Being Denied Overtime in Oregon

My employer isn't paying me overtime — here's what Oregon law says and what to do next.

Oregon Law

Statute: Or. Rev. Stat. § 653.261

Deadline: 730 days

Penalty: Oregon overtime law requires 1.5x pay after 40 hours per week. Employer may be liable for unpaid overtime plus penalty wages under § 652.150 and attorney fees

What is being denied overtime?

The rule is older than your grandparents and it hasn't changed: work more than 40 hours in a single workweek and your employer owes you at least 1.5 times your regular rate for every hour past 40. That's the Fair Labor Standards Act, on the books since 1938.

It covers most hourly workers automatically. If you're salaried but earn less than $684 a week ($35,568 a year), you're owed overtime no matter what your job title says. Above that salary line, your employer can call you "exempt" — but only if your actual day-to-day duties fit one of the narrow categories the DOL spells out (executive, administrative, professional, computer, or outside sales). The label isn't enough; the duties have to match.

One thing worth knowing: the DOL tried to raise the salary threshold to $58,656 in 2024, which would have pulled millions of mid-level salaried workers back into overtime eligibility. A federal judge in Texas vacated the rule in November 2024, so the line is still $35,568 going into 2026.

What to Do If Your Employer Doesn't Pay Overtime

Cases get won on records, not memory. Start there.

Step 1: Keep your own time log. Note when you start, when you stop, and every break. A notebook, a phone app, even photos of the time clock — anything contemporaneous beats your boss's word in front of a DOL investigator.

Step 2: Check the math on your pay stubs. Pull every week you cracked 40 hours. The overtime hours have to be paid at 1.5× your regular rate, and the "regular rate" includes most non-discretionary bonuses and commissions — which is why a lot of overtime claims are even bigger than people first think.

Step 3: Put it in writing. A short email to HR or your manager asking them to correct the underpayment is enough. Save the response (or the silence).

Step 4: File the complaint. The DOL Wage and Hour Division takes complaints at 1-866-487-9243 or online at dol.gov. You can also call an employment attorney — most take overtime cases on contingency, so there's no money up front.

How Oregon differs from federal law

Oregon follows federal FLSA overtime rules with some state additions:

  • Overtime required after 40 hours per workweek at 1.5x the regular rate
  • Oregon agricultural workers gained overtime protections through HB 4002 (2022) — phased in overtime requirements for farmworkers
  • Oregon manufacturing workers are entitled to overtime after 10 hours in a day
  • Oregon does not generally require daily overtime for non-manufacturing workers

Additional steps in Oregon

File with the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) at (971) 245-3844 or oregon.gov/boli.

What you should NOT do

Don't work off the clock. If your boss tells you to clock out but finish the task, that's textbook wage theft. Make a quick note of when it happened and what you were asked to do.

Don't take "you're exempt" at face value. Run the salary and duties tests yourself. If anything's off, you may be owed years of back pay.

Don't sit on it. The FLSA gives you 2 years from each paycheck (3 if the violation was willful). Wait too long and the earliest weeks fall off the back end of your claim.

Don't quit before you file. You can file while you're still on the payroll, and retaliation for filing a wage complaint is itself illegal under FLSA §15(a)(3).

Don't wait — the clock is ticking.

Answer a few questions. We generate a personalized overtime pay demand citing Oregon's exact statute, deadline, and penalties — ready to print and send in minutes.

Lawyers charge $350+. Your letter: $19.

Generate your overtime pay demand

This page is general legal information for Oregon, not legal advice for your specific situation. Laws change, and how a statute applies depends on facts we don't know. For advice on your matter, consult a licensed attorney in Oregon.

You came here to know your rights — help someone else know theirs.

Support This Mission