In short: How overtime is calculated depends on the rules that apply to your business. Depending on the jurisdiction, overtime can be triggered after a certain number of hours worked in a single day, in a single week, or through a combination of both. Thresholds and calculation methods vary by country, state, province, industry, or collective agreement.
For companies managing shift-based or field teams, staffing agencies, events, security, hospitality, or food service, understanding these rules is essential. Misconfigured overtime thresholds can lead to payroll errors, unexpected costs, and disputes with employees.
This guide explains the difference between daily and weekly overtime thresholds, how each works, and best practices for automating the calculation.
A daily threshold triggers overtime when an employee exceeds a certain number of hours within a single workday.
The exact threshold depends on the applicable regulation. In some jurisdictions, an employee becomes eligible for overtime after a set number of hours worked in a day, while others have no daily threshold at all.
Example: Suppose a regulation sets a daily threshold of 8 hours. An employee works 9 hours on Monday and 7 hours on Tuesday. Even though only 16 hours were worked in total that week, the 9th hour on Monday may count as overtime under the applicable rules.
The daily threshold is mainly designed to limit excessively long workdays.
A weekly threshold looks at the total number of hours worked over an entire workweek. Unlike the daily threshold, it doesn't matter how hours are distributed day to day, only the weekly total counts.
Example: Suppose a regulation sets a weekly threshold of 40 hours. An employee works 10 hours a day from Monday through Thursday, for a total of 40 hours. Under a system that applies only a weekly threshold, no overtime is triggered, even though each day involved 10 hours of work.
| Criteria | Daily threshold | Weekly threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Basis for calculation | Hours worked in a single day | Total hours worked in a week |
| Trigger | After a set number of hours per day | After a set number of hours per week |
| Purpose | Limit excessively long days | Limit excessively heavy weeks |
| Calculation | Checked daily | Checked at the end of the week |
| Impact on compressed schedules (e.g., 4 × 10h) | May generate overtime depending on applicable rules | May generate no overtime if the weekly threshold isn't exceeded |
Some jurisdictions apply both a daily and a weekly threshold. In that case, calculations are generally structured so the same hour isn't counted twice as overtime. How the two calculations are combined varies depending on the applicable regulation and, in some cases, the collective agreement.
This is why scheduling software needs to let you configure the exact rules that apply to your business, rather than enforcing a single fixed method. To see how this configuration works in practice (guaranteed minimum hours, skill-based rates, full-day pay), check out our article on Workstaff's Pay Rules feature.
There's no universal answer. Depending on the jurisdiction, overtime may start:
Before configuring a payroll system, it's important to check the rules that apply to your organization.
For companies scheduling variable shift-based teams, errors rarely come from the threshold itself. The real problem is usually that actual hours worked don't match the planned schedule.
Common examples:
Without precise tracking of confirmed hours, these discrepancies can lead to calculation errors and significant payroll costs.
To reduce errors, it's recommended to:
Automation not only reduces errors — it also saves significant time during payroll preparation.
Does the 8-hour daily threshold apply everywhere? No. The daily threshold varies by applicable regulation. Some jurisdictions have no daily threshold at all, while others use a different threshold or apply only a weekly calculation.
Does a compressed 4-day, 10-hour schedule automatically avoid overtime? No. It depends entirely on the applicable rules. If a daily threshold exists, some hours may still count as overtime even if the weekly total stays at or below the standard limit.
Do the same rules apply across all industries? No. Certain industries or collective agreements set specific rules for overtime, holidays, night shifts, or atypical schedules.
Why are overtime errors so common? Because companies sometimes calculate hours based on the scheduled shift rather than the actually confirmed hours. Late finishes, extensions, and replacements often change the final calculation.
Configuring overtime rules correctly is one thing. Applying them automatically to every single shift is another.
Workstaff lets you configure the calculation rules specific to your organization — daily thresholds, weekly thresholds, guaranteed minimum hours, skill-based rates, and other applicable parameters — then automatically applies them based on actually confirmed hours. By comparing scheduled hours to actual hours worked, the platform helps managers quickly catch discrepancies, reduce payroll errors, and save time during payroll processing.