[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR778.203]

[Page 415-416]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
         CHAPTER V--WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 778_OVERTIME COMPENSATION--Table of Contents
 
    Subpart C_Payments That May Be Excluded From the ``Regular Rate''
 
Sec. 778.203  Premium pay for work on Saturdays, Sundays, and other 
``special days''.

    Under section 7(e)(6) and 7(h) of the Act, extra compensation 
provided by a Premium rate of at least time and one-half which is paid 
for work on Saturdays, Sundays, holidays, or regular days of rest or on 
the sixth or seventh day of the workweek (hereinafter referred to as 
``special days'') may be treated as an overtime premium for the purposes 
of the Act. If the premium rate is less than time and one-half, the 
extra compensation provided by such rate must be included in determining 
the employee's regular rate of pay and cannot be credited toward 
statutory overtime due, unless it qualifies as an overtime premium under 
section 7(e)(5).
    (a) ``Special days'' rate must be at least time and one-half to 
qualify as overtime premium: The premium rate must be at least ``one and 
one-half times the rate established in good faith for like work 
performed in nonovertime hours on other days.'' Where an employee is 
hired on the basis of a salary for a fixed workweek or at a single 
hourly rate of pay, the rate paid for work on ``special days'' must be 
at least time and one-half his regular hourly rate in order to qualify 
under section 7(e)(6). If the employee is a pieceworker or if he works 
at more than one job for which different hourly or piece rates have been 
established and these are bona fide rates applicable to the work when 
performed during nonovertime hours, the extra compensation provided by a 
premium rate of at least one and one-half times either (1) the bona fide 
rate applicable to the type of job the employee performs on the 
``special days'', or (2) the average hourly earnings in the week in 
question, will qualify as an overtime premium under this section. (For a 
fuller discussion of computation on the average rate, see Sec. 778.111; 
on the rate applicable to the job, see Sec. Sec. 778.415 through 
778.421; on the ``established'' rate, see Sec. 778.400.)
    (b) Bona fide base rate required. The statute authorizes such 
premiums paid for work on T`TT`TspecialT daysT'TT'T to be treated as 
overtime premiums only if they are actually based on a T`TT`Trate 
established in good faith for like work performed in nonovertime hours 
on other days.T'TT'T This phrase is used for the purpose of 
distinguishing the bona fide employment standards contemplated by 
section 7(e)(6) from fictitious schemes and artificial or evasive 
devices as discussed in Subpart F of this part. Clearly, a rate which 
yields the employee less than

[[Page 416]]

time and one-half the minimum rate prescribed by the Act would not be a 
rate established in good faith.
    (c) Work on the specified ``special days'': To qualify as an 
overtime premium under section 7(e)(6), the extra compensation must be 
paid for work on the specified days. The term ``holiday'' is read in its 
ordinary usage to refer to those days customarily observed in the 
community in celebration of some historical or religious occasion. A day 
of rest arbitrarily granted to employees because of lack of work is not 
a ``holiday'' within the meaning of this section, nor is it a ``regular 
day of rest.'' The term ``regular day of rest'' means a day on which the 
employee in accordance with his regular prearranged schedule is not 
expected to report for work. In some instances the ``regular day of 
rest'' occurs on the same day or days each week for a particular 
employee; in other cases, pursuant to a swing shift schedule, the 
schedule day of rest rotates in a definite pattern, such as 6 days work 
followed by 2 days of rest. In either case the extra compensation 
provided by a premium rate for work on such scheduled days of rest (if 
such rate is at least one and one-half times the bona fide rate 
established for like work during nonovertime hours on other days) may be 
treated as an overtime premium and thus need not be included in 
computing the employee's regular rate of pay and may be credited toward 
overtime payments due under the Act.
    (d) Payment of premiums for work performed on the ``special day'': 
To qualify as an overtime premium under section 7(e)(6), the premium 
must be paid because work is performed on the days specified and not for 
some other reason which would not qualify the premium as an overtime 
premium under section 7(e)(5), (6), or (7). (For examples distinguishing 
pay for work on a holiday from idle holiday pay, see Sec. 778.219.) 
Thus a premium rate paid to an employee only when he received less than 
24 hours' notice that he is required to report for work on his regular 
day of rest is not a premium paid for work on one of the specified days; 
it is a premium imposed as a penalty upon the employer for failure to 
give adequate notice to compensate the employee for the inconvenience of 
disarranging his private life. The extra compensation is not an overtime 
premium. It is part of his regular rate of pay unless such extra 
compensation is paid the employee on infrequent and sporadic occasions 
so as to qualify for exclusion under section 7(e)(2) in which event it 
need not be included in computing his regular rate of pay, as explained 
in Sec. 778.222.