Exempt vs Non-Exempt
Understanding whether you're classified as exempt or non-exempt directly affects your right to overtime pay, break entitlements, and workplace protections. This guide explains the difference clearly.
In This Guide
What Does "Exempt" and "Non-Exempt" Mean?
These terms come from the US Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), the federal law that governs minimum wage, overtime pay, and other employment standards. The classification determines whether an employer must pay you overtime:
"Non-exempt" means you are NOT exempt from overtime protections. Your employer must pay you at least 1.5x your regular rate for any hours worked over 40 in a workweek (and potentially over 8 in a day, depending on state law).
Most hourly employees are non-exempt. Some salaried employees are too.
"Exempt" means you are exempt from FLSA overtime requirements. Your employer is not legally required to pay you extra for working more than 40 hours per week. You receive your agreed salary regardless of hours worked.
Most exempt employees are salaried and perform specific types of professional, managerial, or administrative work.
Classification is determined by law — not by your job title or your employer's preference. Calling a role "Manager" doesn't automatically make it exempt. The actual duties and compensation must meet specific legal tests, which we explain below.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Non-Exempt | Exempt |
|---|---|---|
| Overtime pay (federal) | Required (1.5x after 40hrs) | Not required |
| Pay structure | Usually hourly; can be salaried | Must be salaried (salary basis) |
| Minimum salary required | No (just minimum wage) | Yes ($844/week as of July 2025) |
| Duties test required | No | Yes (executive, admin, professional, etc.) |
| Time tracking required | Legally required | Not required by FLSA |
| Meal/rest breaks (federal) | Not required by federal law* | Not required by federal law* |
| Deductions from pay | Deducted for time not worked | Generally cannot deduct for partial days |
| Work more than 40 hours? | Get paid extra | Same salary |
* Some states (e.g., California) do require meal and rest breaks for non-exempt employees. Federal FLSA does not.
Non-Exempt: What You Need to Know
If you're classified as non-exempt, you have the strongest overtime protections under federal law. Here's what applies to you:
Federal Overtime: Time-and-a-Half
For every hour you work beyond 40 in a single workweek, your employer must pay you at least 1.5 times your regular hourly rate. If you earn £15/hr, your overtime rate is at least £22.50/hr.
State Overtime May Be More Generous
California requires overtime after 8 hours in a day (not just 40 in a week) and double-time after 12 hours. Alaska and Nevada have daily overtime too. Colorado requires overtime after 12 hours/day or 40/week. Your state's rules apply if they're more favorable than federal.
Your Employer Must Track Your Hours
Employers are legally required to keep accurate records of non-exempt employees' hours worked and wages paid. You have the right to request and review these records. Keep your own records too — our calculator can help.
You Can Be Salaried and Still Non-Exempt
Being paid a salary does NOT automatically make you exempt. If your duties don't meet the exemption tests, or your salary is below the threshold, you're still non-exempt and entitled to overtime — even if you receive a fixed salary each week.
Exempt: What You Need to Know
Exempt status is a privilege for the employer, not a benefit for you. It means the employer can require you to work 50, 60, or more hours per week without paying a penny extra. Here's what it means in practice:
- A guaranteed minimum salary regardless of hours worked
- Can't have pay docked for partial-day absences (in most cases)
- May have more scheduling flexibility
- Often (but not always) comes with greater autonomy in how you do your work
- No legal right to overtime pay — ever
- No federal right to meal or rest breaks
- Expected to work until the job is done, regardless of hours
- Effective hourly rate drops the more you work
The Hidden Cost of Being Exempt
If you earn $75,000/year and work 45 hours every week, your effective hourly rate is about $32.05/hr. But if your employer starts requiring 55 hours/week, your effective rate drops to about $26.19/hr — a 18% pay cut without a single change to your salary. Always calculate your real hourly rate to understand the true value of your compensation.
The Three-Part Exemption Test
Under the FLSA, an employee is only exempt if they pass all three of these tests simultaneously. Failing even one means the employee is non-exempt:
Salary Basis Test
You must be paid a predetermined and fixed salary that is not subject to reduction because of variations in the quality or quantity of work performed. If your employer docks your pay when you work fewer hours in a day, you likely fail this test.
Salary Level Test
You must earn at least the minimum weekly salary threshold set by the Department of Labor. As of July 1, 2025, this is $844 per week ($43,888/year). For highly compensated employees, the threshold is $1,318 per week ($68,536/year). Note: these thresholds have been subject to legal challenges and may change.
Duties Test
Your actual job duties (not your job title) must fit into one of the FLSA's exemption categories: Executive, Administrative, Professional, Computer, or Outside Sales. This is the most complex and most frequently litigated part of the test.
All three tests must be met. A senior software engineer earning $150,000/year who passes the salary tests but whose actual duties are primarily data entry (not meeting the Computer Employee duties test) would still be non-exempt. Job titles are irrelevant — only actual duties matter.
Duties Test Categories
Each exemption category has specific criteria. Here's a simplified overview of what each requires:
Executive Exemption
- Primary duty is managing the enterprise or a recognised department or subdivision.
- Customarily and regularly directs the work of 2 or more full-time employees (or equivalent).
- Has the authority to hire, fire, promote, or make similarly weighted recommendations.
A "shift supervisor" who merely assigns tasks but can't hire/fire likely does NOT qualify.
Administrative Exemption
- Primary duty is the performance of office or non-manual work directly related to management or general business operations.
- Includes work in functional areas such as tax, finance, accounting, auditing, insurance, quality control, HR, legal, marketing, and similar activities.
- Must include the exercise of discretion and independent judgment with respect to matters of significance.
A receptionist, bookkeeper doing routine data entry, or clerical worker typically does NOT qualify, even if they work in an "administrative" department.
Professional Exemption (Learned)
- Primary duty is the performance of work requiring advanced knowledge in a field of science or learning.
- The advanced knowledge must be customarily acquired by a prolonged course of specialised intellectual instruction (typically a degree or equivalent).
- Includes doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers, scientists, teachers, and similar roles.
Professional Exemption (Creative)
- Primary duty is the performance of work requiring invention, imagination, originality, or talent in a recognised field of artistic or creative endeavour.
- Includes musicians, composers, writers, cartoonists, and certain designers.
Computer Employee Exemption
- Employed as a computer systems analyst, computer programmer, software engineer, or similarly skilled worker.
- Primary duties involve: systems analysis, design, development, documentation, testing, or modification of computer systems or programs.
- Must exercise discretion and independent judgment.
Help desk support, basic IT maintenance, and hardware installation typically do NOT qualify.
Outside Sales Exemption
- Primary duty is making sales or obtaining orders/contracts.
- Must be customarily and regularly engaged away from the employer's place of business.
- No minimum salary requirement for this exemption.
Salary Thresholds (US FLSA)
The salary threshold is the minimum amount an employee must earn to even be eligible for exempt status. Earning below this amount automatically makes you non-exempt, regardless of your duties.
| Threshold | Weekly | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard (from July 1, 2025) | $844 | $43,888 | Subject to litigation; check current DOL guidance |
| Highly Compensated (from July 1, 2025) | $1,318 | $68,536 | Relaxed duties test; must perform at least one exempt duty |
| Previous (pre-2024) | $684 | $35,568 | Superseded; shown for reference |
Thresholds Are Changing
The DOL has attempted to raise these thresholds multiple times. Legal challenges have caused uncertainty around the exact current numbers. Always check the official DOL website (dol.gov/agencies/whd/overtime/pay) for the most current thresholds. State laws may set higher thresholds.
Earning above the threshold doesn't automatically make you exempt. It only makes you eligible for exemption. You still must pass the salary basis test AND the duties test. Many salaried employees earning well above $844/week are still non-exempt because their duties don't qualify.
UK Equivalent: Worker Classification
The UK doesn't use "exempt" and "non-exempt" terminology. Instead, employment law distinguishes between workers, employees, and the self-employed. However, the concepts overlap significantly:
- Has an employment contract, is on the payroll, and has the most rights.
- Entitled to minimum wage, paid holiday (5.6 weeks), statutory sick pay, redundancy pay, and protection from unfair dismissal.
- Working Time Regulations apply: 48-hour max week (opt-out possible), 11-hour daily rest, 20-minute break after 6 hours.
- There's no federal-style overtime mandate, but most employees have contractual overtime rates or are entitled to the National Minimum Wage for all hours worked.
- Has a contract to perform work personally but has more flexibility than an employee (e.g., can send a substitute).
- Entitled to minimum wage, paid holiday (5.6 weeks), and rest breaks, but NOT statutory sick pay, redundancy pay, or unfair dismissal protection.
- Common in gig economy, agency work, and some freelance arrangements.
- Not a direct equivalent to "exempt" — more of a middle category that doesn't exist in US law.
- Runs their own business, decides how and when to work, can hire others.
- Not entitled to minimum wage, paid holiday, sick pay, or most employment protections.
- Responsible for their own tax (Self Assessment) and National Insurance.
- Some employers misclassify employees as "self-employed" to avoid obligations — this is illegal and can be challenged at an employment tribunal.
UK Overtime Is Contractual, Not Statutory
Unlike the US, the UK has no statutory right to overtime pay for most workers. Overtime is governed by your employment contract. However, all hours worked must be paid at least at the National Minimum Wage rate — so if your contract says "no overtime pay," your employer still can't pay you below NMW for extra hours. For disputes, contact Acas (0300 123 1100).
Impact on Your Pay: A Real Example
Let's see how classification affects two people doing essentially the same work, at the same nominal salary, but classified differently:
Use our calculator to find your real hourly rate. If you're exempt, divide your annual salary by your actual hours worked (not 2,080). If you regularly work 50 hours, a $60,000 salary is really $23.08/hr — not $28.85/hr. Knowing this number is powerful during salary negotiations.
Misclassification: When Employers Get It Wrong
Employee misclassification is one of the most common wage-and-hour violations in both the US and UK. It happens when an employer classifies a worker as exempt (or self-employed) when they should be non-exempt (or an employee), denying them overtime pay and other protections.
Red Flags That You May Be Misclassified
- You're called a "manager" but don't supervise anyone or can't hire/fire.
- You're salaried but earn below the exemption threshold ($844/week).
- Your job title includes "Administrator" or "Analyst" but your actual work is mostly clerical or routine.
- You're classified as a "contractor" or "self-employed" but your employer controls when, where, and how you work.
- You're told you're "salaried, so no overtime" — but your duties don't match any exemption category.
- Your pay gets docked when you work fewer hours in a day (failing the salary basis test).
- You do the same work as non-exempt colleagues but are classified differently.
What You Can Do
- US: File a complaint with the Wage and Hour Division of the DOL (dol.gov/agencies/whd), or consult an employment attorney. You may be entitled to back pay for up to 2–3 years of unpaid overtime.
- UK: Contact Acas (0300 123 1100) for free confidential advice. You can bring a claim to an employment tribunal for "worker status" if you've been wrongly classified as self-employed. Time limits apply (usually 3 months less 1 day from the last date of the complained-of act).
- Both: Start keeping detailed records of your hours worked immediately. Use our calculator, export weekly reports, and save them. Documentation is your strongest evidence.
Common Myths Debunked
"If I'm salaried, I'm automatically exempt."
False. Salary is only one of three tests. Many salaried employees are non-exempt and entitled to overtime. Your actual duties and salary level must also qualify.
"If I sign an agreement saying I'm exempt, that's binding."
False. You cannot contract away your statutory rights under the FLSA. Even if you signed something agreeing to exempt status, if you don't meet the legal tests, you're still non-exempt. The agreement is unenforceable.
"Exempt employees can't get overtime under any circumstances."
Not quite. While the FLSA doesn't require it, many employers voluntarily pay overtime to exempt employees, or state law may impose additional requirements. Some employment contracts also include overtime provisions for exempt staff.
"Only hourly workers are non-exempt."
False. Pay structure (hourly vs. salary) is not the determining factor. A salaried employee who fails the duties test or earns below the threshold is non-exempt, period.
"My job title has 'Manager' in it, so I must be exempt."
False. Job titles are legally irrelevant. A "Shift Manager" at a fast-food restaurant who primarily takes orders and assigns stations — without authority to hire/fire — likely does NOT meet the Executive exemption duties test.
"In the UK, this doesn't apply to me."
Partially true, but dangerous. The UK has different terminology, but the concept matters: your classification (employee vs. worker vs. self-employed) determines your rights to minimum wage, holiday pay, sick pay, and protections. Misclassification is just as common and just as harmful in the UK.
Frequently Asked Questions
In the US, employers can reclassify you, but they must do so legally. If they change you from exempt to non-exempt, that's generally fine (you gain rights). If they change you from non-exempt to exempt, they must ensure you meet all three exemption tests — and they can't do it retroactively to avoid paying overtime you already earned. In the UK, changing someone from employee to worker/self-employed requires genuine changes to the working relationship, not just a label change.
Under federal US law, yes — the FLSA doesn't require breaks for any employees, exempt or non-exempt. However, many states do. California, for example, requires a 30-minute meal break for non-exempt employees working more than 5 hours, plus 10-minute rest breaks. In the UK, the Working Time Regulations 1998 entitle most workers to a 20-minute break if working more than 6 hours, regardless of classification.
Probably, but not automatically. You'd likely qualify under the Computer Employee exemption if you earn above the salary threshold and your primary duties involve systems analysis, design, development, or testing with discretion and independent judgment. However, if you're doing basic HTML updates, QA testing without design input, or IT support, you might not qualify. Junior developers and interns are often non-exempt.
That may violate the salary basis test, which could mean you lose exempt status and become entitled to overtime. There are limited exceptions (full-day absences for personal reasons, sickness, or disability; jury duty; military service), but docking pay for arriving late, leaving early, or taking a partial day off generally breaks the salary basis. Report this to the DOL or an employment attorney.
Under the FLSA, you can recover unpaid overtime for 2 years from the date of filing a claim, or 3 years if the violation was "willful" (the employer knew or showed reckless disregard for whether their conduct violated the FLSA). Liquidated damages (an equal additional amount as compensation) are also available in most cases. In the UK, tribunal claims must usually be brought within 3 months less 1 day of the last act you're complaining about.
Yes. Part-time workers can be exempt or non-exempt just like full-time workers. However, part-time workers are practically never exempt because they almost never meet the salary threshold (e.g., working 20 hours/week at $25/hr = $500/week, well below the $844 threshold). If a part-time worker is wrongly classified as exempt, they're almost certainly misclassified.
Track Your Hours — Whatever Your Classification
Whether you're exempt or non-exempt, tracking your actual hours worked is the first step to understanding your real compensation. Use our free calculator to start.
Open the CalculatorLegal Disclaimer
This page provides general educational information about employee classification under US and UK law. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Classification rules are complex, frequently litigated, and subject to change. Salary thresholds in particular have been subject to legal challenges. Consult a qualified employment attorney (US) or solicitor (UK) for advice about your specific situation. See our full Disclaimer.