FLSA status: Exempt vs. Non-exempt

FLSA status classifies employees as non-exempt or exempt, affecting overtime pay eligibility. This ensures compliance with labor laws and protects workers’ rights.

By Brad Nakase, Attorney

Email  |  Call (888) 600-8654

Have a quick question? I answered nearly 1500 FAQs.

FLSA Status: What is it?

The FLSA (Fair Labor Standards Act) classification of an employee indicates whether they are considered non-exempt or exempt. FLSA status is essential for understanding an employee’s rights regarding wages, overtime pay, and other labor standards.

A United States law called the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) was created to protect workers from unfair labor practices and compensation. Since it was first introduced in 1938 and is overseen by the US DOL (Dept. of Labor), the legislation has undergone a number of revisions to assist contemporary business owners in remaining compliant.

More generally, the following is established by the FLSA:

  • The minimum salary
  • Criterion for overtime pay
  • Guidelines for record-keeping
  • Norms for youth employment

The local, state, and federal governments in addition to private companies employ people who must adhere to the FLSA’s rules.

Non-exempt vs. Exempt

When a non-exempt employee works more than 40 hours during a single workweek, they have the right to overtime pay under the FLSA; exempt workers aren’t entitled to overtime pay.

FLSA status—exempt or non-exempt—depends on a number of variables. When determining a worker’s FLSA status, payroll experts, HR managers, and owners of businesses must take into account the following factors as per this law:

  • The weekly or yearly salary of the staff member
  • The manner in which the employer pays them (hourly or salary)
  • Role and profession of the employee

Exempt Worker

An exempt worker has no right to minimum wage, overtime compensation, or both. That means that certain roles are exempt from the FLSA’s requirements. These are usually salaried staff members and consist of the following:

  • Personnel at the executive level
  • Employees in administration
  • Professional workers, often known as advanced knowledge employees
  • Members of the outside sales staff
  • Workers in some computer-related fields

Specific guidelines, such as minimum earning levels, apply to regulations regarding exempt staff and the positions that may fit according to this FLSA status. Additional information on these roles and others that might be relevant to your company is provided by the DOL.

Non-exempt worker

The FLSA’s requirements for overtime and the minimum wage apply to non-exempt workers. Overtime pay is computed for eligible non-exempt workers at a minimum of 1.5 times their regular salary for every hour worked above the typical 40-hour week.

Direct care employees, such as caregivers, aides for home health, and licensed nursing assistants, are also subject to requirements under the FLSA. A state minimum wage, among other additional requirements, may apply to firms in certain regions when hiring non-exempt workers.

To find out if their employees are exempt from the FLSA or not, employers can refer to the WHD (Wage and Hour Division) of the Dept. of Labor and particular state standards. Understanding FLSA status is crucial for both employers and employees to ensure compliance with labor laws and to protect workers’ rights.

Have a quick question? We answered nearly 2000 FAQs.

See all blogs: Business | Corporate | Employment Law

Most recent blogs:

California Rest and Meal Break Laws 2026

California Rest and Meal Break Laws 2026: Complete Guide

California rest and meal break laws set requirements for breaks, waivers, employer duties, and premium pay after violations. This 2026 guide details employee rights, penalties, industry exceptions, common infractions, and recordkeeping practices.
What Is Considered Wrongful Termination in California

What Is Considered Wrongful Termination in California?

Wrongful termination in California may involve discrimination, retaliation, contract breaches, protected leave violations, or dismissals that violate public policy. Employees can review common examples, available remedies, evidence to preserve, and steps to take after an unlawful firing.
Am I Being Sexually Harassed At Work

Am I Being Sexually Harassed At Work?

Workplace sexual harassment can include unwanted touching, sexual remarks, explicit messages, stalking, repeated date requests, or demands for sexual favors. California employees can preserve evidence, report misconduct in writing, and pursue legal action when an employer fails to respond.
California Law on Deductions from Wage Paycheck

California Law on Deductions from Wage Paycheck

California wage deduction laws limit what employers can withhold for uniforms, meals, housing, debts, taxes, and garnishments. See when employee consent is required and what remedies may apply for improper paycheck deductions.
Workplace Bullying- California Laws, Rights, and Examples

Workplace Bullying: California Laws, Rights, and Examples

Workplace bullying in California can involve verbal abuse, sabotage, threats, cyberbullying, or harassment tied to protected traits. California employees may have legal options when bullying becomes discrimination, retaliation, wrongful termination, or other unlawful workplace conduct.
Do you get paid for training at a job

Do You Get Paid for Training at a Job?

Paid training rules can affect wages for job orientations, meetings, classes, and required work-related courses. See when training must be paid, when exceptions may apply, and how employees can document unpaid hours.
How Long Is Maternity Leave in California

How Long Is Maternity Leave In California?

California maternity leave may include CFRA bonding time, pregnancy disability leave, paid family leave, and job protection. This guide covers eligibility, pay options, breastfeeding rights, and steps when an employer denies leave.
Can Your Employer Spy on You at Home

Can Your Employer Spy on You at Home?

Employee monitoring laws may allow workplace surveillance on company devices, but privacy rights still limit spying at home. Review rules for notice, consent, personal devices, webcams, GPS tracking, email, calls, and state laws.
Are employers required to pay for unauthorized overtime

Are Employers Required To Pay For Unauthorized Overtime?

Employers must pay unauthorized overtime when workers perform extra hours, including off-the-clock time known to the company. California law allows discipline for policy violations, but employers cannot withhold earned wages.
How to Calculate Daily and Weekly Overtime in California

How to Calculate Daily and Weekly Overtime in California

Calculate daily and weekly overtime in California, including pay rates, bonuses, commissions, and salaried employee rules. California overtime laws affect workers, employers, wage calculations, payroll records, and costly pay mistakes.
How to Sell Yourself

How To Sell Yourself In A Job Interview

Show hiring managers your value in a job interview without sounding boastful or forced. Share results, numbers, and a strong career story that supports your fit for the role.
Is Semi-monthly and Bi-weekly The Same Thing

Is Semi-monthly and Bi-weekly The Same Thing?

Semi-monthly and bi-weekly payroll differ in timing, pay periods, overtime handling, and total annual paychecks for employees and employers. Compare both schedules to choose the right fit for budgeting, payroll processing, and workforce needs.
How To Sue Your Employer

How To Sue Your Employer In California

See when California workers may sue an employer for discrimination, retaliation, unpaid wages, wrongful termination, or leave-related violations. Review the records, deadlines, and legal steps that can affect a workplace claim in California.
Can an employee be terminated while on medical leave

Can An Employee Be Terminated While On Medical Leave?

California employees on medical leave can still be fired in some cases, based on the reason for termination and the medical record. This article covers FEHA, return-to-work dates, and doctor’s notes that may affect a disability or leave-related claim.
Wrongful Termination Lawsuit in California

Wrongful Termination Lawsuit in California

California wrongful termination lawsuits may involve discrimination, retaliation, contract breaches, WARN Act violations, AI-based firing, or public policy violations. This article covers claim grounds, supporting evidence, court steps, and possible compensation after an unlawful firing or forced resignation.
Tips on Misclassification of Exempt Employees

Tips on Misclassification of Exempt Employees

California workers may lose overtime, meal breaks, and rest breaks when employers wrongly label positions as exempt. This article explains exemption rules, misclassification warning signs, possible damages, and the role of an employment attorney.
Retaliation for Reporting Harassment at Work

Retaliation for Reporting Harassment at Work

Retaliation after reporting workplace harassment can include firing, demotion, pay cuts, schedule changes, or other harmful job actions. This article outlines protected activity, signs of retaliation, evidence to gather, complaint deadlines, and the legal steps involved.
How is an independent contractor different from an employee

How Is An Independent Contractor Different From An Employee?

See how California law separates independent contractors from employees, including control, pay, benefits, and legal protections. Get the facts on worker classification, misclassification costs, and the legal tests courts and agencies apply.
What is the Equal Pay Act

What is the Equal Pay Act and Worker Rights?

The Equal Pay Act bars wage discrimination for substantially similar work and protects workers facing unequal pay, retaliation, and hiring bias. This article outlines federal and California pay rules, employer defenses, filing deadlines, damages, and legal rights for employees and applicants.
How to Call in Sick - Simple Tips for Notifying Your Boss

How to Call in Sick? Simple Tips for Notifying Your Boss

Get simple tips for calling in sick, telling your boss, and handling sick day communication at work with confidence and professionalism. See when to notify your manager, what to say, and how to stay professional during one-day or multi-day absences.
FMLA Retaliation and Wrongful Termination

FMLA Retaliation and Wrongful Termination

Facing termination after medical leave may signal FMLA retaliation and violations of your job protection rights. Review common warning signs, legal options, and how an experienced California FMLA attorney can support your claim.
How To File A Workplace Harassment Complaint

How To File A Workplace Harassment Complaint

File a workplace harassment complaint with step-by-step actions: document incidents, follow internal reporting rules, and preserve evidence. Know key deadlines, agency filings like the EEOC, and when legal action may be the next step.
Do I Get Overtime Pay If I’m Paid a Salary

Do I Get Overtime Pay If I’m Paid a Salary?

In California, salary pay does not decide overtime; job duties, pay threshold, and hours worked do. See who is exempt, common misclassification signs, unpaid overtime rules, and options for wage claims or lawsuits.

Contact our attorney.

Please tell us your story:

2 + 4 = ?