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California Overtime Law: What Every Employer Needs to Know

California overtime law 2026 employer guide
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California has the most complex and employee-protective overtime law in the United States. California Labor Code and the Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Orders require overtime pay not just for weekly hours over 40, but for daily hours over 8, double time for daily hours over 12, and additional premiums for the seventh consecutive day of a workweek. In 2026, California's statewide minimum wage is $16.90 per hour, setting the minimum daily overtime floor at $25.35 and the minimum double time floor at $33.80. California also has the Private Attorneys General Act -- commonly called PAGA -- which allows employees to sue on behalf of all similarly situated workers for civil penalties assessed on every pay period of every affected employee. In practice, PAGA means that a systematic overtime error affecting a hundred employees over a year can generate liability that dwarfs the underlying unpaid wages many times over. California's industries -- Silicon Valley technology, Los Angeles entertainment, statewide agriculture, healthcare anchored by Kaiser Permanente and Sutter Health, manufacturing, construction, and one of the largest retail and hospitality economies in the world -- each carry overtime compliance risks at a scale that no other state matches.

This guide covers California's 2026 overtime framework, the daily overtime and double time triggers, the seventh consecutive day rule, PAGA, who is exempt, the industries with the highest violation rates, and the specific mistakes California employers make most frequently.

Important: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. California wage law is among the most complex in the country and changes frequently. For guidance specific to your business in 2026, consult an employment attorney licensed in California.

California Overtime Law in 2026: The Full Framework

California overtime has four separate triggers. Hours cannot be double-counted, but each trigger applies independently:

TriggerHours WorkedRate
Daily overtimeOver 8 hours in a workday1.5x regular rate
Weekly overtimeOver 40 hours in a workweek (hours not already counted as daily OT)1.5x regular rate
Daily double timeOver 12 hours in a workday2x regular rate
Seventh consecutive day -- first 8 hoursFirst 8 hours on the 7th consecutive day of a workweek1.5x regular rate
Seventh consecutive day -- over 8 hoursAll hours over 8 on the 7th consecutive day2x regular rate

The daily overtime trigger is the most commonly missed California rule: An employee who works a single 10-hour shift on Monday is owed 2 hours of overtime for that day alone -- regardless of how few hours they work the rest of the week. California employers who only track weekly totals and never calculate daily overtime are violating California Labor Code on every shift that exceeds 8 hours across their entire workforce.

California Minimum Wage and Overtime in 2026

Rate BasisRegular1.5x OT2x Double Time
California statewide minimum (2026)$16.90/hr$25.35/hr$33.80/hr
Fast food (AB 1228)$20.00/hr$30.00/hr$40.00/hr
Los Angeles City (verify for 2026)Higher rate1.5x applicable rate2x applicable rate
San Francisco (verify for 2026)Higher rate1.5x applicable rate2x applicable rate
Example: San Jose software QA (non-exempt)$35.00/hr$58.85/hr$70.00/hr

Local minimum wages in 2026: Dozens of California cities and counties have minimum wages above the state floor. Employers must use the applicable local minimum wage -- not the statewide rate -- as the overtime calculation base for employees working in those jurisdictions. Verify current local rates with the California Department of Industrial Relations for 2026.

The Seventh Consecutive Day Rule

If a non-exempt California employee works all seven days of a workweek, the seventh day carries mandatory premium pay:

The Alternative Workweek Schedule

California employers may establish an alternative workweek schedule (AWS) through a formal election process that allows longer daily shifts without triggering daily overtime. A common AWS is four 10-hour days. The AWS election requires a secret ballot vote by two-thirds of affected employees in a work unit, advance notice, a written agreement, filing with the California Department of Industrial Relations, and compliance with IWC Wage Order requirements. Daily overtime on hours beyond the agreed AWS schedule still applies, and any hours over 40 in the workweek still trigger overtime.

AWS elections must be done correctly: California employers who informally operate employees on 4x10 or similar schedules without a properly conducted and filed AWS election are not shielded from daily overtime. Many California employers mistakenly believe that employee agreement to a longer daily schedule eliminates the daily overtime obligation. Without a compliant AWS election, daily overtime applies on every shift beyond 8 hours regardless of employee agreement.

Who Is Exempt from California Overtime

California Exemptions -- Stricter Than Federal FLSA

California's overtime exemptions are significantly more restrictive than the federal FLSA. The primary difference: California's executive, administrative, and professional exemptions require that the employee spend more than 50 percent of their working time actually performing exempt duties -- not merely that exempt work is the primary duty as under the federal standard.

California salary threshold in 2026: Exempt employees must be paid a monthly salary of at least two times the California state minimum wage for full-time employment. At $16.90/hour state minimum in 2026, the annual salary threshold is approximately $70,304 ($16.90 x 2 x 2,080 hours). Verify the exact current threshold with the California DIR for 2026.

ExemptionCalifornia 2026 Requirements
ExecutiveMore than 50% of time managing; regularly directing 2+ employees; hire/fire authority; monthly salary at least 2x state minimum wage
AdministrativeMore than 50% of time on office/non-manual work related to management or general business operations with genuine discretion and independent judgment; salary threshold
Professional (learned)More than 50% of time on work requiring advanced knowledge through prolonged intellectual instruction; salary threshold
Computer professionalAt least $58.85/hour or $122,573.13/year (verify exact 2026 rate with DIR); specific listed duties; cannot rely on federal exemption rate
Outside salesMore than 50% of time making sales away from employer's place of business; no salary threshold required
Licensed physicians, attorneysSpecific professional exemptions apply
Commissioned sales (retail/service)Earnings must exceed 1.5x minimum wage and more than half from commissions

PAGA -- California's Systemic Enforcement Mechanism

The Private Attorneys General Act (California Labor Code Section 2698 et seq.) is the most consequential feature of California overtime law for employers. PAGA allows any aggrieved employee to file a lawsuit as a proxy for the California Labor Commissioner and recover civil penalties for Labor Code violations on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated current and former employees.

PAGA penalties for overtime violations:

PAGA math in practice: A California employer with 200 non-exempt employees that has been miscalculating daily overtime for one year on biweekly pay cycles has had 26 pay periods of violations per employee. At $200 per employee per period for subsequent violations, that is $200 x 200 x 26 = $1,040,000 in PAGA penalties alone -- before any calculation of unpaid overtime wages, waiting time penalties, wage statement penalties, or attorney fees. PAGA is why California overtime compliance carries higher financial stakes than any other state.

California Overtime Calculation in 2026

Example: A Los Angeles warehouse worker earns $18 per hour and works Monday through Saturday as follows: Monday 10 hours, Tuesday 8 hours, Wednesday 9 hours, Thursday 8 hours, Friday 8 hours, Saturday 7 hours. Total: 50 hours.

Regular Rate Inclusions in California

California employers must include all of the following in the regular rate before applying overtime multipliers:

California Industries with High Overtime Violation Rates in 2026

Technology -- Silicon Valley, San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles Tech

California's technology sector -- including Apple, Google, Meta, Salesforce, and hundreds of thousands of startups and enterprise software companies -- is the largest in the world and one of the most significant sources of California overtime litigation in 2026. Technology overtime issues include:

Healthcare -- Kaiser Permanente, Sutter Health, Dignity Health, UCLA Health

California's healthcare sector in 2026 -- anchored by Kaiser Permanente, Sutter Health, Dignity Health, Providence, and the UC and county health systems -- employs one of the largest non-exempt workforces in the state. Healthcare overtime issues in California include:

Retail and Hospitality -- Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego

California's retail and hospitality sector -- including the hotel and resort economies of Los Angeles and San Francisco, theme parks, restaurants, and a massive retail footprint -- is one of the largest in the country and a consistent source of California overtime enforcement actions. Retail and hospitality issues include:

Agriculture -- Central Valley and Salinas Valley

California is the only state that provides full overtime protections for agricultural workers. Under AB 1066 (phased in through 2022), California agricultural workers receive the same daily and weekly overtime rights as all other California non-exempt employees. In 2026:

Manufacturing -- Los Angeles Basin and Bay Area

California's manufacturing sector -- aerospace, electronics, food processing, garment, and industrial manufacturing concentrated in the Los Angeles Basin and Bay Area -- operates on shift schedules that interact daily with California's overtime triggers. Manufacturing overtime issues include non-discretionary production bonuses and shift differentials in the regular rate, daily overtime on production shifts exceeding 8 hours, and misclassification of working supervisors as exempt executives.

Common California Overtime Mistakes in 2026

Not Calculating Daily Overtime

The most common and most expensive California overtime mistake is only tracking weekly hours. In 2026, every shift over 8 hours triggers California daily overtime, and every shift over 12 hours triggers double time -- regardless of weekly total. A California employer with 100 employees who work one 10-hour shift per week and calculates only weekly overtime is generating 100 daily overtime violations per week, 5,200 per year, before PAGA multipliers are applied.

Operating a 4x10 Schedule Without a Compliant AWS Election

California employers who schedule employees on four 10-hour days without conducting a compliant alternative workweek schedule election are liable for daily overtime on the 2 daily hours over 8 for every employee on every shift. The AWS election process is strict -- a written agreement alone is not sufficient. The secret ballot, two-thirds vote, advance notice, written agreement, and DIR filing requirements must all be satisfied.

Ignoring PAGA Exposure on Systematic Errors

California employers who discover an overtime calculation error and treat it as a back-pay correction without analyzing PAGA exposure are underestimating their liability in 2026. Any systematic overtime error that affected multiple employees for multiple pay periods carries PAGA penalty exposure that must be analyzed separately from the underlying wages owed.

Using the Wrong Minimum Wage Base

California employers who calculate minimum overtime rates using the statewide $16.90 floor instead of an applicable higher local minimum wage are underpaying employees who work in cities with local minimum wages above the state floor. In Los Angeles, San Francisco, and other high-minimum jurisdictions, this error produces larger per-hour underpayments and larger PAGA exposure than the same error in the rest of the state.

Excluding Non-Discretionary Bonuses from the Regular Rate

California technology, manufacturing, and retail employers who pay non-discretionary bonuses must include those amounts in the regular rate before applying overtime multipliers. In California, that error is multiplied across daily, weekly, and potential seventh-day calculations -- and then multiplied again through PAGA penalties on every affected pay period.

Misclassifying Non-Exempt Employees Under California's 50-Percent Rule

California employers who classify employees as exempt without confirming that the employee spends more than 50 percent of their actual working time on genuinely exempt duties are misapplying the California exemption standard. Job titles and job descriptions are not determinative. California courts examine what the employee actually does with their time.

How Updoot Helps California Employers Stay Compliant in 2026

Updoot handles the time tracking requirements that matter most for California employers in 2026 -- including the daily overtime and double time triggers that catch most California employers off guard.

Daily and Weekly Overtime -- All California Triggers

Updoot tracks hours at the daily level and flags California's three overtime thresholds independently: daily overtime after 8 hours, daily double time after 12 hours, and weekly overtime after 40 hours. For California employers where a single extended shift triggers daily overtime regardless of weekly totals, the correct calculation runs automatically on every day and every workweek.

Seventh Consecutive Day Tracking

Updoot tracks consecutive workdays within the defined workweek and flags when an employee reaches a seventh consecutive day. The first 8 hours are automatically calculated at 1.5x and hours beyond 8 at 2x -- before payroll locks, not after an audit discovers the violation.

Regular Rate Accuracy for Bonuses, Commissions, and Differentials

Updoot tracks base pay and additional compensation separately so the correct blended regular rate is available before overtime multipliers are applied. California technology, manufacturing, and retail employers with non-discretionary bonuses, commissions, and shift differentials get accurate daily and weekly overtime figures -- eliminating the regular rate errors that trigger PAGA exposure on every affected pay period.

Overtime Alerts Before Payroll Locks

Managers receive alerts when employees approach the daily 8-hour threshold, the 12-hour double time threshold, and the 40-hour weekly threshold. For California employers where PAGA penalties attach to every pay period of every affected employee, preventing violations from occurring is exponentially more cost-effective than correcting them after the fact.

GPS-Verified Records for DLSE and PAGA Defense

Every punch is GPS-verified and timestamped. California employees can pursue claims through the Labor Commissioner, PAGA lawsuits, class actions, and the federal DOL simultaneously. Complete, GPS-verified time records for every employee for every day are the foundation for defending any California wage claim -- and for demonstrating that a PAGA plaintiff's claims are not representative of a systematic violation across the workforce.

Related Reading

Colorado Overtime Laws: What Every Employer Needs to Know →

Washington Overtime Laws: What Every Employer Needs to Know →

Oregon Overtime Laws: What Every Employer Needs to Know →

Frequently Asked Questions About California Overtime Law in 2026

What is California overtime law in 2026?
California overtime law requires non-exempt employees to receive 1.5 times their regular rate for all hours worked over 8 in a single workday, all hours worked over 40 in a workweek, and the first 8 hours on the seventh consecutive day of a workweek. Double time (2 times the regular rate) is required for all hours worked over 12 in a single workday and all hours worked over 8 on the seventh consecutive day of a workweek. California Labor Code and the Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Orders govern overtime. The California Labor Commissioner enforces state wage laws.
What is California's minimum wage in 2026?
California's statewide minimum wage is $16.90 per hour in 2026. The minimum daily overtime rate at state minimum wage is $25.35 per hour (1.5x). The minimum double time rate is $33.80 per hour (2x). Some local jurisdictions -- including Los Angeles, San Francisco, and San Jose -- have higher minimum wages that must be used as the overtime calculation base for employees working in those jurisdictions. The fast food industry minimum wage is $20 per hour under AB 1228.
When does daily overtime apply in California?
California daily overtime applies at 1.5 times the regular rate for every hour worked over 8 in a single workday, regardless of weekly total hours. Double time applies at 2 times the regular rate for every hour worked over 12 in a single workday. California employers who only track weekly hours and ignore the daily triggers are violating California Labor Code on every shift that exceeds 8 hours, even if the employee works fewer than 40 total hours that week.
What is the California seventh consecutive day rule?
California requires that non-exempt employees who work all seven days of a workweek receive overtime at 1.5 times the regular rate for the first 8 hours worked on the seventh consecutive day, and double time (2 times the regular rate) for all hours worked beyond 8 on that seventh day. The seventh consecutive day rule applies regardless of how many total hours were worked during the workweek.
Who is exempt from overtime in California?
California exemptions are stricter than federal FLSA exemptions. California's executive, administrative, and professional exemptions require that the employee be primarily engaged in exempt work (more than 50 percent of their time) and be paid a monthly salary of at least two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment. California also has specific exemptions for licensed physicians, licensed attorneys, certain computer professionals (at a high hourly rate), outside salespersons, and certain commissioned sales employees in retail or service establishments. California's exemption standards are significantly more restrictive than the federal salary-plus-duties test.
What are California's wage statement requirements?
California Labor Code Section 226 requires that every wage statement issued to an employee include: gross wages earned, total hours worked, the number of piece-rate units earned, deductions, net wages, pay period dates, employee name and last four digits of Social Security number, employer name and address, and hourly rates in effect and hours worked at each rate. Failure to provide accurate wage statements is a separate violation from underpayment of overtime and carries statutory penalties of up to $4,000 per employee.
What damages are available for unpaid overtime in California?
California employees who are owed unpaid overtime may recover: the unpaid overtime wages, interest, and waiting time penalties if wages were not paid at separation (one day of wages per day of delay, up to 30 days under Labor Code Section 203), wage statement penalties under Labor Code Section 226, civil penalties under the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) which can be brought on behalf of all similarly situated employees, and attorney fees. California's PAGA mechanism makes systematic overtime violations extraordinarily expensive because PAGA penalties can be assessed for every pay period of every affected employee.
What is PAGA and how does it affect California overtime compliance?
California's Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) allows employees to sue on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated current and former employees to collect civil penalties for Labor Code violations, including overtime violations. PAGA penalties can be assessed for every pay period of every affected employee going back one year from the PAGA notice. For a company with 100 employees that has been miscalculating overtime for one year on bi-weekly pay periods, that is up to 2,600 individual penalty assessments before any calculation of unpaid wages. PAGA is the primary reason California overtime compliance carries the highest financial stakes of any state in the country.

Stay Compliant with California Overtime Law in 2026.

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