Overtime

Share of full-time salaried workers who are overtime-exempt under the 2004 and 2016 salary levels, by detailed occupation: Includes all white-collar occupations in which the overtime-exempt share under the 2016 salary level is 20% or less, pooled 2015–2017 data

Occupation Total number of salaried workers Share exempt under 2016 salary level ($913 per week) Share exempt under 2004 salary level ($455 per week)
Gaming cage workers 400 0% 5%
Telephone operators 4,600 1% 4%
Hosts and hostesses, restaurant, lounge, and coffee shop 11,700 1% 5%
Tellers 46,300 2% 5%
Phlebotomists 13,000 2% 5%
Proofreaders and copy markers 1,600 2% 5%
Pharmacy aides 4,400 2% 5%
Medical transcriptionists 7,000 3% 6%
Medical assistants 81,700 3% 5%
Receptionists and information clerks 181,100 3% 5%
Data entry keyers 57,500 3% 5%
Teacher assistants 220,800 3% 5%
Hotel, motel, and resort desk clerks 16,400 3% 5%
First-line supervisors/managers of personal service workers 40,600 3% 5%
File clerks 38,400 3% 5%
Office clerks, general 309,000 3% 5%
First-line supervisors/managers of housekeeping and janitorial workers 66,000 3% 5%
Library assistants, clerical 14,000 3% 6%
Human resources assistants, except payroll and timekeeping 17,200 3% 5%
Shipping, receiving, and traffic clerks 73,500 3% 5%
Cashiers 216,600 3% 5%
Bill and account collectors 41,400 3% 5%
Mail clerks and mail machine operators, except postal service 12,900 3% 5%
Word processors and typists 26,100 3% 6%
Switchboard operators, including answering service 1,400 3% 6%
Parts salespersons 22,000 3% 5%
Animal trainers 12,300 3% 5%
Miscellaneous health care support occupations, including medical equipment preparers 15,800 3% 5%
Couriers and messengers 42,800 3% 5%
Dispatchers 77,700 3% 5%
Billing and posting clerks and machine operators 106,800 3% 5%
Weighers, measurers, checkers, and samplers, record-keeping 10,100 3% 5%
Secretaries and administrative assistants 915,300 3% 5%
Veterinary assistants and laboratory animal caretakers 4,600 3% 5%
Door-to-door sales workers, news and street vendors, and related workers 19,600 3% 5%
Health practitioner support technologists and technicians 77,900 3% 5%
Travel agents 26,100 3% 5%
Information and record clerks, all other 38,300 4% 5%
Office machine operators, except computer 6,300 4% 6%
Bookkeeping, accounting, and auditing clerks 287,200 4% 6%
First-line supervisors of farming, fishing, and forestry workers 4,200 4% 6%
Order clerks 26,800 4% 5%
Interviewers, except eligibility and loan 25,700 4% 5%
Models, demonstrators, and product promoters 7,600 4% 6%
Payroll and timekeeping clerks 48,300 4% 5%
Court, municipal, and license clerks 32,500 4% 5%
Office and administrative support workers, all other 185,300 4% 5%
Licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses 95,700 4% 5%
Reservation and transportation ticket agents and travel clerks 34,200 4% 5%
Medical records and health information technicians 32,600 4% 5%
Retail salespersons 592,400 4% 5%
Counter and rental clerks 24,700 4% 5%
Agricultural and food science technicians 7,000 4% 5%
Postal service clerks 26,700 4% 5%
Library technicians 5,500 4% 5%
Communications equipment operators, all other 2,800 4% 5%
Paralegals and legal assistants 186,200 4% 5%
Computer operators 24,200 4% 5%
Miscellaneous life, physical, and social science technicians 67,400 4% 5%
Surveying and mapping technicians 21,100 4% 5%
First-line supervisors/managers of construction trades and extraction workers 214,200 4% 5%
Meter readers, utilities 6,000 4% 5%
Cargo and freight agents 8,000 4% 5%
New accounts clerks 9,300 4% 5%
Production, planning, and expediting clerks 103,700 4% 5%
Private detectives and investigators 32,900 4% 5%
Financial clerks, all other 34,300 4% 5%
Postal service mail carriers 89,200 5% 5%
Chemical technicians 22,600 5% 5%
Postal service mail sorters, processors, and processing machine operators 13,900 5% 5%
Statistical assistants 5,100 5% 5%
Engineering technicians, except drafters 109,000 5% 5%
Telemarketers 8,700 5% 5%
Procurement clerks 11,600 5% 6%
Computer control programmers and operators 9,300 5% 6%
Geological and petroleum technicians 6,200 5% 5%
Drafters 42,300 5% 5%
Broadcast and sound engineering technicians and radio operators 36,000 5% 6%
Aircraft pilots and flight engineers 17,800 5% 6%
Brokerage clerks 2,400 5% 6%
Biological technicians 10,300 6% 6%
Air traffic controllers and airfield operations specialists 3,900 14% 21%
First-line supervisors/managers of food preparation and serving workers 110,000 15% 28%
First-line supervisors/managers of landscaping, lawn service, and groundskeeping workers 42,500 17% 28%
Insurance claims and policy processing clerks 75,500 18% 30%
Loan interviewers and clerks 48,700 19% 30%
Eligibility interviewers, government programs 20,000 19% 30%
Social and human service assistants 73,100 19% 29%

Note: Full time is defined as 35+ hours per week at work.

Source: Economic Policy Institute (EPI) analysis of Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group microdata, pooled 2015–2017, EPI Current Population Survey Extracts, Version 1.0.28 (2022), https://microdata.epi.org.

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