Overtime Calculator
Work out your overtime and total weekly pay — and confirm your overtime multiplier meets the federal FLSA 1.5× minimum.
Regular vs overtime pay
How you compare
🧮 Payroll & time-tracking tools
Check it outTime-and-a-half, by the rule
Federal law sets a floor: non-exempt workers earn at least 1.5× their regular rate beyond 40 hours in a week. This adds your overtime to regular pay, shows the blended effective rate for the week, and checks your multiplier against that FLSA minimum — useful whether you’re an employee verifying a paycheck or an employer costing a schedule.
How it’s calculated
Regular pay = rate × regular hours. Overtime pay = rate × multiplier × overtime hours. Total = the two combined; effective rate = total ÷ all hours worked.
Results update as you type and are estimates, not professional advice — verify important decisions with a qualified professional.
Worked example
At $22/hr with 40 regular hours and 10 overtime hours at 1.5×, overtime pay is $330, on top of $880 regular — $1,210 for the week, a $24.20 effective rate.
Common mistakes
- Applying overtime to the wrong base (it’s the regular rate, including some bonuses).
- Assuming salaried always means no overtime — it depends on exemption tests.
- Ignoring stricter state rules like daily overtime or double-time.
Where it is used
- Checking a paycheck includes correct overtime.
- Costing extra hours before approving them.
- Comparing offers with different overtime policies.
Frequently asked questions
What is the FLSA overtime rule?
Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, non-exempt employees must be paid at least 1.5× their regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek. Some states add daily overtime or double-time rules.
How is time-and-a-half calculated?
Multiply your regular hourly rate by 1.5, then by the number of overtime hours. Add that to your regular pay for the week.
Does everyone get overtime?
No — exempt employees (often salaried roles meeting certain duties and salary tests) may not qualify. This estimates pay for non-exempt, hourly work.
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