The New 2025 DOL Final Rule on Overtime: How to Properly Calculate Overtime Due To Your Workers
Live Webinar
75 Minutes
May 13, 2025
01 : 00 PM EST
4 Days Left
Although the rules on exempt vs non-exempt employees have changed a few times in the past 10 years, overtime worked is, and has always been, overtime earned. THERE ARE NO EXCEPTIONS. But 1.5 times a worker's hourly rate of pay is just the start of calculating overtime earned. This course is designed as a refresher on what hours and payments are considered in calculating overtime pay.
Areas Covered in the Session:-
The basics of overtime as established in the FLSA, including:
An overview of exempt vs non-exempt workers
Definitions of overtime hours, workweek, and more
Employers NOT covered by the FLSA
State definitions for hours worked, exempt employees, and more
Work time that is included or excluded from hours that count toward overtime, including:
Breaks
Time away from the office
Travel
Pre- and post-shift work
Training
What qualifies as a work week, and what doesn't
How to calculate overtime due with shift differential,s work week changes
What payments count toward the "regular rate of pay"
How to calculatethe regular rate of pay in unusual circumstances
How to take into account pay that happens outside the normal payday for weeks worked overtime
And much more, including numerical examples.
Why You Should Attend:-
THE DOL issued its new final rule on exempt workers. The Rule increases salary thresholds for all employees who can be considered exempt from overtime. Learn exactly what the new amounts are and other information from the rule.
If your employee works more than 40 hrs in a workweek (or over 8 hrs in a day in some states), they have earned overtime of at least 1.5 times their hourly rate of pay (HRP). Do you know all types of payments that carry an overtime premium? If not, join Mark Schwartz in this informative webinar designed for the seasoned payroll professional to properly analyze compliance with overtime regulations and help their CFO properly budget payroll expenses.
You will also find the answers to the following questions, and more:
What hours worked qualify for paid wages, and which don't? Which qualify for overtime premiums, and which don't
What fringe benefits and supplemental payments should be counted toward the hourly rate of pay?
Are there any restrictions on setting work weeks?
How do you account for shift differentials, when an employee's workweek changes, etc?
Do payments made after a regular pay day need to be applied to weeks wherein overtime was worked?
What states have overtime rules that are different than the minimums set by the Fair Labor Standards Act
Who Will Benefit:-
Budgeting Personnel
Payroll Personnel and Management
HR Managers
Department Managers and Budget Personnel
Timekeepers
Financial Dept Personnel.
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