Beginning next January, Coca-Cola will offer U.S. employees who are new parents — including mothers, fathers, adoptive parents and those providing foster care — six weeks of paid leave.

The new benefits will supplement the time off Coke currently gives to birth mothers — roughly six to eight weeks of paid leave — through short-term disability.

Coca-Cola
icon to expand image

Coca-Cola

“Fostering an inclusive workplace means valuing all parents – no matter their gender or sexual orientation,” Ceree Eberly, Coke’s Chief People Officer, said on the company’s website Monday. “We think the most successful way to structure benefits to help working families is to make them gender-neutral and encourage both moms and dads to play an active role in their family lives.”

The company, citing statistics from the Society for Human Resource Management, said 21 percent of large U.S. businesses offered paid maternity leave in 2015, up from 12 percent in 2014.

A key component of Coke’s new policy is gender neutrality. By offering the paid leave to both women and men, the company hopes to avoid a “moms-only” bias that some have argued has cost women job opportunities.

About the Author

Keep Reading

Passengers wait to check in or drop off luggage at the Frontier Airlines counter around lunchtime Sunday, Nov. 30, 2025. More than 100,000 travelers were expected to fly out of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Sunday. (Maya T. Prabhu/AJC)

Credit: Maya Prabhu

Featured

Inventor Lonnie Johnson stands with his Super Soaker water guns at JTEC Energy on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025, in Atlanta. Johnson, a former NASA engineer, is currently working on a new energy technology through his company’s JTEC device that turns thermal heat into usable energy. (Natrice Miller/AJC)