What Does Non-Exempt Mean?
Non-exempt is a classification under the Fair Labor Standards Act that entitles an employee to overtime pay and other wage protections. It is the default status for most American workers. An employee is non-exempt unless their employer can demonstrate that they meet all three requirements for exempt status: salary basis, salary level, and a qualifying duties test. When any one of those criteria is not met, the employee is non-exempt.
Non-exempt status is not a lesser designation. It simply describes a different set of rules. Non-exempt employees are entitled to meaningful legal protections that exempt employees are not: overtime pay, minimum wage guarantees, and detailed hour recordkeeping by their employer. HR Cloud's guide to non-exempt employees explains these protections in practical business terms.
|
Right/Protection |
Applies to Non-Exempt? |
Notes |
|
Overtime at 1.5x rate |
Yes |
For every hour over 40/week |
|
Federal minimum wage |
Yes |
Currently $7.25/hr federal; states vary |
|
Accurate time records kept by employer |
Yes |
FLSA-mandated employer obligation |
|
Off-the-clock work protection |
Yes |
Cannot work unpaid, even voluntarily |
|
Rest and meal break protections |
State-dependent |
Many states have specific requirements |
|
Salary reduction for partial-day absence |
Yes (permitted) |
Exempt employees cannot be docked this way |
Most hourly workers are non-exempt by default because hourly pay does not satisfy the salary basis test for exemption. Salaried workers earning below the federal threshold ($35,568 annually) are also non-exempt regardless of their job duties. And salaried workers earning above the threshold can still be non-exempt if their primary job duties don't qualify for one of the recognized exemption categories.
Common non-exempt roles include production workers, customer service representatives, administrative assistants whose duties are primarily clerical, most retail associates, and many healthcare support roles like CNAs and medical assistants. HR Cloud's healthcare HR platform helps employers manage large non-exempt clinical and support workforces accurately.
Track all hours worked, including pre- and post-shift duties, mandatory training, and travel between job sites.
Pay overtime for every hour worked beyond 40 in a workweek, without exception or offset against hours in prior or subsequent weeks.
Maintain accurate time and pay records for a minimum of three years. HR Cloud's time tracking tools automate this recordkeeping.
Comply with state-specific break and meal period requirements for non-exempt employees on qualifying shift lengths.
Never allow or require off-the-clock work. Work performed must be compensated, whether authorized or not.
Build overtime authorization workflows. Non-exempt employees who work unauthorized overtime must still be paid, but you can require prior approval.
Integrate time tracking with payroll through HR Cloud's HRIS platform to eliminate manual timesheet entry errors.
Provide written notice to non-exempt employees about their rights, including how to report missed breaks or unpaid work.
Review state-specific rules for every location where you employ non-exempt workers. Requirements vary significantly.
Treating 'hourly' and 'non-exempt' as interchangeable terms: While most hourly workers are non-exempt, the classification is about FLSA criteria, not pay structure.
Failing to pay for all time worked, including time spent donning and doffing required uniforms or equipment.
Not maintaining time records for salaried non-exempt workers: The salary does not remove the employer's FLSA recordkeeping obligation.
Construction, manufacturing, retail, hospitality, and healthcare all employ primarily non-exempt workforces. HR Cloud's tools for managing these workforces are purpose-built for environments where accurate time tracking, overtime management, and compliance documentation are daily operational requirements, not periodic administrative tasks.
The share of the American workforce classified as non-exempt is not shrinking. Growing enforcement activity, pay transparency laws, and expanding state-level protections are making non-exempt workforce management increasingly complex. Organizations that invest in the right technology infrastructure now will handle that complexity efficiently. Those that rely on manual timekeeping and informal oversight will accumulate compliance risk they cannot easily quantify until it becomes a claim.