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FLSA Compliance Time Tracking

Time tracking practices required to comply with the Fair Labor Standards Act, including accurate record-keeping, overtime calculation, and record retention requirements for U.S. employers.

Last updated: 2026-03-19 20:45

Overview

The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) is a U.S. federal law that establishes minimum wage, overtime pay, recordkeeping, and child labor standards. Proper time tracking is essential for FLSA compliance, with violations resulting in significant penalties, back pay obligations, and legal exposure.

FLSA Time Tracking Requirements

Required Records

Employers must maintain accurate records for each non-exempt employee including:

Record Retention

3 Years: Payroll records, collective bargaining agreements, sales and purchase records 2 Years: Basic time and earning records, wage rate tables, work schedules, records of additions/deductions

Overtime Calculation

Standard Rule

Non-exempt employees must receive overtime pay at 1.5x their regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek.

Common Errors

Rounding Practices: While minor rounding is permitted (to nearest 5 or 15 minutes), systematic rounding that favors employer is illegal.

Break Time: Short breaks (5-20 minutes) must be paid. Meal periods (30+ minutes) where employee is completely relieved of duty may be unpaid.

Travel Time: Regular commute is not work time, but travel during work hours or to temporary work sites generally is.

On-Call Time: Whether on-call time counts depends on how much freedom employee has during that time.

Common Violations

Misclassification

Classifying employees as "exempt" when they don't meet FLSA exemption criteria (administrative, executive, professional, computer, outside sales exemptions).

Off-the-Clock Work

Requiring or allowing work before clocking in, after clocking out, or during unpaid breaks.

Automatic Deductions

Automatically deducting time for breaks whether or not taken.

Comp Time

Providing compensatory time off instead of overtime pay (only allowed for government employers).

Inaccurate Records

Failing to track all hours worked or maintaining incomplete records.

Technology Solutions for Compliance

Time Clock Features

Biometric Authentication: Prevents buddy punching Automatic Overtime Calculation: Ensures correct overtime rates Break Tracking: Records when breaks are taken Audit Trails: Documents all time edits and approvals Geofencing: Verifies employee location for remote/field workers

Reporting Capabilities

Integration

State-Specific Considerations

Many states have laws more stringent than FLSA:

California

New York

Other States

Each state may have unique:

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Financial Penalties

Additional Consequences

Best Practices for Compliance

1. Clear Policies

2. Employee Training

3. Manager Training

4. Regular Audits

5. Technology Leverage

2026 Compliance Trends

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