Economic Snapshot | Overtime

6.9 Million Women Would Directly Benefit from Raising the Overtime Salary Threshold to $50,440

Because their pay tends to be lower than men’s, women are especially likely to benefit from the Department of Labor’s proposed change to the rules governing overtime pay, which would require all salaried workers earning less than $50,440 a year in 2016 to be automatically entitled to time-and-a-half pay if they work more than 40 hours in a week. Currently, only workers paid a salary of $23,660 or less have this guarantee—workers paid more than $23,660 can be denied overtime pay under the current rules if their primary job duty is determined to be “executive, administrative, or professional.”

Economic Snapshot

6.9 million women would directly benefit from raising the overtime salary threshold to $50,440: Number of women and moms covered under current and proposed overtime salary threshold, 2014

Group Women without children Women with children
Currently covered 1,831,000 1,016,000
Newly covered 4,506,000  2,402,000
Total covered 6,337,000 3,418,000
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.

The sample reflects salaried (nonhourly) workers who are subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This excludes certain groups of workers such as the self-employed, most federal workers, religious workers, many agricultural workers, and many transportation workers.

Copy the code below to embed this chart on your website.

As the figure above shows, only 2.8 million salaried women earn less than the current overtime salary threshold of $23,660. Under the new rule, an additional 6.9 million women will have automatic overtime pay coverage, including 2.4 million women with children under the age of 18. Raising the overtime salary threshold to $50,440 will bring the total number of women eligible for overtime based on their salary alone to 9.8 million (or nearly 40 percent of the entire salaried female workforce). More than one-third of these women (3.4 million, or 13 percent of the entire salaried female workforce) have children.

Raising the overtime salary threshold to $50,440 in 2016 will directly benefit women by protecting their right to a limited work week and requiring that they be paid a premium for every extra hour they work beyond 40 hours in a week. This new rule will give some women higher pay for working overtime and others reduced hours without any reduction in pay. Additionally, it will benefit millions of women by giving them more time for commuting, community, family, and friends.


See related work on Women | Overtime

See more work by Ross Eisenbrey and Will Kimball