Washington sets the line between a salaried employee who is exempt from overtime and one who is not at a single number: the white-collar (EAP) exempt salary threshold. A salaried executive, administrative or professional worker who earns at least $1,541.70 per week ($80,168 per year) can be classified as overtime-exempt — provided they also pass the job-duties test. Below that floor, the worker is non-exempt and must be paid 1.5x for every hour over 40 in a workweek, no matter that they draw a salary.
The salary-level test is only half the story
To be legally exempt from overtime an employee must clear three hurdles:
- Salary basis — paid a fixed, predictable salary not subject to improper deductions.
- Salary level — at or above the threshold this page calculates ($80,168/yr in Washington).
- Duties — the job’s actual primary duties fit the executive, administrative or professional definition.
This calculator tests only the salary level — the one part that is a clean number. A salary above the floor does not by itself make anyone exempt; the duties test still applies and cannot be reduced to a figure.
Why Washington differs from the federal floor
Set as a multiplier of the state minimum wage (highest in the nation). 2025 was tiered by size: small (1-50) $1,332.80/wk ($69,305.60/yr), large (51+) $1,499.40/wk ($77,968.80/yr). From 1/1/2026 unified at 2.25x min wage = $1,541.70/wk. The figure shown is the 2026 unified level.
The federal floor is $684 per week ($35,568 per year) under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The 2024 DOL rule that would have raised it to $844 then $1,128 per week was vacated nationwide on November 15, 2024, so the federal figure reverted to $684/week. Because Washington’s statutory floor of $1,541.70/week is higher, Washington employers must apply the Washington figure.
How to use this calculator
Enter a salary, choose per year or per week, and read whether it meets Washington’s exempt salary level. If it falls short, the annual shortfall is the raise needed to reach the floor. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is sent anywhere.
Not legal advice. Thresholds change (most indexed states adjust each January 1; a few mid-year). Verify against Washington State Dept. of Labor & Industries (L&I) before classifying any employee. Source: Washington State Dept. of Labor & Industries (L&I) + US DOL, as of 2026-06-18.