DOL explains that employers don’t have to classify employees as exempt (“salaried”)
Employers are allowed to classify some employees as exempt from the minimum wage and overtime provisions of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) if those employees meet certain criteria. Those employees must, however, meet all the criteria. Simply having a job that could fall under part of the criteria isn’t enough.
An employee learned this from the U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL) Wage and Hour Division (WHD) early this year when the agency published an opinion letter.
The question
The employee, whose job fell under the learned professional exemption under the FLSA (Licensed Clinical Social Worker), asked the WHD if their employer could reclassify them from an exempt to a nonexempt status, despite their belief that they continue to satisfy the educational and job duties criteria of an exempt learned professional under the FLSA.
The WHD said “yes.” Here’s why.
For an employer to classify an employee as exempt, the employee must:
- Be paid on a salary basis,
- Be paid at least the minimum salary threshold, and
- Meet certain duties tests.
The employer in question went through an internal restructuring and reclassified the employee as hourly (nonexempt) and removed her supervisory duties. It was the lack of supervisor responsibilities that caused the employer to reclassify the employee.
The employee felt that, because the job duties for a professional exemption were still intact, the employee should remain exempt.
The answer
The WHD said that the lack of supervisor duties wasn’t the issue. The employee was being paid by the hour, and that would cause the employee to no longer be exempt.
The WHD went on to say that even if all the criteria for an FLSA exemption are met, the employer—not the employee — determines the exemption. Employers don’t have to classify any employee as exempt. In fact, all employees (even high-level executives) can be classified as nonexempt. The nonexempt status is the baseline. Employers may only classify employees as exempt if the criteria are met and they want to assign that classification.
Key to remember: Employees must be paid on a salary basis to be considered exempt, along with meeting other criteria. Employers don’t have to classify employees as exempt, even if they meet the criteria.














































