REFERENCE GUIDE TO THE
TO THE FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT
U.S. Dept of Labor
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) establishes minimum wage, overtime pay,
recordkeeping, and child labor standards affecting full-time and
part-time workers in the private sector and in Federal, State, and
local governments.
The Wage and Hour Division (Wage-Hour) administers and enforces FLSA
with respect to private employment, State and local government
employment, and Federal employees of the Library of Congress, U.S.
Postal Service, Postal Rate Commission, and the Tennessee Valley
Authority. The FLSA is enforced by the U.S. Office of Personnel
Management for employees of other Executive Branch agencies, and by the
U.S. Congress for covered employees of the Legislative Branch.
Special rules apply to State and local government employment involving
fire protection and law enforcement activities, volunteer services, and
compensatory time off instead of cash overtime pay.
BASIC WAGE STANDARDS
Covered nonexempt workers are entitled to a minimum wage of not less
than $4.75 an hour, effective October 1, 1996, and not less than $5.15
an hour, effective September 1, 1997. Overtime pay at a rate of not
less than one and one-half times their regular rates of pay is required
after 40 hours of work in a workweek.
Wages required by FLSA are due on the regular payday for the pay period
covered. Deductions made from wages for such items as cash or
merchandise shortages, employer-required uniforms, and tools of the
trade, are not legal to the extent that they reduce the wages of
employees below the minimum rate required by FLSA or reduce the amount
of overtime pay due under FLSA.
The FLSA contains some exemptions from these basic standards. Some
apply to specific types of businesses; others apply to specific kinds
of work.
While FLSA does set basic minimum wage and overtime pay standards and
regulates the employment of minors, there are a number of employment
practices which FLSA does not regulate.
For example, FLSA does not require:
- vacation, holiday, severance, or sick pay;
- meal or rest periods, holidays off, or vacations;
- premium pay for weekend or holiday work;
- pay raises or fringe benefits; and
- a discharge notice, reason for discharge, or immediate payment of
final wages to terminated employees.
The FLSA does not provide wage payment or collection procedures for an
employee's usual or promised wages or commissions in excess of those
required by the FLSA. However, some States do have laws under which
such claims (sometimes including fringe benefits) may be filed.
Also, FLSA does not limit the number of hours in a day or days in a
week an employee may be required or scheduled to work, including
overtime hours, if the employee is at least 16 years old.
The above matters are for agreement between the employer and the
employees or their authorized representatives.
WHO IS COVERED?
All employees of certain enterprises having workers engaged in
interstate commerce, producing goods for interstate commerce, or
handling, selling, or otherwise working on goods or materials that have
been moved in or produced for such commerce by any person are covered
by FLSA.
A covered enterprise is the related activities performed through
unified operation or common control by any person or persons for a
common business purpose and --
- whose annual gross volume of sales made or business done is not
less than $500,000 (exclusive of excise taxes at the retail level that
are separately stated); or
- is engaged in the operation of a hospital, an institution primarily
engaged in the care of the sick, the aged, or the mentally ill who
reside on the premises; a school for mentally or physically disabled or
gifted children; a preschool, an elementary or secondary school, or an
institution of higher education (whether operated for profit or not for
profit); or
- is an activity of a public agency.
Construction and laundry/dry cleaning enterprises, which had been
previously covered regardless of their annual dollar volume of
business, became subject to the $500,000 test on April 1, 1990.
Any enterprise that was covered by FLSA on March 31, 1990, and that
ceased to be covered because of the $500,000 test, continues to be
subject to the overtime pay, child labor and recordkeeping provisions
of FLSA.
Employees of firms which are not covered enterprises under FLSA still
may be subject to its minimum wage, overtime pay, and child labor
provisions if they are individually engaged in interstate commerce or
in the production of goods for interstate commerce, or in any
closely-related process or occupation directly essential to such
production. Such employees include those who: work in communications or
transportation; regularly use the mails, telephones, or telegraph for
interstate communication, or keep records of interstate transactions;
handle, ship, or receive goods moving in interstate commerce; regularly
cross State lines in the course of employment; or work for independent
employers who contract to do clerical, custodial, maintenance, or other
work for firms engaged in interstate commerce or in the production of
goods for interstate commerce.
Domestic service workers such as day workers, housekeepers, chauffeurs,
cooks, or full-time babysitters are covered if (1) their cash wages
from one employer are at least $1,000 in a calendar year (or the amount
designated pursuant to an adjustment provision in the Internal Revenue
Code), or (2) they work a total of more than 8 hours a week for one or
more employers.
TIPPED EMPLOYEES
Tipped employees are those who customarily and regularly receive more
than $30 a month in tips. The employer may consider tips as part of
wages, but the employer must pay at least $2.13 an hour in direct wages.
The employer who elects to use the tip credit provision, must inform
the employee in advance and must be able to show that the employee
receives at least the minimum wage when direct wages and the tip credit
allowance are combined. If an employee's tips combined with the
employer's direct wages of at least $2.13 an hour do not equal the
minimum hourly wage, the employer must make up the difference. Also,
employees must retain all of their tips, except to the extent that they
participate in a valid tip pooling or sharing arrangement.
EMPLOYER-FURNISHED FACILITIES
The reasonable cost or fair value of board, lodging, or other
facilities customarily furnished by the employer for the employee's
benefit may be considered part of wages.
INDUSTRIAL HOMEWORK
The performance of certain types of work in an employee's home is
prohibited under the law unless the employer has obtained prior
certification from the Department of Labor. Restrictions apply in the
manufacture of knitted outerwear, gloves and mittens, buttons and
buckles, handkerchiefs, embroideries, and jewelry (where safety and
health hazards are not involved). The manufacture of women's apparel
(and jewelry under hazardous conditions) is generally prohibited. If
you have questions on whether a certain type of work is restricted, or
who is eligible for a homework certificate, or how to obtain a
certificate, you may contact the local Wage-Hour office.
SUBMINIMUM WAGE PROVISIONS
The FLSA provides for the employment of certain individuals at wage
rates below the statutory minimum. Such individuals include
student-learners (vocational education students), as well as full-time
students in retail or service establishments, agriculture, or
institutions of higher education. Also included are individuals whose
earning or productive capacity is impaired by a physical or mental
disability, including those related to age or injury, for the work to
be performed. Employment at less than the minimum wage is authorized to
prevent curtailment of opportunities for employment. Such employment is
permitted only under certificates issued by Wage-Hour.
YOUTH MINIMUM WAGE
A minimum wage of not less than $4.25 an hour is permitted for
employees under 20 years of age during their first 90 consecutive
calendar days of employment with an employer. Employers are prohibited
from taking any action to displace employees in order to hire employees
at the youth minimum wage. Also prohibited are partial displacements
such as reducing employees' hours, wages, or employment benefits.
EXEMPTIONS
Some employees are exempt from the overtime pay provisions or both the
minimum wage and overtime pay provisions.
Because exemptions are generally narrowly defined under FLSA, an
employer should carefully check the exact terms and conditions for
each. Detailed information is available from local Wage-Hour offices.
Following are examples of exemptions which are illustrative, but not
all-inclusive. These examples do not define the conditions for each
exemption.
Exemptions from Both Minimum Wage and Overtime Pay
- Executive, administrative, and professional employees (including
teachers and academic administrative personnel in elementary and
secondary schools), outside sales employees, and employees in certain
computer-related occupations (as defined in Department of Labor
regulations);
- Employees of certain seasonal amusement or recreational
establishments, employees of certain small newspapers, seamen employed
on foreign vessels, employees engaged in fishing operations, and
employees engaged in newspaper delivery;
- Farm workers employed by anyone who used no more than 500
"man-days" of farm labor in any calendar quarter of the preceding
calendar year;
- Casual babysitters and persons employed as companions to the
elderly or infirm.
Exemptions from Overtime Pay Only
- Certain commissioned employees of retail or service establishments;
auto, truck, trailer, farm implement, boat, or aircraft salesworkers,
or parts-clerks and mechanics servicing autos, trucks, or farm
implements, who are employed by nonmanufacturing establishments
primarily engaged in selling these items to ultimate purchasers;
- Employees of railroads and air carriers, taxi drivers, certain
employees of motor carriers, seamen on American vessels, and local
delivery employees paid on approved trip rate plans;
- Announcers, news editors, and chief engineers of certain
nonmetropolitan broadcasting stations;
- Domestic service workers living in the employer's residence;
- Employees of motion picture theaters; and
- Farmworkers.