## Overtime pay in Delaware
The federal **Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)** sets minimum overtime rules — but Delaware can (and sometimes does) require more.
### Delaware overtime
Federal FLSA only.
## Federal FLSA basics
**Standard rule:** non-exempt employees must be paid 1.5x regular rate for all hours over 40 in a single workweek.
**"Workweek"** is a fixed, recurring 7-day period — does NOT have to be Sunday-Saturday or pay-period-aligned.
## Who's exempt from overtime
**Executive exemption** — salaried at $684+/week, primary duty managing, directs 2+ employees, hire/fire authority
**Administrative exemption** — salaried, office or non-manual work directly related to management or general business operations + discretion + judgment
**Professional exemption** — learned or creative professional, salaried at threshold
**Computer professional** — salaried OR $27.63+/hour, specific computer duties
**Outside sales** — primary duty making sales, customarily away from employer's place
## Misclassification — the big issue
Most overtime cases involve misclassification:
- Salaried ≠ exempt (must also meet duties test)
- "Manager" titles that don't actually manage
- Computer workers misclassified
- Independent contractors who are really employees
- Restaurant managers primarily doing line work
If misclassified, employees can recover unpaid overtime for prior 2-3 years.
## Calculating regular rate
Overtime is calculated on regular rate — more than just hourly wage:
- All non-discretionary bonuses included
- Commissions included
- Shift differentials included
- Excludes: discretionary bonuses, gifts, expense reimbursements
## Common overtime violations
- **Off-the-clock work** — pre-shift, post-shift, lunch period
- **Working through breaks** without comp
- **"Comp time" instead of overtime** — generally illegal in private sector
- **Averaging hours** across two weeks (illegal — must be calculated weekly)
- **Misclassifying as exempt or contractor**
- **Failing to include bonuses in regular rate**
- **Donning / doffing safety gear** uncounted
- **Travel time** misclassified
- **Training time** uncounted
- **After-hours emails / calls**
## Damages
- **Back wages** for unpaid overtime
- **Liquidated damages** equal to back wages (effectively doubles)
- **Attorney's fees** — fee-shifting under FLSA
- **Statute of limitations:** 2 years (3 for willful violations)
## Filing a claim
Two paths:
1. **Wage and Hour Division of U.S. DOL** — investigates and seeks back wages
2. **Private lawsuit** — typically faster, can recover attorney's fees + liquidated damages
Many cases proceed as **collective actions** (FLSA § 216(b)) — opt-in class actions.
## What you should do
If you suspect overtime violations in Delaware: keep your own time records, don't sign release agreements without review, contact an employment attorney. Most Delaware wage-and-hour attorneys work on contingency. Fee-shifting means you typically pay nothing out of pocket.
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*This guide is general information about federal FLSA and Delaware law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Overtime rules have many exemptions and edge cases. Talk to a licensed Delaware employment attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.