Minimum Wage
Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on federal statutes and official sources.
What is this right?
The federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour. Your employer must pay you at least this amount for every hour you work. Many states and cities have higher minimum wages — you're entitled to whichever is higher.
Tipped employees have a lower federal minimum ($2.13/hr), but your tips plus wages must equal at least $7.25/hr. If they don't, your employer must make up the difference.
When does it apply?
This right applies when:
- You work for an employer covered by the FLSA
- You are at least 20 years old (workers under 20 can be paid $4.25/hr for the first 90 days)
- You are not a full-time student or student learner on a special certificate
Common misconceptions:
- "My state's minimum wage is the only one that matters" — You get whichever is higher: federal, state, or local.
- "Undocumented workers don't have minimum wage rights" — Wrong. The FLSA covers all workers regardless of immigration status.
- "Independent contractors don't get minimum wage" — True, but many workers are misclassified as contractors when they should be employees.
What should you do?
Step 1: Know your rate. Check your state and city minimum wage — it's often higher than the $7.25 federal rate.
Step 2: Calculate your actual hourly pay. Divide your total weekly pay by total hours worked. If it's below the minimum, you have a claim.
Step 3: Document everything. Save pay stubs, schedules, and any records of hours worked.
Step 4: File a complaint. Contact the DOL Wage and Hour Division or your state's labor department. Many employment attorneys handle wage cases on contingency.
What should you NOT do?
Don't accept illegal deductions. Your employer cannot deduct for cash register shortages, breakage, or uniforms if it would bring your pay below minimum wage.
Don't ignore tip credit violations. If you're a tipped employee and your tips + base pay don't reach $7.25/hr, your employer must pay the difference.
Don't sign away your rights. Any agreement to work for less than minimum wage is unenforceable under federal law.
How Michigan differs from federal law
Michigan's minimum wage is significantly higher than the federal rate following the 2024 Michigan Supreme Court ruling in Mothering Justice v. Attorney General, which reinstated the original voter-initiated wage law:
- 2025: $12.48/hr (standard) — effective February 21, 2025
- Tipped employees: $5.99/hr (48% of the standard minimum wage); tips must bring total to at least $12.48/hr. The tip credit is being gradually reduced (reaching 50% by 2031 under the amended SB 8 schedule)
- Upcoming increases: $13.73/hr in 2026, $15.00/hr in 2027, then CPI-adjusted starting 2028 (per SB 8, Public Act 1 of 2025)
- Minors (16-17): 85% of the standard minimum wage
- Michigan law preempts local minimum wage ordinances — cities and counties cannot set higher rates
- Employers with fewer than 2 employees are exempt from the state minimum wage
Additional Steps in Michigan
File minimum wage complaints with Michigan LEO, Wage and Hour Division at (855) 464-9243 or online at michigan.gov/leo. Workers can also file with the federal DOL or bring a private lawsuit in Michigan courts.
Relevant Law: Michigan Workforce Opportunity Wage Act, MCL § 408.932 et seq.
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