Must employers pay for pump breaks?
The Providing Urgent Maternal Protections for Nursing Mothers (PUMP) Act, which became part of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), requires covered employers to provide time and a private space for nursing employees to pump breast milk.
Some employees might need to pump beyond the usual meal and break times. If so, do employers need to pay them for those extended or additional breaks?
The frequency and duration of breaks needed to express milk will vary among nursing employees. One employee might need only two breaks each day, while another might need five, or even more.
Under the FLSA, when an employee is using break time at work to express breast milk, they must either be:
- Completely relieved from duty; or
- Paid for the break time.
If employers provide paid breaks, they must pay employees who use such breaks to pump in the same way they pay other employees for breaks.
If employees take pump breaks beyond what the employer usually provides, employers don’t have to pay the employees for the additional time, unless the employee works during the breaks.
To illustrate
Mallory works at a manufacturing company. Her employer provides all employees with two paid 15-minute rest breaks each day and a 30-minute unpaid lunch break. Mallory chooses to use both the paid 15-minute breaks and the unpaid 30-minute lunch break to pump breast milk for her 6-month-old infant.
Mallory is already using her breaks to pump. If she needs breaks in addition to these, the employer doesn’t have to pay for the additional break time as long as Mallory does not perform any work during the breaks.
Undue hardship
Employers with fewer than 50 employees aren’t subject to the FLSA break time and space requirements if they pose an undue hardship. Whether they would be an undue hardship is determined by looking at the difficulty or expense for a specific employer in relation to the employer’s:
- Size,
- Financial resources,
- Nature of the business, and
- Company structure.
Employers must count all employees who work for the covered employer, regardless of work site, when determining whether this exemption may apply.
Key to remember: Employers don’t have to pay employees for extra pump breaks if employees perform no work during the extra breaks.