September 1, 2014
Jurisdiction |
Basic Combined Cash & Tip Minimum Wage Rate |
Maximum Tip Credit Against Minimum Wage |
Minimum Cash Wage 1 |
Definition of Tipped Employee by Minimum Tips received (monthly unless otherwise specified) |
---|---|---|---|---|
FEDERAL: Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) |
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $30 |
State requires employers to pay workers full state minimum wage before tips |
||||
|
|
$7.75 |
||
|
|
$9.00, effective July 1, 2014 |
||
|
|
$6.55 |
||
Large employer 2 |
|
|
$8.00, effective August 1, 2014 |
|
Small employer 2 |
|
|
$6.50, effective August 1, 2014 |
|
Business with gross annual sales over $110,000 |
|
|
$7.90 |
|
Business with gross annual sales of $110,000 or less |
|
|
$4.00 |
|
|
|
$8.25
$7.25 |
With no health insurance benefits provided by employer and received by employee With health insurance benefits provided by employer and received by employee |
|
|
|
$9.10 |
||
|
|
$9.32 |
||
State requires employers to pay workers above federal tipped minimum wage |
||||
$7.90 |
$3.00 |
$4.90 |
Not specified |
|
$6.25 |
$3.62 |
$2.63 |
More than $20 |
|
$8.00 |
$3.02 |
$4.98 |
More than $30 |
|
$8.70 |
|
|
At least $10 weekly for full-time employees or $2.00 daily for part-time in hotels and restaurants. Not specified for other industries. |
|
Hotel, restaurant |
|
34.6% ($3.01) |
$5.69 |
|
Bartenders who customarily receive tips |
|
15.6% ($1.36) |
$7.34 |
|
$7.75, effective June 1, 2014 |
$5.52 |
$2.23 |
More than $30 |
|
$9.50, effective July 1, 2014 |
$6.73 |
$2.77 |
Not specified |
|
$7.93 |
$3.02 |
$4.91 |
|
|
$7.25 |
$0.25 |
$7.00 |
More than $20 |
|
(Tip Credit in Hawaii is permissible if the combined amount the employee receives from the employer and in tips is at least 50 cents more than the applicable minimum wage) |
||||
$7.25 |
$3.90 |
$3.35 |
More than $30 |
|
$8.25 |
40% |
$4.95 |
$20 |
|
$7.25 |
$2.90 |
$4.35 |
More than $30 |
|
$7.50 |
50% |
$3.75 |
More than $30 |
|
$7.25 |
$3.62 |
$3.63 |
More than $30 |
|
$8.00 |
$5.37 |
$2.63 |
More than $20 |
|
$8.15, effective September 1, 2014 |
$5.05 |
$3.10 |
Not specified |
|
$7.50 |
$3.75 |
$3.75 |
Not specified |
|
$7.25 |
55% |
45% |
More than $30 |
|
$8.00 (Effective 12/31/2013) |
|
|
Not specified |
|
Food service workers |
|
$3.00 |
$5.00 |
|
Service Employees |
|
$2.35 |
$5.65 |
|
Service Employees in Resort Hotels if tips average at least $4.50 per hour |
$3.10 |
$4.90 |
||
$7.25 |
33% |
$4.86 |
More than $30 |
|
Ohio
5
|
$7.95 |
$3.97 |
$3.98 |
More than $30 |
$7.25 |
$4.42 |
$2.83 |
More than $30 |
|
$8.00 |
$5.11 |
$2.89 |
Not specified |
|
Vermont
|
$8.73 |
$4.50 |
$4.23 |
More than $120
|
Wisconsin 8 |
$7.25 |
$4.92 |
$2.33 |
Not specified |
West Virginia 7 |
$7.25 |
20% |
$5.80 |
Not specified |
State requires employers to pay workers as low as federal tipped minimum wage ($2.13/hr.) |
||||
Alabama 9 |
|
|
$2.13 |
|
Georgia 9 |
|
|
$2.13 |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
Not specified |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $20 |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $30 |
|
Louisiana 9 |
|
|
$2.13 |
|
Mississippi 9 |
|
|
$2.13 |
|
North Carolina 4 |
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $20 |
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
Not specified |
|
$8.25 |
$6.12 3 |
$2.13 |
Not specified |
|
$7.50 |
$5.37 |
$2.13 |
More than $30 |
|
Oklahoma 6 |
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
Not specified |
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $30 |
|
South Carolina 9 |
|
|
$2.13 |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 3 |
$2.13 |
More than $35 |
|
Tennessee 9 |
|
|
$2.13 |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $20 |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
More than $30 |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
Not specified |
|
$7.25 |
$5.12 |
$2.13 |
Not specified |
|
$5.15 |
$3.02 |
$2.13 |
More than $30 |
Some states set subminimum rates for minors and/or students or exempt them from coverage, or have a training wage for new hires. Such differential provisions are not displayed in this table.
FOOTNOTES
1 Other additional deductions are permitted, for example for meals and lodging, except as noted in footnote 8 .
2 Minnesota. Effective August 1, 2014, a large employer means an enterprise whose gross volume of sales made or business done is not less than $500,000. A small employer means an enterprise whose gross volume of sales made or business done is less than $500,000.
3 In New Jersey and South Dakota , the listed maximum credit is the total amount allowable for tips, food and lodging combined, not for tips alone as in other states.
Regarding Oklahoma , when a food and/or lodging credit is not involved, the wage tip credit is limited to $2.13 per hour.
In New Jersey , in specific situations where the employer can prove to the satisfaction of the Department of Labor and Workforce Development that the tips actually received exceed the creditable amount, a higher tip credit may be taken.
4 North Carolina . Tip credit is not permitted unless the employer obtains from each employee, monthly or for each pay period, a signed certification of the amount of tips received.
5 Ohio . For employees of employers with gross annual sales of less than $292,000, the state minimum wage is $7.25 per hour. For these employees, the state wage is tied to the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour which requires an act of Congress and the President’s signature to change.
6 Oklahoma . For employers with fewer than 10 full-time employees at any one location who have gross annual sales of $100,000 or less, the basic minimum rate is $2.00 per hour.
7 West Virginia . For employers with six or more employees and for state agencies.
8 Wisconsin . $2.13 per hour may be paid to employees who are not yet 20 years old and who have been in employment status with a particular employer for 90 or fewer consecutive calendar days from the date of initial employment.
9 The following states do not have State minimum wage laws: Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Georgia exempts tipped employees under the law.
Prepared By :
Division of Communications
Wage and Hour Division
U.S. Department of Labor
This document was last revised in September 2014.