If you run a store in New York City — or you’re thinking about it — a bill moving through the City Council could reshape your labor budget for years. On March 10, 2026, the Council introduced the New York City Minimum Wage Act (Int. No. 757), which would lift the city’s minimum wage well above the state floor and gradually phase out the tip credit for food-service workers. It is not law yet, but the proposed numbers are big enough that smart owners should start planning today.

Where it stands: Int. No. 757 was introduced on March 10, 2026 and has not been signed into law. The schedule below is what the bill proposes — it can still change as it moves through the Council. New York State’s minimum wage is currently $17/hour.

The proposed schedule for small employers

The bill sets separate tracks for large employers (500+ employees nationwide) and small employers (500 or fewer) — most independent AARA member stores fall in the small-employer track:

  • 2027: $19/hour
  • 2028: $21.50/hour
  • 2029: $24/hour
  • 2030: $27/hour
  • 2031: $29/hour
  • 2032 and beyond: annual cost-of-living increases tied to the Consumer Price Index

For comparison, large employers would start at $20/hour in 2027 and reach $30/hour by 2030. That’s the “$30 minimum wage” headline you may have seen.

The tip credit phase-out

If your store has a deli counter, food service, or any tipped roles, note this: under the bill, tipped food-service workers would initially earn two-thirds of the minimum wage plus tips, but starting January 1, 2032, the required cash wage would rise $1.50 each year until it equals the full minimum wage — eliminating the tip credit entirely over time.

Verify before you rely on it: This is proposed legislation and the figures can be amended. Confirm the current text and status of Int. No. 757 on the New York City Council website (council.nyc.gov) and check the New York State Department of Labor for the official statewide minimum wage before making payroll decisions. This article is general information, not legal or tax advice.

What it means for your operation

  • Build a multi-year labor forecast. Even on the small-employer track, base pay could climb from $17 today to roughly $29 by 2031. Model your schedules and margins against that curve now, not in 2027.
  • Revisit pricing and product mix. Higher-margin categories (prepared food, services, lottery, and other foot-traffic drivers) help absorb rising wages better than low-margin staples.
  • Audit scheduling efficiency. Overlapping shifts, idle hours, and overtime get more expensive at every step of the schedule. Tighten scheduling before the increases hit.
  • Plan tipped roles carefully. If you rely on the tip credit for food-service staff, the 2032 phase-out changes the math — start thinking about menu pricing and staffing structure.
  • Watch the cross-border gap. NYC wages would pull away from NJ and PA. If you operate in more than one state, your labor model won’t transfer across the line.

The AARA takeaway

Nothing here is final — Int. No. 757 still has to pass — but wage policy in New York City has trended in one direction, and the responsible move is to plan early. AARA will keep members posted as the bill advances, and we’ll continue to advocate for a balance that protects workers without crushing the thin margins independent retailers already operate on.

Worried about what rising wages mean for your store? Email AARA at info@aarausa.com — we’ll help you think through scheduling, pricing, and where to find the official numbers.