May 4, 2026
Do Salaried Employees Get Overtime in California?
If you have ever asked whether salaried employees get overtime in California, you are not alone. Many salaried employees work 50 or 55 hours a week and never see a penny more. Their offer letter says exempt, and no one explains what that word means under California law. That confusion costs employees real money, and it goes on far longer than it should.
Being paid a salary does not make you exempt from overtime. California overtime law has its own strict rules. Certain salaried employees who appear to be exempt often do not qualify once you look at the facts. Many California employers get the exemption rules wrong. The law gives misclassified employees a way to recover the back pay they were owed.
This guide breaks down how California decides who qualifies as exempt. It covers the rules that apply if you do not qualify, and the signs that your classification may be off. If any of this sounds familiar, you may have a stronger case than you think.

Many Salaried California Employees Are Owed Overtime
A salary is a pay structure, not a legal shield. California overtime law starts from one basic rule: every employee is owed overtime unless the employer proves an exemption applies. That burden falls on the employer, not on you.
A California overtime exemption requires three tests at once: a salary basis test, a salary threshold, and a duties test. Your employer must pass all three tests. Fail any one of them, and you are non-exempt. That means overtime applies to your role no matter what your offer letter says.
How California Decides If a Salaried Employee Is Exempt From Overtime
California courts and the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement look at what you do on the job, not the label your employer gives you. Under California Labor Code §515, your employer must clear three hurdles before treating you as exempt from overtime.
The California Salary Basis Test
The California salary basis test requires that you get a fixed, set amount each pay period. That amount cannot go up or down based on your hours or your output. Your employer cannot cut your pay because you left an hour early or because business was slow.
If your employer uses an attendance policy to dock your pay for partial absences, that can break the salary basis test. The same is true if your employer tracks your hours and links them to your pay. Those steps treat you more like an hourly employee. That alone can defeat an exemption claim.
The California Overtime Exempt Salary Threshold
California requires exempt employees to earn at least two times the state minimum wage. This is the California overtime exempt salary threshold. When the minimum wage goes up each year, that floor goes up too. If your salary falls below it at any point, you lose the exemption for that pay period.
This number changes every year, so last year's figure may not apply today. For the current amount, see our California minimum wage 2026 guide, which tracks the threshold and what it means for salaried employees.
The Duties Test for California Overtime Exemption
The duties test for California overtime exemption is where most misclassification cases begin. To be exempt, you must spend more than half your work time on exempt tasks. Those tasks include making real decisions, using advanced expertise, or running a team. Your job title plays no role here. Your actual daily work is what matters under California law.
If you spend most of your week doing the same tasks as your teammates, you likely fail the duties test. Following a set process is not the same as using real judgment. That makes you non-exempt, and your employer owes you overtime for every qualifying hour.

California Overtime Exemptions: Executive, Administrative, and Professional
California law recognizes a few white-collar exemptions under the IWC Wage Orders. Each comes with its own duties test. California courts interpret every exemption narrowly by design. If you do not know which exemption your employer claims, that gap is worth looking into.
Executive Exemption in California
The executive exemption in California covers employees who truly run a business or a department. They must direct two or more full-time employees. They must also have real power to hire, fire, or change pay. Team leads and shift managers who do line work alongside their team usually do not qualify.
Administrative Exemption in California
The administrative exemption in California covers employees whose main job is office work tied to management or business operations. They must also use real judgment on matters that carry weight. This is the most over-applied exemption in California. Plaintiff-side firms challenge it more than any other.
Professional Exemption in California
The professional exemption in California covers licensed fields such as law, medicine, dentistry, engineering, and accounting. It also covers learned professionals with advanced, specialized study in a set field. Most office staff, sales employees, and technicians do not qualify, even if their work is complex. Salaried employees dealing with disabilities or FMLA leave may have separate rights as well. California and federal law offer protections in these cases that go beyond overtime.
California Overtime Rules for Non-Exempt Salaried Employees
Non-exempt salaried employees in California get stronger overtime rights than federal law provides under the Fair Labor Standards Act. Federal law only covers hours past 40 per week. California adds daily overtime, a seventh-day rule, and a double-time rate after 12 hours in one day.
The full text of California Labor Code §510 is available through the California Legislative Information portal. For a step-by-step example of how this math works on a paycheck, see our guide to calculating unpaid overtime in California.

Signs a Salaried Employee Is Misclassified as Exempt in California
Overtime misclassification is rarely obvious from the outside. It shows up as a cluster of small patterns rather than one clear breach. Certain salaried employees face the highest risk when these signs match their role:
- Most of your day involves hands-on tasks that your teammates also perform.
- Management is only on paper, with no real power to hire, fire, or change anyone's pay.
- An attendance policy ties your pay to your hours, treating you more like an hourly employee.
- Your salary has dipped below the California exempt threshold at some point.
- Your employer has deducted pay for partial-day absences, which breaks salary basis status under California law.
- Work spills into after-hours on a regular basis, from emails to calls to working through lunch.
Misclassification is not always done on purpose, but it is common. Our overview of employee misclassification in California covers the legal tests in detail and explains how these cases are built.
What Salaried California Employees Can Recover for Unpaid Overtime
Misclassified salaried employees in California have strong recovery options. A successful claim typically means your employer owes you the unpaid overtime itself. Interest on those wages and your legal fees often follow. Lost wages and benefits from the claim period may also be part of what you recover. Waiting time penalties under California Labor Code §203 can add on top of that.
Some employees can also bring claims under California's Private Attorneys General Act when the same violations affected coworkers. Our explainer on PAGA claims and wage disputes covers how that works in practice. If your job ends while a dispute is open, the rules around your final paycheck may also affect your claim. California's final pay requirements are strict and worth understanding.
Recovered wages can have tax effects as well. See our guide to overtime and taxes in California for details on how those amounts are treated. Keep records of your hours, your pay stubs, and any messages about extra work. Strong records can make a real difference in what you recover.
Frequently Asked Questions: Salaried Employee Overtime in California
These are the questions California employees ask most often when they suspect an overtime problem in their salaried role. The answers below are general in nature. Your specific facts may shift the outcome.
Does My Job Title Determine Whether I Am Owed Overtime in California?
Your job title does not decide your overtime rights under California law. Courts look at what you do each day and how you get paid, not your title. Consider an Operations Manager who spends 70 percent of their week doing line work. California gives that person the same overtime rights as the non-exempt employees on that floor.
What Does "Paid on a Salary Basis" Mean Under California Overtime Law?
In California, paid on a salary basis means you get the same fixed amount every pay period. That amount does not change no matter how many hours you work. If your employer cuts your pay for missed time, you may not pass the California salary basis test. The same applies if your employer charges back missed output. The same applies if your salary acts more like a base rate that goes up with hours.
Can a California Employer Require Salaried Employees to Work Overtime?
Yes, California employers can require salaried employees to work overtime, including nights, weekends, and on-call shifts. That does not change whether you are owed overtime pay for those hours. If you are non-exempt, your employer must track and pay those hours under California law.
Does a Bonus or Commission Plan Affect Overtime Exemption for Salaried Employees in California?
A bonus or commission plan does not make a salaried California employee exempt from overtime on its own. California still runs all three exemption tests on your role. A strong pay package on top of a base salary can hide misclassification rather than fix it. That is often true when the base salary and daily tasks would not hold up under close review.
Are Non-Exempt Salaried Employees Owed Overtime for After-Hours Work in California?
Non-exempt salaried employees in California earn pay for time spent on email, calls, or tasks outside regular hours. California law counts that time as hours worked. Every time an employer tells a non-exempt employee to handle something off the clock, it adds to unpaid wage debt.
How Do I Know If I Am Exempt or Non-Exempt Under California Overtime Law?
Start by checking your salary level, your salary basis, and your daily duties in that order. If any one of the three fails California's rules, you are non-exempt and owed overtime. When the answer is not clear, California law typically sides with the employee. The burden falls on your employer to prove the exemption applies.

Get a Free Case Evaluation for Unpaid Overtime in California
If you read this and saw yourself in it, that matters. The situation you face is exactly what California overtime law was built to fix. Working long weeks with no extra pay, and assuming salary means no recourse, is a misclassification pattern California courts see all the time.
The clock on these claims does run, and it matters. California has a statute of limitations on wage claims. The longer a claim goes unchecked, the more wages fall outside the window. Acting sooner is almost always in your interest.
A free case evaluation with Frontier Law Center costs nothing and commits you to nothing. During that call, an attorney will look at how the salary basis test, salary threshold, and duties test apply to your role. They will tell you if your employer's classification holds up under California law. They will also lay out what a clear path forward looks like based on your facts. You face no pressure after the call ends.
Frontier Law Center handles California overtime cases on a contingency basis. You pay no legal fees unless your case settles or wins. If you have put this question off because you were not sure it was worth asking, it is. Reach out to Frontier Law Center today and find out exactly where you stand.
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