Exempt and non-exempt are two classifications under the Fair Labor Standards Act that decide whether a worker is owed overtime. Non-exempt employees must receive overtime pay for hours over 40 in a workweek. Exempt employees are not entitled to overtime, no matter how many hours they work.
The classification controls overtime eligibility and several other wage protections. A non-exempt employee earns overtime at 1.5 times their regular rate once they pass 40 hours in a week. An exempt employee does not earn overtime at all, because they are paid for the role rather than for each hour.
The label is not about job title, prestige, or whether someone happens to be salaried. It depends on how the worker is paid and what they actually do, measured against specific tests written into the FLSA. This is a frequent source of confusion, because many people assume a salary automatically means exempt. It does not.
To be classified as exempt, an employee generally has to pass three tests:
Failing any one of these usually makes the worker non-exempt and therefore eligible for overtime. The duties test is the one employers most often get wrong, because it looks at what an employee really does day to day, not the title on the org chart. A high salary alone is not enough; the responsibilities have to match the legal definition. The number of full-time hours a company sets internally does not change any of this.
The FLSA defines several white-collar exemptions, each with its own duties requirements:
A worker has to genuinely fit one of these to be exempt under it. Giving someone a manager title without real managerial duties, for example, does not make them exempt.
Getting classification right has real financial stakes. Misclassifying a non-exempt worker as exempt to avoid paying overtime is one of the most common and expensive wage-and-hour violations. When it surfaces, often through a complaint or a Department of Labor audit, the employer can owe years of unpaid overtime, liquidated damages, and penalties.
For employees, the classification shapes their entire pay experience. Non-exempt workers usually track their hours closely and are paid for every one, including overtime. Exempt workers trade that hour-by-hour protection for a steady salary and, often, more flexibility. Neither is inherently better, but the rules are not optional, and both sides benefit when the classification is accurate.
Non-exempt employees must receive overtime pay for hours over 40 in a workweek. Exempt employees are not entitled to overtime, regardless of how many hours they work.
Not by itself. To be exempt, an employee must be paid on a salary basis above a set threshold and perform specific executive, administrative, or professional duties.
Yes. A worker can be paid a salary and still be non-exempt, meaning they are owed overtime when they work more than 40 hours in a week.
The employer classifies each role, but the classification must hold up against the FLSA salary and duties tests. Getting it wrong can trigger back pay and penalties regardless of the title used.
The most common white-collar exemptions are executive, administrative, professional, computer employee, and outside sales. Each has its own duties requirements under the FLSA.