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Compliance & Risk5 min read

FLSA Exempt vs Non-Exempt: Getting Employee Classification Right

Few HR mistakes are as expensive as getting employee classification wrong. Misclassifying a worker as exempt when they should be non-exempt can trigger back pay, penalties, and legal exposure that dwarf the cost of doing it right the first time.

Exempt is not about salary alone

A common myth is that paying a salary makes someone exempt from overtime. In reality, exemption requires meeting both a salary threshold and specific duties tests tied to executive, administrative, or professional work. Title means nothing; actual job duties are what matter.

Audit the roles you assume are safe

The riskiest classifications are often the ones nobody questions, such as assistant managers who spend most of their time doing the same work as the hourly staff they supervise. A duties-based review of these roles frequently uncovers costly misclassifications.

Document your reasoning

When you classify a role as exempt, keep a record of why it qualifies. If a classification is ever challenged, contemporaneous documentation of the duties analysis is far more persuasive than a reconstructed explanation after the fact.

The bottom line

Classification is not guesswork. A duties-based review of every role, documented and revisited as jobs evolve, is the single best protection against a costly wage claim.

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