Madison Law, APC

Off-the-Clock Time: Being Helpful or a Victim of Wage Theft?

Off-the-clock work can lead to wage theft claims. Learn how California law defines this time, protects employees’ rights, and what employers can do to ensure compliance.

Off-the-Clock Time: Being Helpful or a Victim of Wage Theft?

In California, all time you spend working must be paid.  Some employees are properly exempt and paid a salary.  For everyone else, the employee’s time must be accurately tracked to ensure that the employee is paid for all the time they worked.  Time that is not tracked, and does not show up on the employee’s timecard or other time tracking system is sometimes referred to as ‘off-the-clock’ time.  It is illegal for an employer to require an employee to work off the clock, and likewise illegal for the employer to fail to pay the employee for the time they worked if the employer knew that the work was occurring.

What Does ‘Off-the-Clock’ Time Actually Look Like?

Off-the-clock time can occur in many different situations.  Below is a list of situations where off the clock work commonly occurs, and an example of each:

In each of these circumstances, the employee performed work for the employer, but that time does not show up on the employee’s timecard (or other time tracking system).  That time is therefore ‘off the clock’ and the employee never receives payment for that time.

Mandated or Unauthorized Voluntary – Still Illegal

If work is being done by an employee, and the employer has reason to know about it, that time is properly compensable to the employee as time worked.

Cascading Consequences

Off-the-clock work generates a series of violations.  First, and most obviously, the employee is owed payment for the time that they worked and were not paid.  However, the violations compound from there.

The off-the-clock work did not appear on the employee’s paystub.  That means that the paystub was inaccurate, and may generate penalties owed by the employer for providing an inaccurate paystub.  The off-the-clock work was not paid at all; in other words, it was paid at a rate of $0 per hour.  Because minimum wage compliance checks every hour worked (and cannot be averaged), that means that the employer violated the minimum wage laws for the off the clock time – generating further penalties. 

Additionally, adding that additional time into the total time worked by the employee may mean that the employee has worked overtime, or worked additional overtime.  Payment is due for that overtime as well.  Off-the-clock time during a break may also mean that break penalties are at issue.  And if the employee has quit or left their job, then they have not been paid all of their wages (including the off-the-clock time) at the time of termination.  That generates a further waiting time penalty.

As you can see, 5 minutes here or there can stack into claims, penalties, and attorney fees that are many times the cost of paying the time worked property in the first place.

Final Note

Professional headshot of Susanna F. Wiseman, Esq., partner at Madison Law, in a teal blouse, smiling confidently.

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