Unpaid Overtime (FLSA) Estimator
Estimates unpaid overtime by comparing the hours you worked beyond 40 in a week to the time-and-a-half standard set by the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Wage and leave rights are often misunderstood — by workers and employers alike. We help you check your pay against federal overtime and minimum-wage standards and confirm whether you qualify for protected leave. If something looks off, you’ll know what questions to ask.
Hourly and salaried workers who suspect unpaid overtime or underpayment, or who need job-protected time away from work.
When a worker can see a concrete gap between what they were paid and what the law requires, a vague sense of unfairness becomes a claim worth pursuing.
Each runs in the visitor’s browser, shows a real answer instantly, then routes a lead to the firm. No sign-up, nothing stored.
Estimates unpaid overtime by comparing the hours you worked beyond 40 in a week to the time-and-a-half standard set by the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Checks your effective hourly pay against the federal minimum wage to flag a possible shortfall under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Helps you gauge whether you meet the basic eligibility criteria for job-protected leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act, such as tenure, hours worked, and employer size.
This is the real tool your visitors would use, recolored to your firm.
Lay out your hours, pay, and job duties to see how they map to federal standards.
Compare your pay to overtime and minimum-wage requirements under the FLSA.
If a shortfall or leave-eligibility question appears, discuss next steps with counsel.
Every calculator draws on published government sources, dated and monitored. These are the current ones for employment.
Salary alone doesn’t decide it — overtime eligibility under the FLSA turns on your actual duties and how you’re paid, not just your title. Many salaried roles are still entitled to overtime.
Not necessarily; the FLSA looks at the economic reality of the working relationship rather than the label on your paperwork. Misclassification can mean overtime and minimum-wage protections still apply.
Time you’re required or permitted to work generally counts, even if it happens before clocking in, after clocking out, or during a working lunch, under the FLSA. Those minutes can add up to real unpaid wages.
Eligibility generally depends on how long you’ve worked for the employer, the hours you’ve logged, and whether the employer is large enough to be covered under the Family and Medical Leave Act. Meeting all three is what unlocks job-protected leave.
The FLSA prohibits retaliation against workers who assert their wage rights, so an employer generally can’t lawfully punish you for raising a good-faith concern. If retaliation happens, it can become its own claim.
Every figure traces to a federal or state primary source — VA, SSA, IRS, USCIS, the U.S. Trustee — with its effective date shown.
Tools are reviewed by a licensed attorney and ship as illustrative information, never as advice or a guarantee.
Monitored on each source’s own cadence — annual COLA, quarterly IRS interest, and so on — so a stale number can’t linger.
The math runs in the visitor’s browser. No claimant data is stored unless they choose to send it to the firm.
One line of code, or let us build the whole site. It runs itself — no agency, no retainers.
This is an illustrative estimate for general informational purposes only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice, it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and it is not a quote, promise, prediction, or guarantee of any benefit, amount, eligibility, deadline, or outcome. Figures are based on published government sources as of the date shown and change over time; results may not reflect current law or the facts of your situation. Do not rely on this tool — consult a licensed attorney before taking or refraining from any action.