Overtime Laws in Alaska
Alaska (AK) · Overtime laws · Last reviewed June 2026
Weekly overtime
1.5× after 40 hrs/week
Daily overtime
Yes — see below
Double-time
Not state-mandated
The federal baseline (FLSA)
Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, non-exempt employees in Alaska must be paid at least one and a half times their regular rate for every hour worked beyond 40 in a single workweek. A workweek is any fixed, repeating block of seven consecutive days — your business picks the start day, but once chosen it has to stay consistent.
Overtime is calculated per workweek, not per pay period. So even on a bi-weekly payroll, you still total each of the two workweeks separately when figuring out who crossed 40 hours.
Daily overtime in Alaska
Alaska requires overtime after 8 hours in a day in addition to the weekly 40-hour rule, with some flexibility for approved flexible-schedule plans. Small employers under a set headcount can be exempt.
Because Alaska layers daily rules on top of the federal weekly rule, your time clock needs to evaluate each day and each week and pay whichever produces the higher amount.
Who is exempt from overtime?
Overtime protections cover non-exempt employees. Workers correctly classified as exempt — typically salaried executive, administrative, and professional roles that meet both a salary threshold and a duties test — generally are not owed overtime. Misclassifying an employee as exempt is one of the most common and expensive wage-and-hour mistakes, so review the duties test, not just the job title.
Independent contractors are not employees and are not covered by overtime rules — but the test for contractor status is strict, and getting it wrong creates back-pay liability.
Official sources
More Alaska guides
Overtime laws in other states
Alaska overtime laws: frequently asked questions
Do you get overtime after 8 hours in Alaska?
Yes — Alaska has daily overtime, so hours past 8 in a single day can earn time-and-a-half even during a short week.
How is overtime pay calculated in Alaska?
Overtime is 1.5× the regular rate for hours over 40 in a workweek, plus daily overtime for long days. Each workweek is totaled on its own, even on a bi-weekly payroll.
Who is exempt from overtime in Alaska?
Correctly classified salaried executive, administrative, and professional employees who meet the salary and duties tests are usually exempt. Job title alone doesn't make someone exempt.
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