
Iowa removes gender identity discrimination protections
S.B. 418, the Iowa gender identity bill that removes gender identity as a protected characteristic, has been signed by Governor Kim Reynolds.

Published: March 3, 2025 | Emily Scace, JD, Senior Legal Editor at Brightmine
In a first-of-its-kind bill, Iowa has removed gender identity as a protected characteristic under the state’s antidiscrimination laws.
Gender identity was first added to the Iowa Civil Rights Act (ICRA) as a protected characteristic in 2007. The ICRA, which applies to employers with four or more employees, prohibits employment discrimination in hiring, firing, compensation and other employment decisions.
With the passage of S.B. 418, which takes effect July 1, 2025, employees and job applicants in Iowa no longer have a remedy under state law if they experience job discrimination or harassment because they are transgender or nonbinary. However, some localities in Iowa continue to prohibit gender identity-based discrimination.
The Iowa law comes amid a string of developments aiming to strip legal protections from transgender and nonbinary individuals.
Executive Order 14168, which President Trump issued on January 20, directed federal agencies including the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to adopt strictly biological definitions of sex, male, female and related terminology when interpreting or applying laws and guidance.
While the EEOC had previously taken an active role in pursuing enforcement against employers that engaged in gender-identity discrimination, recent changes in agency leadership have caused an about-face. Acting EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas said in a January 28 statement that “defend[ing] the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights” is a top priority, and the agency has moved to dismiss multiple lawsuits alleging discrimination against transgender employees.
In 2020, the Supreme Court held in Bostock v. Clayton County that discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity is a form of unlawful sex-based discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the federal antidiscrimination law that applies to employers with 15 or more employees. That decision is still federal law.
Just under half of US states explicitly name gender identity as a protected characteristic in their employment discrimination laws, and many localities provide similar protections.

Start your free trial today
Register today to gain free 7-day access to the Brightmine HR & Compliance Center and stay up to date, compliant and save valuable time.
About the author

Emily Scace, JD
Senior Legal Editor, Brightmine
Emily Scace has more than a decade of experience in legal publishing. As a member of the Brightmine editorial team, she covers topics including employment discrimination and harassment, pay equity, pay transparency and recruiting and hiring.
Emily holds a Juris Doctor from the University of Connecticut School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts in English and psychology from Northwestern University. Prior to joining Brightmine, she was a senior content specialist at Simplify Compliance. In that role, she covered a variety of workplace health and safety topics, was the editor of the OSHA Compliance Advisor newsletter, and frequently delivered webinars on key issues in workplace safety.