Parental leave · Rhode Island
Paid maternity & paternity leave in Rhode Island
Rhode Island runs the RI TCI program. Here's what you'll actually receive — and how to combine it with FMLA, short-term disability, and employer top-ups.
Paid weeks
8
Wage replacement
60%
Max weekly benefit
$1,103
Job protection
Yes
Program details
Temporary Caregiver Insurance: 8 weeks paid bonding leave (up from 7 effective January 1, 2026). Max $1,103/wk for 2026. TDI covers pregnancy disability separately.
How to stack the benefits in Rhode Island
- Federal FMLA — 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave at employers with 50+ employees. You must have worked there for 12 months and 1,250 hours. FMLA runs concurrently with state programs, so don't double-count weeks.
- RI TCI — apply through the state portal. Most programs require notice 30 days before your leave starts (sooner for unexpected medical events). Approval and first check typically take 2–4 weeks.
- Short-term disability (STD) — covers the birth parent's medical recovery (typically 6 weeks for vaginal delivery, 8 weeks for C-section). Check whether STD pays on top of state PFL or instead of it.
- Employer top-up — many employers add their own paid parental leave benefit. Some "top up" state benefits to 100% of salary. Check your benefits handbook for parental leave, paid time off, and salary continuation.
- Accrued PTO/vacation — use to extend total time off or to top up partially-paid state benefit weeks.
Common pitfalls
- Don't quit during leave — most state benefits stop the day employment ends, and you may owe back any unused FSA contributions.
- File for state benefits early — claims processed retroactively can take weeks; living off savings while waiting is the most common surprise.
- Plan the FMLA "12 weeks" carefully — it's measured by your employer's chosen method (calendar year, rolling, fiscal). Two consecutive babies in one rolling year can leave you short.
- Check insurance continuation — FMLA preserves group health coverage; state-only leave may not. Confirm with HR before you stop receiving paychecks.
Next decision
After leave: childcare in Rhode Island
Infant center daycare in Rhode Island typically runs $14,800–$19,800/year. Plan childcare alongside your return-to-work date — many programs have 3–6 month waitlists.
See Rhode Island childcare costsNot legal advice. Eligibility rules change. Confirm wage replacement, waiting periods, and stacking rules with your HR and the official program portal before relying on a benefit number.
Compare
Other state leave programs
Programs with similar paid weeks and benefit caps.