| Right-to-disconnect law | No statewide law |
| Electronic monitoring disclosure | Federal floor only |
| Expense reimbursement mandatory | Mandatory by statute |
| State personal income tax | Yes (2.5% top rate) |
North Dakota has no right-to-disconnect statute. The Legislative Assembly has not enacted after-hours communication restrictions.
North Dakota is a one-party consent state. Employers party to electronic communications on their own systems may monitor without separate employee notice, though written policy is best practice.
North Dakota is one of the few states with an affirmative reimbursement statute. N.D. Cent. Code § 34-02-01 ("Employer must indemnify employee for losses and expenses") requires the employer to indemnify the employee for all necessary expenditures or losses incurred in direct consequence of the discharge of duties. The statutory language closely mirrors California Labor Code § 2802 and reaches reasonable remote-work costs (home internet, phone, equipment) that are necessary to perform the job.
Stipends paid outside an IRS accountable plan are taxable wages federally and subject to ND's individual income tax (top rate 2.5%, the lowest in the country among states that levy one). Accountable-plan reimbursements satisfying § 34-02-01 are tax-free.
North Dakota remote-work activity concentrates in Fargo and adjacent metros, with Microsoft (Fargo campus), Sanford Health, Bobcat Company among the larger remote-friendly headquarters. State-level BLS Telework Supplement micro-data was not retrievable at verification time; the national figure (~19-23% any-telework) is the closest available baseline.
Top remote-hub metro: Fargo
Notable remote-work employers headquartered in North Dakota:
Our sister site CeoCult covers the federal + North Dakota home-office tax deduction methodology in detail, including IRS Form 8829, the simplified $5/sq ft method, and the state-specific quirks for North Dakota filers.
Read the North Dakota home-office deduction guide on CeoCult →
Likely yes, for the business-necessary portion. N.D. Cent. Code § 34-02-01 requires employers to indemnify employees for all necessary expenditures or losses incurred in direct consequence of duties. The statute mirrors California § 2802 and reaches the reasonable business-use share of home internet, phone, and equipment when remote work is required.
Yes, generally. North Dakota is a one-party consent state. An employer party to communications on its own systems may monitor without separate consent.
Yes, unless paid under an IRS accountable plan. Non-accountable stipends are taxable wages and subject to ND's individual income tax (top rate 2.5%). Accountable-plan reimbursements satisfying § 34-02-01 are tax-free.
No. The Legislative Assembly has not enacted after-hours communication restrictions.