Federal Government Proposes Raising Overtime Threshold to $55K
2 Min Read By Pooja S. Nair
On August 30, 2023, the Department of Labor (“DOL”) issued a notice of proposed rulemaking for a rule “Defining and Delimiting the Exemptions for Executive, Administrative, Professional, Outside Sales, and Computer Employees. If enacted, the rule would guarantee overtime pay for salaried workers earning less than $55,068 a year.
The rule would raise the minimum salary required to invoke the “white-collar” exemption to overtime from the current $684/week ($35,568 annual salary) to $1,059/week ($55,068 annual salary). Additionally, the highly compensated employee threshold would go up to $143,988 a year.
DOL estimates that this change would impact 3.6 million employees, and create an additional $1.2 billion paid to employees.
Some states already have a higher threshold for overtime. For example, salaried workers in California are only eligible to be exempted for overtime if they are paid up to $64,480 (twice the state minimum wage). However, with the federal minimum…
Sorry, You've Reached Your Article Limit.
Register for free with our site to get unlimited articles.
Already registered? Sign in!