Filing a Wage and Hour Claim - Utah
Utah state law does not cover overtime. For that reason, only federal overtime law applies in the state.
Like the federal minimum wage, Utah’s minimum wage is currently set at $7.25. Employers may pay tipped employees (earning at least $30 per month in tips) cash wages of $2.13 per hour, as long as this amount combined with the employee’s tips equals the minimum wage of $7.25 per hour.
Utah’s minimum wage only applies to employees not covered by the federal minimum wage provision. There are nonetheless some employees in Utah who are not covered by the federal or the state minimum wage requirement:
- Outside salespersons
- Employees who are members of their employer’s immediate family
- Employees providing companionship services for persons unable to care for themselves
- Casual and domestic employees
- Seasonal employees of nonprofit camping programs, religious or recreation programs, and nonprofit educational and charitable organizations
- Federal employees
- Prisoners
- Employees engaged in the range production of livestock
- Harvest laborers paid on a piece-rate basis
- Agricultural employees employed in agriculture less than 13 weeks during the preceding calendar year
- Retired or semi-retired individuals performing part-time or incidental agricultural work as a condition of their residence on a farm or ranch
- Registered apprentices and students employed by the educational institution in which they are enrolled
- Seasonal employees of seasonal amusement establishments if their total compensation, including tips, incentives, commissions, and bonuses, brings their wages up to the minimum wage, but only for establishments that do not operate for more than seven months per year or that make the vast majority of their profits in a six-month period
- Disabled individuals with impaired earning or productive capabilities, as long as their wages are related to their productivity
Minors (under 18) may be paid at a lower rate of $4.25 per hour during the first 90 days of their employment.
No. In 2001, Utah passed a law that stops any cities or counties in the state from passing their own minimum wage laws. Therefore, the federal minimum of $7.25 per hour, or $2.13 per hour for tipped workers, applies across the state.
Utah law only requires employers to provide meal and rest breaks to minors (under 18). Employers must provide minors a meal period of at least 30 minutes not later than five hours after the beginning of the workday. If the minor employee cannot be relieved of all duties and permitted to leave the work state or area, the meal period must be paid as time worked. Minors must also be given rest breaks of at least 10 minutes for every three hours worked.
If your employer owes you wages between $50 and $10,000, you can electronically file a wage claim with the Labor Commission of Utah. You can also manually file a wage claim.
The Commission has the authority to investigate the claim, hold hearings, and issue orders requiring your employer to pay. If you or your employer are unsatisfied with the process, it is possible to appeal a final order to a court within 30 days of the order. In addition to obtaining the wages you are owed, the Commission can also assess a penalty against your employer, part of which will be paid to you.
Do not delay in contacting the Commission to file a claim. There are strict time limits in which charges of wage-and-hour violations must be filed. In order for the Commission to act on your behalf, you must file your wage claim within one year from the date your wages were due. However, as you might have other legal claims with shorter deadlines, do not wait to file your claim until your time limit is close to expiring. It may be helpful to consult with an attorney prior to filing your claim, but it is not necessary to have an attorney to file your claim with the Commission.
If your employer has not paid you the minimum wage, instead of filing a wage claim with the Commission, you may bring a lawsuit against your employer in court. In addition to awarding you the wages you are owed, the court may require your employer to pay your litigation costs and attorneys’ fees. There is a two-year statute of limitations for such suits. If your employer owes you wages you have earned (unrelated to the minimum wage law) you may also file a lawsuit for breach of contract instead of filing with the Commission. In that case, the court may also award you litigation costs and attorneys’ fees, but only if you make a written demand to your employer for the sum you were owed (and not greater) fifteen days prior to bringing the lawsuit. For suits brought for breach of contract, there is a six-year statute of limitations.
Utah Labor Commission
160 East 300 South, 3rd Floor
Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-6600
Phone: (801) 530-6800 or (801) 530-6801
Toll Free: 1-800-530-5090 or 1-800-222-1238
Email: laborcom@utah.gov
Web: Utah Labor Commission website
Wage Claims
PO Box 146630
Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-6610
Phone: (801) 530-6801
Fax: (801) 530-7609
Email: wcu@utah.gov