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Tip and Wage Theft in Minnesota

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Source: Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 203(m), 206, 207 — tip provisions and wage requirements. Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018, Pub. L. 115-141 § 1201 (codified at 29 U.S.C. § 203(m)(2)(B)) — prohibits employer tip retention. DOL Final Rule on Tip Regulations, 29 C.F.R. Part 531 (effective December 2021). Enforced by U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division.

About this article

Sourced from primary statutes (U.S. Code, CFR, state compiled statutes) and official government agency guidance. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards

My employer is taking my tips in Minnesota?See the focused guide →
Minnesota Law

Primary statute: Minn. Stat. § 181.032

How Minnesota differs from federal law

Minnesota has one of the most active state employment-law regimes in the country — wage theft is criminal, paid sick leave is mandatory, PFML launches in 2026, and captive-audience meetings are banned:

  • No tip credit: employers must pay the full minimum wage ($11.41/hr statewide from 1 January 2026) regardless of tips. Minneapolis $16.37/hr; St. Paul on tiered phase-in.
  • Minnesota Wage Theft Prevention Act (Minn. Stat. § 181.032, 2019): requires written notice of pay terms at hire and with each paycheck. Wages owed are due within 24 hours of demand after separation (§ 181.13); failure triggers up to 15 days of additional wages as a penalty.
  • Criminal wage theft (Minn. Stat. § 609.52 subd. 2(a)(19), 2019): intentional wage theft is criminal theft — misdemeanor for amounts under $500; felony for $5,000+. Minnesota is one of the few states to make wage theft criminal.
  • Earned Sick and Safe Time (ESST, Minn. Stat. § 181.9445 et seq., in force 1 January 2024): ALL Minnesota employers must provide 1 hour of paid sick/safe leave per 30 hours worked, up to 48 hours per year (with carryover up to 80). No employer-size threshold.
  • Minnesota Paid Family and Medical Leave (Minn. Stat. § 268B, benefits effective 1 January 2026): up to 20 weeks combined family and medical leave per year at partial wage replacement. Premium collection began 1 January 2026; administered by MN Department of Employment and Economic Development.
  • Captive Audience Ban (Minn. Stat. § 181.531, in force 1 August 2023): employers cannot require employees to attend or participate in meetings about political or religious matters, including union-related discussions. Private right of action with treble damages + attorney's fees.
  • Tip protections: tips belong to the employee. Employers cannot keep tips or require tip sharing with managers/supervisors. Voluntary tip pools among tipped employees are allowed.
  • File a wage complaint with the Minnesota DLI at (651) 284-5070; ESST claims to (651) 284-5075; private right of action available.

Additional Steps in Minnesota

File a wage complaint with the Minnesota DLI at (651) 284-5070 or dli.mn.gov. For Minneapolis-specific violations, contact the Minneapolis Department of Civil Rights at (612) 673-3012. Keep your own records of hours worked and tips received.

Relevant Law: Minnesota Wage Theft Prevention Act (Minn. Stat. § 181.032). Minn. Stat. § 181.13 (wage payment on separation). Minn. Stat. § 177.24 (minimum wage, no tip credit).

Federal baseline: Tip and Wage Theft nationwide

What is this right?

Wage theft is the most common labor violation in the country — and by far the largest property crime. The Economic Policy Institute estimates American workers lose more than $50 billion a year to it, which is more than the FBI's combined totals for all robberies, burglaries, and auto thefts in the same year. The DOL recovered roughly $232 million for workers in fiscal 2023 alone, and that's just the violations the agency caught.

The forms it takes are familiar: not paying overtime, paying below minimum wage, stealing tips, demanding off-the-clock work, misclassifying employees as independent contractors to dodge the FLSA, and making illegal deductions for breakage, uniforms, or till shortages. All of it is barred by the Fair Labor Standards Act and stronger state laws on top.

One critical update: the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018 made it explicit that employers, managers, and supervisors cannot keep any portion of employee tips, even through a mandatory tip pool. That closed a loophole some restaurants had been exploiting for years.

When does it apply?

This right applies when:

  • Your employer takes a portion of your tips (unless part of a valid tip pool among tipped employees)
  • You are not paid for all hours worked, including prep time, cleanup, or required training
  • Your employer requires you to clock out but continue working
  • Tip credits reduce your base pay below the effective minimum wage (tips + base must equal at least $7.25/hr)
  • Your employer misclassifies you as an independent contractor to avoid paying minimum wage or overtime

Federal tip rules (updated 2021):

  • Tips belong to the employee. Employers, managers, and supervisors cannot keep any portion of employee tips — this is federal law as of 2018.
  • Tip pooling: Employers can require tip pooling, but only among employees who customarily receive tips (servers, bartenders, bussers). If the employer does NOT take a tip credit, the pool can include back-of-house workers (cooks, dishwashers).
  • Tip credit: Employers can pay tipped employees as little as $2.13/hr if tips bring total compensation to at least $7.25/hr. If they don't, the employer must make up the difference.
  • Service charges: Automatic service charges (e.g., mandatory gratuity on large parties) are NOT tips under federal law — they belong to the employer unless the employer distributes them to workers.

Common misconceptions:

  • "My manager can take a cut of my tips" — No. The 2018 law explicitly prohibits employers, managers, and supervisors from retaining any employee tips. Violations can result in liquidated damages equal to the stolen tips.
  • "If I'm paid a salary, I can't be a victim of wage theft" — Salaried workers can be victims too, especially through misclassification as exempt from overtime.
  • "Independent contractors can't file wage theft claims" — If you are misclassified as a contractor but actually work as an employee (controlled schedule, required tools, single client), you can file a claim as a misclassified employee.

What to Do If Your Employer Is Stealing Your Wages or Tips

Step 1: Keep your own records. Hours, tips, pay received — every shift. A notebook, a spreadsheet, even photos of the schedule and your tip-out slip. Cases get won or lost on contemporaneous notes; memory alone is rarely enough in front of an investigator.

Step 2: Run the math against your pay stubs. Missing hours, smaller tips than you earned, unauthorized deductions, overtime that wasn't paid at 1.5×. Highlight the gaps and total them.

Step 3: Put it to your employer in writing. An email or text saying, "I worked X hours last week and was paid for Y; please correct the difference of $Z," creates a record and often produces a quiet correction.

Step 4: File if it doesn't get fixed. DOL Wage and Hour Division at 1-866-487-9243 or dol.gov. Your state labor department often has stronger protections — California, New York, and Massachusetts in particular.

Step 5: Talk to a wage attorney. Most work on contingency. Under the FLSA you can recover back wages plus an equal amount in liquidated damages (so effectively 2× your stolen pay) and attorney's fees. Class actions are common for systemic violations and can produce serious recoveries.

What should you NOT do?

Don't trust the employer's time records. Some employers quietly "correct" timecards after the fact. Your own contemporaneous log is admissible and can directly contradict the company's version.

Don't sit on it. FLSA gives you 2 years from each unpaid paycheck (3 if willful). Every month you wait is a month of damages falling off the back of your claim.

Don't dismiss small amounts. Five dollars off a shift, twice a week, for two years is over a thousand dollars — and that's before liquidated damages and fees. Class actions get certified on patterns this size.

Don't fear retaliation. Firing, demoting, or punishing a worker for filing a wage complaint is itself illegal under FLSA §15(a)(3) — and creates a separate, usually stronger, retaliation claim.

You shouldn't have to hire a lawyer to assert your rights.

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Common Questions

Can my manager be part of the tip pool?

No. Since the 2018 amendment to FLSA §203(m), employers, managers, and supervisors cannot keep any portion of tips, even via a mandatory tip pool. The DOL defines managers/supervisors using the executive-exemption duties test — anyone with hiring/firing authority or who supervises 2+ employees as their primary duty is excluded. Violations trigger liquidated damages equal to the stolen tips plus attorney fees.

What's the difference between a tip and a service charge?

A tip is voluntary, determined by the customer, and belongs to the worker. A service charge (mandatory 18% gratuity on parties of 6+, banquet service fees, delivery fees) is part of the bill, counts as the employer's revenue, and does not have to be distributed to workers — though the employer can pay it out as wages. The distinction matters because tip-credit calculations only include true tips.

Can I file a wage claim anonymously?

DOL complaints are confidential but not anonymous — investigators don't share your identity with the employer during intake, but if the case proceeds to interviews or litigation, your name becomes known. State labor agencies have varying confidentiality rules. Retaliation is illegal (FLSA §215(a)(3)) and carries separate damages including reinstatement, back pay, and front pay if reinstatement isn't feasible.

How much can I recover for wage theft?

Unpaid wages + liquidated damages equal to the unpaid amount (so effectively 2× back wages) + attorney fees. The 2-year statute extends to 3 years for willful violations. If misclassification as an independent contractor is involved, the damages also include overtime differentials back 2–3 years. Class actions for systemic violations can reach 6–7 figures quickly.

Tip and Wage Theft in other states

Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.

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