What to Do After a Wrongful Termination in Nevada
By John Quigley · NevadaAttorneyFinder.com · Updated May 27, 2026
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. NevadaAttorneyFinder is a directory, not a law firm.
Nevada is an at-will employment state — your employer can fire you for any reason or no reason, with some important exceptions. If you were fired for an illegal reason — discrimination, retaliation for reporting a legal violation, whistleblowing, or in breach of a contract — you may have a wrongful termination claim. What you do in the first 30 days is critical.
6 Steps to Take Immediately
Do Not Sign Any Severance Agreement Without Consulting an Attorney
If your employer offers severance pay in exchange for signing a release of claims, do not sign until you have reviewed it with an employment attorney. Severance releases almost always waive all legal claims, including wrongful termination, discrimination, and wage theft. Employees over 40 are entitled to 21 days to consider the release and 7 days to revoke it after signing under the ADEA. Signing away a $100,000 wrongful termination claim for $5,000 in severance is a costly mistake.
Secure All Evidence Before You Lose Access
Once fired, you typically lose access to work systems within hours. Before your termination is effective: save copies of performance reviews, positive feedback emails, any communications about the conduct that led to termination, HR complaints you filed, any discriminatory comments by supervisors, and your employment contract, offer letter, and employee handbook. Forward work emails to your personal account if the company policy allows it — check this carefully.
File for Unemployment Benefits Immediately
Apply for Nevada unemployment benefits through the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation (DETR) as soon as your employment ends. You are eligible for unemployment even if you were fired for cause in many circumstances — 'misconduct' under Nevada unemployment law has a specific legal meaning (NRS 612.385) that is narrower than most employers claim. Apply first; the employer will have an opportunity to contest.
Document the Timeline and Evidence of Unlawful Motive
Write down in detail: when the discriminatory, retaliatory, or otherwise unlawful conduct began; specific incidents, dates, and words used; the names of witnesses; HR complaints you filed; how similarly situated employees outside your protected class were treated; and the stated reason for your termination. Look for 'suspicious timing' — being fired shortly after an OSHA complaint, discrimination complaint, or medical leave request is strong evidence of retaliation.
File an EEOC Charge or NERC Complaint (If Applicable)
For discrimination or harassment claims under federal law (Title VII, ADEA, ADA), you must file an EEOC charge before suing — generally within 300 days of the discriminatory act in Nevada (which is a dual-filing state). For state discrimination claims under NRS Chapter 613, you can file with the Nevada Equal Rights Commission (NERC) within 180 days. These deadlines are strict. An employment attorney can determine which agency to file with and draft the charge.
Consult a Las Vegas Employment Attorney
Employment attorneys typically work on contingency for wrongful termination cases. Many also charge flat fees for EEOC charge filing and severance review. An experienced Las Vegas employment attorney can: evaluate whether your termination was unlawful, identify all potential claims (state and federal), handle EEOC or NERC proceedings, and litigate in federal or state court if settlement isn't possible.
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