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Overtime pay is the additional compensation that non-exempt employees receive for hours worked beyond 40 hours in a single workweek under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The standard overtime rate is 1.5 times the employee's regular rate of pay — commonly called 'time and a half.' This premium serves two purposes: it compensates employees fairly for extended work, and it creates a financial incentive for employers to hire additional workers rather than overworking existing staff. The FLSA defines the workweek as any fixed recurring period of 168 hours — seven consecutive 24-hour periods. Employers set the workweek start day (Sunday midnight, Monday morning, etc.) and it must be consistent. Overtime is calculated on a workweek basis, not on a biweekly pay period or monthly basis — this means two weeks of 36 and 44 hours each results in 4 overtime hours in the 44-hour week, even though the biweekly total is 80 hours. Individual states may have stricter overtime rules: California, for example, requires daily overtime (over 8 hours per day) and double time (over 12 hours per day or over 8 hours on the seventh consecutive day of work). Understanding the 'regular rate of pay' is critical — it is not simply the hourly wage. The regular rate includes all remuneration except specifically excluded items. It includes hourly wages, shift differentials, non-discretionary bonuses, commissions, and most other cash compensation. It excludes gifts, discretionary bonuses, vacation pay, and premium pay for overtime itself. Overtime is then calculated at 1.5× this blended regular rate. Employees are classified as either exempt or non-exempt from overtime. Most salaried professional, managerial, and executive employees earning above the salary threshold ($684/week or $35,568/year as of 2024 federal rules) may qualify for overtime exemptions, but exemption depends on both salary AND job duties tests.
Regular Rate = Total Straight-Time Pay / Total Hours Worked Overtime Premium = Regular Rate × 0.5 × Overtime Hours Total Pay = Regular Rate × Total Hours + 0.5 × Regular Rate × Overtime Hours Alternatively: Total Pay = Regular Rate × 40 + 1.5 × Regular Rate × Overtime Hours
- 1Determine all hours worked in the workweek — include all time the employer 'suffers or permits' the employee to work, including pre-shift and post-shift activities, training, and travel if it meets FLSA work time criteria.
- 2Calculate the regular rate of pay: for hourly employees, the regular rate equals the hourly wage (plus any non-discretionary bonuses allocated to the week). For employees with multiple pay rates or bonuses, calculate total straight-time earnings and divide by total hours.
- 3Identify overtime hours: all hours exceeding 40 in the workweek. (California employees also track daily overtime.)
- 4Calculate regular pay: Regular Rate × 40 hours (or actual hours if under 40).
- 5Calculate overtime premium: Regular Rate × 0.5 × Overtime Hours. (You pay the base rate for all hours worked, then an additional 0.5× as the overtime premium for OT hours only.)
- 6Add regular pay and overtime premium for gross weekly wages. Apply applicable payroll tax withholding and any voluntary deductions.
Regular hours: 40. Overtime hours: 7. Regular pay: 40 × $20 = $800. Overtime pay: 7 × $20 × 1.5 = 7 × $30 = $210. Total: $800 + $210 = $1,010. Alternatively: 47 × $20 = $940 straight time, plus 7 × $10 overtime premium = $940 + $70 = $1,010.
Total straight-time pay = (48 × $18) + $100 bonus = $864 + $100 = $964. Regular rate = $964 / 48 hours = $20.083. Overtime premium on 8 OT hours = 8 × $20.083 × 0.5 = $80.33. Total pay = $964 + $80.33 = $1,044.33. This is higher than ignoring the bonus in the regular rate — employers who pay bonuses to hourly workers must recalculate the regular rate to include them.
Under California law, daily overtime applies to hours over 8 per day. Each day has 10 hours → 2 OT hours × 4 days = 8 daily overtime hours. Even though total weekly hours (40) do not exceed the FLSA 40-hour threshold, California requires 1.5× for the 8 hours of daily overtime. Regular pay: 32 hours × $22 = $704. OT pay: 8 hours × $33 = $264. Double time would apply to any hours over 12 in a single day (none here). Total: $704 + $264 = $968. Note: the additional 8 hours beyond 40 federally would still apply — whichever gives more overtime wins.
Under the fluctuating workweek method (permitted in some states for employees with a fixed salary for all hours), the regular rate changes weekly. This week: Regular rate = $600 / 50 hrs = $12/hr. Overtime premium (not 1.5× — the salary already covers straight time): 10 OT hours × $12 × 0.5 = $60. Total: $600 + $60 = $660. This method is controversial and state laws vary — California and several other states do not permit the fluctuating workweek method.
Total straight-time pay: (30 × $20) + (15 × $25) = $600 + $375 = $975. Regular rate: $975 / 45 = $21.67. Overtime hours: 5. Overtime premium: 5 × $21.67 × 0.5 = $54.17. Total: $975 + $54.17 = $1,029.17. (Alternatively, some employers apportion overtime using the rate in effect during OT hours — this method requires written agreement with the employee in advance.)
Payroll processing: calculating gross wages for non-exempt employees each pay period, representing an important application area for the Overtime Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate overtime calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Budgeting: estimating overtime costs during busy seasons or project peaks, representing an important application area for the Overtime Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate overtime calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Staffing decisions: comparing overtime costs to the cost of hiring additional part-time workers, representing an important application area for the Overtime Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate overtime calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
FLSA compliance: ensuring overtime calculations include all required pay components, representing an important application area for the Overtime Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate overtime calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Wage and hour audits: documenting correct overtime calculations to defend against DOL investigations, representing an important application area for the Overtime Calc in professional and analytical contexts where accurate overtime calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Highly compensated employees: Those earning $107,432+ annually (including at
Highly compensated employees: Those earning $107,432+ annually (including at least $684/week in salary) may be exempt under the HCE test even if they fail the standard duties test.. In the Overtime Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting overtime results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when overtime calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Piece-rate workers: For employees paid per piece or per unit, the regular rate
Piece-rate workers: For employees paid per piece or per unit, the regular rate is total piece-rate earnings divided by total hours worked. Overtime premium is then 0.5× this regular rate for OT hours.. In the Overtime Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting overtime results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when overtime calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Commissioned employees: A retail or service establishment employee may be
Commissioned employees: A retail or service establishment employee may be exempt from overtime if their regular rate exceeds 1.5× minimum wage AND more than half of pay comes from commissions (Section 7(i) exemption).. In the Overtime Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting overtime results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when overtime calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Emergency medical services: EMT and paramedic employers may use a special 8/80
Emergency medical services: EMT and paramedic employers may use a special 8/80 rule — overtime is triggered only after 8 hours in a day or 80 hours in a 14-day period instead of 40 hours in 7 days.. In the Overtime Calc, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting overtime results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when overtime calculations fall into non-standard territory.
| Jurisdiction | Weekly OT Threshold | Daily OT Rules | Double Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal (FLSA) | >40 hours | None | Not required |
| California | >40 hours | >8 hours/day | >12 hrs/day or 7th day |
| Nevada | >40 hours | >8 hrs/day (if <$15.50/hr) | None required |
| Alaska | >40 hours | >8 hours/day | None required |
| Colorado | >40 hours | >12 hours/day | None required |
| Most other states | >40 hours | None | None required |
| Most EU countries | >48 hours/week (Working Time Directive) | Varies | Varies by country |
Who is exempt from overtime pay?
Employees may be exempt from FLSA overtime if they meet both a salary threshold ($684/week/$35,568/year in 2024) AND a duties test for executive, administrative, professional, computer, or outside sales exemptions. The duties tests are strict and fact-specific. Note: many employers misclassify employees as exempt to avoid overtime — the Department of Labor aggressively investigates misclassification complaints, and penalties include back pay for up to 3 years plus liquidated damages.
Is overtime mandatory for employers to offer?
Under the FLSA, employers are not required to offer overtime work — they can require employees to limit hours to 40 per week. However, if an employer 'suffers or permits' an employee to work overtime (even without explicit approval), they must pay for it. Employers can discipline employees for working unauthorized overtime, but they still must pay for hours actually worked. Refusing to pay for worked overtime is a wage and hour violation.
How is overtime calculated for tipped employees?
For tipped employees paid below the federal minimum wage (using the tip credit), the FLSA requires that overtime be calculated on the full federal minimum wage ($7.25/hour), not the reduced cash wage. The overtime rate = $7.25 × 1.5 = $10.875/hour for tipped overtime hours. Some states have higher minimum wages and restrict or prohibit tip credits altogether — state law governs when more protective than federal law.
Does PTO or sick leave count toward the 40-hour overtime threshold?
No. Overtime is based on hours actually worked, not hours paid. If an employee takes 8 hours of paid sick leave and works 36 hours, they have 36 actual hours worked — no overtime is owed. An employer can voluntarily pay overtime on paid leave hours, but the FLSA does not require it. This distinction matters for pay period cutoffs near holidays when employees may work less actual time.
Can employees waive their right to overtime pay?
No. Overtime rights under the FLSA cannot be waived by agreement between the employer and employee. An employment contract that says 'I waive overtime pay' is unenforceable. Similarly, employees cannot agree to be paid straight time for overtime hours or to receive compensatory time off instead of overtime pay (though government employers can offer comp time under specific rules). Only the Department of Labor can approve settlements of disputed overtime claims.
How does comp time work instead of overtime pay?
Private sector employers generally cannot substitute compensatory time off (comp time) for overtime pay under the FLSA — they must pay cash overtime at 1.5× the regular rate. Public sector employers (government agencies) may offer comp time under FLSA Section 7(o) at a rate of 1.5 hours of comp time per overtime hour worked. Some states allow private employers to offer comp time with employee agreement, but this varies by state — employers must comply with both federal and applicable state law.
What overtime rules apply to salaried employees who are non-exempt?
Salaried non-exempt employees must receive overtime for hours over 40 per week. The regular rate is calculated by dividing the salary by the number of hours the salary is intended to compensate. If the salary covers 40 hours/week, the regular rate = Salary / 40, and overtime is 1.5× that rate for OT hours. Under the fluctuating workweek method (where the salary covers all hours regardless of how many), the regular rate changes weekly and only a 0.5× premium (not 1.5×) is added for OT hours — but this method has restrictions and is not permitted in all states.
What are the recordkeeping requirements for overtime?
The FLSA requires employers to keep records of hours worked by non-exempt employees for at least 3 years. Time records must capture daily and weekly totals. Employers need not use time clocks, but must maintain accurate records. In wage and hour lawsuits, if the employer has failed to keep accurate records, courts may accept employee estimates of hours worked and place the burden on the employer to disprove them. Maintaining accurate timekeeping is therefore both a legal requirement and a litigation risk management tool.
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If you pay any non-discretionary bonuses (production bonuses, attendance bonuses, safety bonuses), you must retroactively calculate the overtime premium on those bonuses for the workweeks to which they relate. Build this into your payroll process — many employers miss this step and face back-pay liability.
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The 40-hour workweek was established by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Before the FLSA, 60–70 hour workweeks were common in many industries. Henry Ford famously implemented the 40-hour week at Ford Motor Company in 1926, 12 years before it became law — and he saw productivity increase as a result.