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Rights Under the FLSA : Pay for Overtime

The FLSA does not limit the number of hours an employee may work in a week—unless the employee is a minor. But it does require that any covered worker who works more than 40 hours in one week must be paid at least one and one-half times his or her regular rate of pay for every hour worked in excess of 40.

There is no legal requirement under the FLSA that workers must receive overtime pay simply because they worked more than eight hours in one day (although a few states require it). Nor is there anything that requires a worker to be paid on the spot for overtime. Under the FLSA, an employer is allowed to calculate and pay overtime by the week—which can be any 168-hour period made up of seven consecutive 24-hour periods.

It is custom, not law, that determines that a workweek begins on Monday. However, the FLSA requires consistency. An employer cannot manipulate the start of the workweek to avoid paying overtime.

Also, because of the nature of the work involved, common sense—and the law—both dictate that some jobs are exempt from the overtime pay requirements of the FLSA.

The most common of these jobs include:

  • commissioned employees of retail or service establishments

  • some auto, truck, trailer, farm implement, boat, or aircraft workers

  • railroad and air carrier employees, taxi drivers, certain employees of motor carriers, seamen on American vessels, and local delivery employees

  • announcers, news editors, and chief engineers of small nonmetropolitan broadcasting stations

  • domestic service workers who live in their employer’s residence

  • employees of motion picture theaters, and

  • farmworkers.


  • And, finally, some employees may be partially exempt from the Act’s overtime pay requirements. The most common of this hybrid type is an employee who works in a hospital or residential care establishment who agrees to work a 14-day work period. However, these employees must be paid overtime premium pay for all hours worked over eight in a day or 80 in the 14-day work period, whichever is the greater number of overtime hours.

    In addition to the FLSA overtime provisions, a number of state laws also define how and when overtime must be paid. Some states measure overtime on a daily, rather than weekly, basis. In these states, workers who put in more than eight hours a day are generally entitled to overtime, even if they work a total of 40 or fewer hours in a week. The chart that follows summarizes state overtime rules for private employers. Note that if the federal and state law conflict, your employer must obey the stricter law—that is, the law that provides the most expansive rights to you.

    Some employers have tried to skirt the overtime pay requirements by labeling part of the pay received as a bonus. In fact, bonuses have a strict legal definition, being reserved only for money paid in addition to wages because of some extra effort you have made on the job, as a reward for loyal service, or as a gift.

    While the term bonus has a grand ring to it, be skeptical if you receive one too often. And take the time to do some math to discover whether the bonus is an apt description for the sum you receive—or a ploy to circumvent the laws requiring overtime pay.