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KansasOvertime Rules & Laws (2026)

Last updated: 2026-03-27

Summary: Kansas has its own overtime law that is stricter than federal FLSA. Overtime required after 46 hours per workweek at 1.5x regular rate. Salary exemption threshold: $684/week ($35,568/year).

What are the overtime rules in Kansas?

Weekly Threshold46 hours
Daily Overtime?NoOnly weekly overtime applies
Overtime Rate1.5x regular rate
Follows FLSA?State lawStricter than federal FLSA

How does Kansas differ from federal overtime rules?

Kansas has its own overtime law with a 46-hour weekly threshold (higher than federal 40 hours). However, most Kansas employers are also covered by FLSA's 40-hour threshold. The Kansas law primarily fills gaps for workers not covered by FLSA. For FLSA-covered employers, the federal 40-hour threshold applies.

How to Calculate Overtime in Kansas

Example 1: Hourly employee works 45 hours in one week at $20/hr

Hourly rate:$20.00Hours worked:45 hrs/week

40 x $20.00 = $800.00 (straight time) + 5 x $30.00 = $150.00 (overtime at 1.5x)

Total pay: $950.00

Example 2: Hourly employee works 50 hours in one week at $15/hr

Hourly rate:$15.00Hours worked:50 hrs/week

40 x $15.00 = $600.00 (straight time) + 10 x $22.50 = $225.00 (overtime at 1.5x)

Total pay: $825.00

Example 3: Salaried non-exempt employee earns $800/week, works 48 hours

Hourly rate:$20.00 ($800 ÷ 40)Hours worked:48 hrs/week

$800.00 (salary for 40 hrs) + 8 x $10.00 = $80.00 (overtime premium — half-time method)

Total pay: $880.00

Calculate Your Overtime Pay

Enter your details below to see a breakdown of regular, overtime, and total pay.

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This assumes a non-exempt hourly employee. Exempt employees are not entitled to overtime. This calculator provides estimates only — actual pay may vary based on shift differentials, piece rates, bonuses, or other factors. Not legal or payroll advice.

What Counts as "Hours Worked" in Kansas?

Under Kansas law, the following time must be counted as hours worked for overtime purposes:

  • All time an employee is required to be on the employer's premises or at a prescribed workplace
  • On-call time when the employee is required to remain on or near the employer's premises (not free to use time for personal purposes)
  • Travel time during the workday between job sites (not normal home-to-work commuting)
  • Training, lectures, and meetings if attendance is mandatory or practically required by the employer
  • Meal breaks shorter than 30 minutes, or meal periods where the employee is not completely relieved of duties
  • Time spent donning and doffing required protective equipment or uniforms if integral to the job
  • Waiting time or idle time if the employee is engaged to wait (as opposed to waiting to be engaged)

Who is Exempt from Overtime in Kansas?

Salary Threshold$684/week ($35,568/year) — federal FLSA minimum
Exempt CategoriesExecutive, administrative, professional (follows FLSA exemptions for FLSA-covered employers)
Industry ExemptionsAgriculture, certain seasonal workers
To be exempt from overtime, an employee must meet BOTH the salary threshold AND the duties test for their exemption category. If either test is not met, the employee is entitled to overtime.

Overtime Exemption Categories Explained

CategoryRequirements
ExecutiveSalary $684+/week; primary duty is managing the enterprise or a department; customarily directs 2+ full-time employees; authority to hire/fire or recommendations carry weight
AdministrativeSalary $684+/week; primary duty is office or non-manual work related to management/business operations; exercises discretion and independent judgment on significant matters
Professional (Learned)Salary $684+/week; primary duty requires advanced knowledge in a field of science or learning customarily acquired by prolonged specialized intellectual instruction (e.g., law, medicine, engineering)
Professional (Creative)Salary $684+/week; primary duty requires invention, imagination, originality, or talent in a recognized field of artistic or creative endeavor
Computer EmployeeSalary $684+/week or hourly rate of $27.63+; work as computer systems analyst, programmer, software engineer, or similar; primary duties involve systems analysis, design, development, or testing
Outside SalesNo salary requirement; primary duty is making sales or obtaining orders/contracts; customarily and regularly works away from the employer's place of business
Highly Compensated EmployeeTotal annual compensation of $107,432+; performs at least one exempt duty of an executive, administrative, or professional employee; customarily performs office or non-manual work

Must I Pay Unauthorized Overtime in Kansas?

Yes — you must pay for all overtime worked, even if unauthorized.

Employers must pay for all overtime worked, even if it was not authorized or was expressly forbidden. An employer may discipline an employee for violating a policy against unauthorized overtime, but cannot withhold pay for hours actually worked. Failure to pay for unauthorized overtime is a wage violation under the FLSA.

Common Overtime Violations to Avoid in Kansas

These are the most common overtime mistakes employers make in Kansas. Avoiding them protects your business from costly lawsuits and penalties.

  1. 1.Misclassifying non-exempt employees as exempt (especially by title alone without meeting salary and duties tests)
  2. 2.Requiring or permitting off-the-clock work (answering emails, setting up before shifts, cleaning up after shifts)
  3. 3.Averaging hours across two or more workweeks instead of calculating overtime for each individual workweek
  4. 4.Improperly rounding time entries in a way that consistently favors the employer
  5. 5.Failing to include bonuses, commissions, and shift differentials in the regular rate when calculating overtime
  6. 6.Providing comp time instead of overtime pay (allowed for government employers, not private sector under FLSA)

Penalties for Overtime Violations in Kansas

Federal FLSA penalties apply: back pay for unpaid overtime plus an equal amount in liquidated damages (effectively double back pay). Willful violations carry a 3-year statute of limitations (vs. 2 years for non-willful). Employers may also face civil penalties of up to $2,451 per violation. Repeated or willful violators can face criminal prosecution with fines up to $10,000 and imprisonment.

What Kansas Employers Need to Know

  • Kansas state law sets overtime at 46 hours/week — but federal FLSA's 40-hour threshold applies to most employers
  • For employers not covered by FLSA, Kansas overtime kicks in at 46 hours
  • Overtime rate is 1.5x the regular rate of pay
  • No daily overtime requirement
  • Agricultural workers are exempt from Kansas overtime

Frequently Asked Questions

When does overtime start in Kansas?

Under Kansas state law, overtime begins at 46 hours per workweek. However, most employers are covered by federal FLSA, which requires overtime after 40 hours. The stricter (lower) threshold applies.

Is there daily overtime in Kansas?

No. Kansas has no daily overtime requirement.

This is general information, not legal advice. Requirements change — always verify with the official state agency or a qualified employment attorney. Sources: Kansas Department of Labor, U.S. Department of Labor.