Do You Have to Pay Your Salaried Employees Overtime in Oklahoma?
Do You Have to Pay Your Salaried Employees Overtime in Oklahoma?
Employers sometimes fall into the dangerous trap of believing they do not need to pay an employee overtime wages because they pay that employee a salary. That conclusion is wrong. The legal difference is not salaried versus hourly, but exempt versus non-exempt. If a salaried employee is non-exempt, the employer must still pay that employee overtime for any hours over 40 worked in a work week.Oklahoma’s Overtime LawsOklahoma's overtime law generally follows the federal law regarding overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Under Oklahoma law, non-exempt employees who work more than 40 hours in a workweek are entitled to receive overtime pay at a rate of one and a half times their regular rate of pay for every hour worked over 40 hours. The Oklahoma law tracks with the FLSA. Exempt vs. Non-Exempt EmployeesGenerally speaking, the FLSA requires employers to pay overtime to non-exempt employees who work more than 40 hours per week. Exempt employees, on the other hand, are not just paid on a salary basis, but also must meet one of the FLSA’s statutory exemptions. Being non-exempt and owing overtime is the rule. Being exempt is a special exception.To be exempt from overtime pay under the FLSA, an employee must meet certain criteria regarding job duties and salary. Specifically, the employee must meet both a salary test and a duties test. The salary test requires that the employee be paid a salary of at least $684 per week ($35,568 per year) and that the salary is not subject to reduction based on the quantity or quality of work performed. The duties test requires that the employee primarily perform executive, administrative, or professional duties. Certain outside sales employees can also be exempt. And there is an exemption for highly compensated employees.Simply paying an employee a salary does not automatically make them exempt from overtime pay. To be exempt, the employee must also meet the duties test, meaning if an employee is salaried but does not primarily perform executive, administrative, professional, or outside sales duties, they may still be entitled to overtime pay.Executive employees primarily manage the business or a department, supervise two or more employees, and have the authority to hire or fire employees. Administrative employees primarily perform non-manual work related to the management or operations of the business, and whose work requires the exercise of discretion and independent judgment.
Image by Bench Accounting, via Unsplash.com.
About Davis Business Law
At Davis Business Law, our business lawyers are dedicated to helping companies and entrepreneurs deal with the complex vulnerabilities they face in their problems and opportunities. Our law firm works with our clients to make smart business decisions to achieve their goals. If you call us with a pressing problem our commitment is to ensure you get back on track as efficiently and quickly as possible. If we get to help you with an opportunity we work to make sure you capitalize on it while building in safeguards to protect your investment of time and money.