The minimum salary for exempt employees is $47,476 per year.
To qualify as an exempt employee, you must be paid on a salary basis rather than by the hour. To do this, your employer must pay you at least $47,476 per year. That’s how much the Department of Labor says is a fair minimum for someone working full-time for 50 weeks a year.
If you make less than that salary, but have been doing so for at least a year and are classified as exempt by your employer, then you may be eligible to file a claim against them in federal court alleging they have misclassified you as an exempt employee when they should not have done so.
Minimum Annual Salary For Exempt Employees
Of course, this calculator presents a simplified version of California law and it should not be relied on as legal advice. There are many exceptions and caveats to the minimum salary requirement. The rules that apply to California’s minimum salary are explained in more detail below.
Chapter 1
The Definition of “Exempt Employee” in California
Most California employees are entitled to certain important rights. Those include:
- The right to be paid at least the minimum wage;
- The right to overtime wages when they work more than eight hours in a workday, more than 40 hours in a workweek, or seven consecutive days; and
- The right to meal and rest breaks when their shifts exceed a certain duration.
Some employees, however, are exempt from some or all of these legal protections, as well as related laws. In most cases, there are three simple requirements to determine whether a worker is an exempt employee under state law:
- Minimum Salary. The employee must be paid a salary that is at least twice California’s minimum wage for full-time employment.
- White-Collar Duties. The employee’s primary duties must consist of administrative, executive, or professional tasks.
- Independent Judgment. The employee’s job duties must involve the use of discretion and independent judgment.
If all three requirements are met, the employee will usually be classified as “exempt” from overtime, minimum wage, and rest break requirements (but not meal break requirements).
Chapter 2
The Requirement of a Salary Generally
In most cases, employees must be paid a salary to qualify as an exempt employee. Employees who are paid an hourly wage are usually considered non-exempt. (Although there are a number of job-specific exemptions that apply to certain types of hourly employees, like commissioned employees, outside salespersons, and computer professionals.)
A salary, for these purposes, is a fixed minimum payment of wages that is paid regardless of hours worked or the amount or quality of work performed. Employees who are paid an hourly wage cannot be classified as exempt employees—even if their work consists primarily of job duties that would otherwise be considered exempt.
A salary that is tied to the number of hours worked, with no minimum guarantee, is treated as the payment of hourly wages and will not satisfy the exemption’s salary requirement.
Chapter 3
The Minimum Required Salary Amount
To meet the salary test, an employee must be paid a monthly salary that is at least twice the state minimum wage for full-time employment.
“Full-time employment,” for these purposes, is defined as 40 hours per week. And the phrase “monthly salary” refers to the amount of wages paid in a month, not to the frequency of payment—most employees are entitled to be paid twice a month.
In 2022, people that work for an employer with 25 or fewer employees are entitled to be paid a minimum wage of at least $14.00 per hour. People that work for an employer with more than 25 employees are entitled to be paid a minimum wage of at least $15.00 per hour.
This means that the minimum salary for exempt employees in 2022 is either:
- $4,853.34 per month (or $58,240.00 annually) if the employee works for an employer of 25 or fewer people, or
- $5,200.00 per month (or $62,400.00 annually) if the employee works for an employer of more than 25 people.
These numbers are calculated by doubling the applicable minimum wage, multiplying that amount by 40 hours per week, the result of which is then multiplied by 52 weeks and divided by 12 months. This calculation gives us a monthly salary that is equal to twice the state minimum wage for full-time employment.
Importantly, California’s minimum wage is set to increase every year on January 1st until 2023. This means that the minimum salary for exempt employees in California will also be increasing annually.
Applicable Year | Employers with 25 or Fewer Employees | Employers with More Than 25 Employees |
---|---|---|
2015 | $37,440 | $37,440 |
2016 | $41,600 | $41,600 |
2017 | $41,600 | $43,680 |
2018 | $43,680 | $45,760 |
2019 | $45,760 | $49,920 |
2020 | $49,920 | $54,080 |
2021 | $54,080 | $58,240 |
2022 | $58,240 | $62,400 |
For more information about California’s minimum wage, please read our article: Guide to California’s Minimum Wage Laws in 2022 and Beyond.
Disciplinary Salary Deductions
Under federal law, docking an employee’s salary as a disciplinary action may nullify an employer’s classification of the employee as exempt.
In California, however, “docking” a salary as a disciplinary action should never happen. “Docking” wages for disciplinary reasons is contrary to California’s policy that an employer must pay, without deduction except for those authorized by law, the full wages an employee has earned.
On the other hand, docking a salary for missing full days of work due to a disciplinary suspension will not cause a loss of exempt status unless the remaining salary earned during the month in which the deduction was made causes the monthly salary to fall below the threshold required for exempt employee status.
Salary Deductions for Absences
In calculating an employee’s salary for the purposes of the salary test for exempt employees, employers are permitted to deduct any unpaid vacation days or personal days that are taken by the employee. Importantly, however, the deductions must reflect a full day of pay due to absence from work.
When deductions are made from a salary for missing less than a full of work, the employee cannot be classified as exempt. Docking an employee’s pay for missing less than a full day of work amounts to treating the employee as an hourly employee, rather than a salaried employee.
Requiring exempt employees to use annual vacation or leave time when they miss work, even if they are absent for only part of a day, will not usually affect an employee’s exempt status. When leave or vacation time has been exhausted, however, deducting pay for missing a partial day of work would require the employer to treat the employee as nonexempt.
Chapter 4
Job-Specific Exemptions
The discussion above has focused on the three most commonly-exempt employees (professionals, executives, and administrators). There are, however, a handful of other occupations that are exempt from some or all of California’s labor laws. The minimum salary, among other requirements, may differ from the general exemption test above. Several of the more common exemptions are discussed below.
Commissioned Employees
Employees who are paid on a commission basis are sometimes exempt from California’s overtime pay laws. To qualify for this exemption, the following requirements must be met:
- The employee’s earnings are more than one-and-a-half times the minimum wage.
- Commission payments constitute more than half of the employee’s total compensation.
- They work in either: the retail industry, or a professional, technical, or clerical occupation.
Commissions are wage payments that an employee is entitled to as a result of sales they make. In a commission-based arrangement, the size of the employee’s compensation depends on the amount or value of the thing that was sold.
A discretionary payment that an employer can choose to pay or withhold, such as a performance bonus, is not a commission even if it is computed as a percentage of sales or profits.
Physicians and Surgeons
Licensed physicians and surgeons are sometimes exempt for the purposes of overtime compensation. To fall under this exemption, the physician or surgeon must:
- Be paid at an hourly rate of at least $84.79 per hour.
- Perform, as their primary duties, tasks that require them to be licensed.
The applicability of this exemption is limited. Medical interns and residents do not qualify. Nor do physicians covered by certain types of collective bargaining agreements.
Computer Professionals
Employees in the computer software field are sometimes exempt for the purposes of overtime compensation. To qualify for this exemption, the following requirements must be met:
- The employee must be primarily engaged in work that is intellectual or creative.
- The employee’s primary duties must require the exercise of discretion and independent judgment.
- The employee must be highly skilled in a field of computer systems analysis, programming, or software engineering.
- The employee’s primary duties must involve designing or developing computer hardware or software.
- If the employee is hourly, they must be paid at least $46.55 per hour.
- If the employee is salaried, they must earn at least $96,968.33 per year.
Private School Teachers
Many teachers are exempt under the professional exemption described above. But some teachers at private schools are exempt even if they don’t meet those requirements. Instead, they will be considered exempt if:
- They teach students who are in kindergarten or any of grades 1 through 12,
- They earn at least twice the state’s minimum wage, and
- They hold a baccalaureate degree (or higher) from an accredited institution of higher learning, or they meet the requirements for a teaching credential from California or any other state.
Outside Salespersons
Employees who are considered “outside salespersons” are generally considered exempt employees. An outside salesperson is defined as someone:
- Who is at least 18 years old,
- Who spends more than half of their working time away from their employer’s place of business, and
- Who sells items, services, contracts, or the use of facilities.
Truck Drivers
Some truck drivers are exempt from California’s overtime laws (but not other employment rights, like meals breaks or the minimum wage). This exemption applies to interstate truck drivers and drivers who transport hazardous materials.
In those situations, the drivers’ hours are controlled by either: federal regulations, or California’s motor vehicle regulations.
Union Employees
Union employees are sometimes exempt from California’s overtime laws. To qualify as exempt, the employees must be employed under a collective bargaining agreement that expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employees.
The collective bargaining agreement must also provide premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay of at least 30 percent more than the state minimum wage.
Other Job-Specific Exemptions
California law is governed, in part, by a series of regulations called wage orders, which have been issued California’s Industrial Welfare Commission. The wage orders have adopted several exceptions to California’s overtime laws, in addition to those listed above, that apply to workers in specific industries or jobs. Occupations to which special overtimes rules apply include:
- Live-in household employees;
- Personal attendants;
- Camp counselors
- Managers of homes for the aged;
- Certain providers of 24-hour residential childcare;
- Ambulance drivers and attendants;
- Agricultural occupations; and
- The employer’s spouse, children, and parents.
– Source: https://wrklyrs.com/MinSlry#section_4-8