Minimum Wage $17.13 / HR
Washington has one of the highest minimum wages in the country. As of January 1, 2026, the minimum wage is $17.13 per hour. Washington adjusts the rate every year based on inflation, so it tends to go up annually. If you work in Washington, your employer must pay you at least this rate regardless of how you are employed, whether full-time, part-time, or temporary.
If you receive tips, your employer still owes you the full minimum wage. Tips are yours on top of your base pay. Your employer cannot count tips toward satisfying the minimum wage. Washington is one of a small number of states that prohibits a lower tipped minimum wage, which is a meaningful protection for hospitality and service workers.
Workers who are 14 or 15 years old may be paid 85 percent of the minimum wage, which comes to $14.56 per hour in 2026. Workers 16 and older are entitled to the full rate.
Overtime Laws 1.5X RATE
In Washington, most employees must be paid 1.5 times their regular rate for all hours worked past 40 in a workweek. At $17.13 per hour, that puts overtime at $25.70 per hour. Your employer cannot pay straight time for overtime hours. Once you cross 40 hours, the higher rate kicks in for every additional hour.
A salary does not make you automatically exempt from overtime. Washington has its own overtime exemption threshold, which is higher than the federal standard. For 2026, an employee must earn at least $1,541.70 per week ($80,168.40 per year) to even be considered exempt. If you earn less than that amount, you qualify for overtime regardless of your job title or duties.
For those earning above the threshold, the duties test still applies. The employee must genuinely perform executive, administrative, or professional work. A manager title on paper is not enough. If your actual day-to-day work does not match the exemption criteria, you may still be owed overtime. Many workers in Washington are misclassified as exempt and never receive overtime they have earned.
Meal & Rest Breaks MANDATED
Washington is one of the better states in the country when it comes to break protections. Both rest breaks and meal periods are required by law, and violations carry real consequences for employers who ignore them.
For rest breaks, you are entitled to a paid 10-minute break for every 4 hours worked. You cannot be required to work more than 3 hours without a break. Breaks should be scheduled as close to the midpoint of each work period as possible. Unlike meal breaks, rest breaks cannot be waived, even if you and your employer both agree to skip them. Time spent on rest breaks counts toward your total hours for overtime and paid sick leave calculations.
For meal periods, you must receive at least 30 minutes when you work more than 5 hours. That meal period must start between your second and fifth hour of work. If you are kept on duty, required to stay on-call on the premises, or called back during your meal break, that time must be paid. You are still owed a full 30 minutes of meal time even if the break was interrupted.
If your shift runs more than 3 hours past when it was scheduled to end, you are entitled to an additional 30-minute meal period. More can be required depending on total hours worked. Employers who routinely deny breaks or interrupt meal periods without paying for that time are committing wage violations.
Non-Compete Clauses WA SPECIFIC
Washington limits when non-compete agreements are enforceable. For 2026, a non-compete clause in an employment contract is only enforceable if the employee earns more than $126,858.83 per year. If you earn less than that, any non-compete your employer had you sign is not valid under Washington law.
For independent contractors, the threshold is higher. A non-compete clause covering an independent contractor is only enforceable if the contractor earns more than $317,147.09 per year from the company that imposed the restriction. Below that amount, the agreement cannot legally prevent you from working for a competitor.
If you were classified as an independent contractor but were earning below the threshold, and your employer is trying to enforce a non-compete, you may have a case. This is especially relevant when misclassification is also involved. An attorney can review whether the non-compete applies to your situation and what options you have.
Employee Misclassification COMMON VIOLATION
Calling a worker an independent contractor does not make it true. Washington courts look at how you actually work, not what your paperwork says. Employers in construction, transportation, and the gig economy have a long history of using the contractor label to avoid paying overtime and benefits. Washington takes misclassification seriously.
The test looks at the actual working relationship. If your employer controls when, where, and how you do the work, you are likely an employee. If you use their equipment, work only for them, and cannot set your own rates, you are likely an employee. A true independent contractor runs their own business, works for multiple clients, sets their own prices, and controls how the work gets done.
When misclassification is combined with denied breaks, unpaid overtime, or an unenforceable non-compete, the damages can be substantial. If any of this sounds familiar, an attorney can review the full picture and tell you what you may be owed.
Filing a Claim 3 YEAR WINDOW
You have 3 years to file a wage claim for unpaid wages in Washington. The clock starts on the date you should have been paid. If your employer has owed you wages for the past two years, you still have time to act. Once 3 years pass, those wages are gone. You cannot go back for them.
Once you report a violation or speak with an attorney, your employer cannot legally punish you for it. Retaliating against a worker for pursuing a wage claim is against the law. If your employer fires you, cuts your hours, or targets you after learning about a complaint, that is a separate violation and can increase what you are owed.
Start gathering your records now. Pay stubs, timesheets, texts or emails about your schedule, and any written policies about breaks or pay are all useful. The stronger your documentation, the stronger your case. An attorney can help you organize what you have and identify what else might help.
Think You May Be Owed Back Wages?
Josephson Dunlap reviews wage claims for Washington workers at no cost. There is no fee unless wages are recovered. A case manager will go through your situation and tell you where you stand.