contracts, employer policies, and the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, which requires that non-exempt employees be paid for all hours worked, including after-hours email and messaging responses that cross the threshold of compensable time.
Indiana is a one-party consent state for interception of wire and oral communications under Indiana Code § 35-33.5-1-5 and the related criminal wiretap framework. An Indiana employer that is itself a party to a communication, or has consent of one party, may record it without notifying others. Indiana has no statute analogous to New York Civil Rights Law § 52-c requiring written employee notice of electronic monitoring.
Indiana has no statute requiring private employers to reimburse employees for business expenses incurred while working remotely. Indiana Code Title 22, Article 2 (Wages, Hours, and Benefits) governs wage payment timing, deductions, and final pay but does not impose a freestanding employer-required-expense reimbursement duty. Federal law continues to set the floor: under 29 CFR § 531.35, an employer cannot require an employee to bear employer-benefit costs to the extent it cuts the employee's effective pay below the federal minimum wage or overtime premium.
Indiana imposes a flat 3.05% personal income tax (2026 rate, with continued statutory reductions on the path toward 2.9%). On top of the state rate, every Indiana county levies a local income tax ranging from roughly 0.5% to 3%+ depending on county of residence, meaning a flat unaccountable home-office stipend can face a combined Indiana effective rate of 4-6% before federal tax. Indiana conforms to federal AGI under Indiana Code § 6-3-1-3.5, so an IRS Pub 463 accountable-plan reimbursement is excluded from both the state and county bases.
Indiana's remote workforce centers on the Indianapolis metro, anchored by Eli Lilly's pharmaceutical headquarters, Salesforce's regional tower, Elevance Health's payer operations, and Cummins' engineering functions in Columbus. Bloomington and West Lafayette add concentrations of remote-friendly academic, research, and tech-transfer roles. Cost of living below the national average and an expanding life-sciences corridor continue to make Indiana a quietly competitive destination for remote knowledge workers.
Top remote-hub metro: Indianapolis
Notable remote-work employers headquartered in Indiana:
Our sister site CeoCult covers the federal + Indiana home-office tax deduction methodology in detail, including IRS Form 8829, the simplified $5/sq ft method, and the state-specific quirks for Indiana filers.
No statute requires it. Indiana has no analog to California Labor Code § 2802. Reimbursement is contractual unless un-reimbursed costs drop your pay below federal minimum wage or overtime.
Generally yes. Indiana is a one-party consent state and has no employee electronic monitoring notice statute.
A flat unaccountable stipend is taxable at Indiana's 3.05% state rate plus your county income tax (often 1-3%) plus federal tax. An IRS Pub 463 accountable-plan reimbursement is excluded from all three.
No. Indiana has no statute, regulation, or pending bill creating a right to refuse off-hours work contact.