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HOME > ARTICLES > WAGE HOUR LAWS > EXEMPT EMPLOYEES AND NON EXEMPT EMPLOYEES

Payroll Articles
Exempt Employees & Nonexempt Employees

All Employees in your business must be classified by you as either Exempt Employees or Nonexempt Employeesfor purposes of complying with the. Based on the criteria set out by the law, you can determine which classification is appropriate for each of your Employees.

What does "Exempt" mean? When an Employee is Exempt from the FLSA, it means that Employee is not entitled to the benefits and protections of the FLSA, and you, as an employer, are not subject to its rules for that Employee. That means that an Exempt Employees may not have to be paid minimum wage or paid in accordance with the overtime requirements specified by the FLSA, for example.

What does Nonexempt mean? When an Employee is classified as Nonexempt, it means that the Employee is entitled to a minimum wage, and overtime pay at the rate of time and one-half the regular rate for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours per week, as well as other protections under child labor and equal pay as prescribed by the FLSA.

If you want to treat an Employee as Exempt, you must pay him or her a salary. Employees who are paid by hourly wage are automatically considered to be Nonexempt. However, you can have Nonexempt Employeesemployers who are paid by salary.

Which Employees are considered "Exempt?" An exemption from the minimum wage, equal pay, overtime pay and child labor provisions of the FLSA applies to:

An exemption from the minimum wage, equal pay, and overtime requirements of the FLSA (but not the child labor laws) applies to:

An exemption from the minimum wage and overtime laws (but not the equal pay or child labor laws) applies to: