🇺🇸 Maine Overtime Laws — 2026 UPDATE

Overtime Laws in Maine 2026: Pay Rates, Exemptions & Tax Deduction (2026)

⚠️Informational only — not legal or tax advice.

Guide for Maine overtime laws 2026

Last verified: March 5, 2026

Next scheduled review: June 5, 2026

Overtime in Maine 2026

Table of Contents

Maine Overtime Laws at a Glance (2026)

Details
Overtime threshold 40 hours per workweek
Overtime pay rate 1.5× regular rate of pay
Double time No
7th consecutive day rule No
State minimum wage (2026) $15.10/hour
Exempt salary threshold (2026) State: $871.16/week ($45,300.32/yr) — higher than federal
Daily overtime No — weekly calculation only
Mandatory overtime cap 80 hours of overtime per consecutive 2-week period
State enforcement agency Maine Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division
Federal enforcement U.S. DOL Wage and Hour Division
Overtime tax deduction (federal) Up to $12,500/yr (2025–2028) — FLSA-covered workers — Maine does not conform for state income tax
Statute of limitations 6 years (state) / 2 years FLSA (3 if willful)

Governing law: 26 M.R.S. § 664; 26 M.R.S. § 603; Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 207
Last verified: March 5, 2026

Does Maine Have Its Own Overtime Law?

Maine has its own overtime law under 26 M.R.S. § 664, which provides protections that go beyond the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) in several important respects.

When Maine law and federal FLSA rules differ, the standard that is more favorable to the employee applies.

Key differences between Maine and federal overtime law:

  • Higher exempt salary threshold: Maine requires employees to earn at least $871.16 per week ($45,300.32 per year) to qualify for the executive, administrative, or professional exemption — significantly higher than the federal threshold of $684 per week ($35,568/year). The Maine threshold is recalculated annually as 3,000 times the state minimum wage, so it rises automatically each time the minimum wage increases.
  • Mandatory overtime cap: Under 26 M.R.S. § 603, employers in Maine may not require an employee to work more than 80 hours of overtime in any consecutive 2-week period. No comparable federal cap exists for most private-sector workers.
  • Mandatory overtime refusal for nurses: Registered nurses who have worked 12 consecutive mandatory hours at a healthcare facility may refuse to work additional hours and cannot be disciplined for doing so (26 M.R.S. § 603).
  • Longer statute of limitations: Maine employees have 6 years to bring wage and hour claims under state law, compared to 2 years (3 if willful) under the FLSA.

State statute: 26 M.R.S. § 664 — https://legislature.maine.gov/statutes/26/title26sec664.html
Mandatory overtime statute: 26 M.R.S. § 603 — https://www.mainelegislature.org/legis/statutes/26/title26sec603.html
Federal statute: Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 207 — https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/overtime

How Overtime Pay Is Calculated in Maine

What Is a “Workweek”?

Under the FLSA, a workweek is a fixed, regularly recurring period of 168 consecutive hours (seven consecutive 24-hour periods). A workweek does not have to start on Monday or align with a calendar week — the employer may designate any day and time as the start of the workweek.

Each workweek stands alone. An employer cannot average hours across two or more workweeks to avoid overtime. If an employee works 50 hours in one week and 30 the next, overtime is owed for the first week regardless of the second.

Source: 29 C.F.R. § 778.104–778.105

Pay Rates

Under Maine law (26 M.R.S. § 664) and the FLSA, nonexempt employees earn overtime at one rate:

Time-and-a-half (1.5× regular rate):

  • All hours worked over 40 in a workweek

Maine does not require daily overtime, double time, or a 7th-day rule. Overtime in Maine is calculated on a strictly weekly basis.

What Counts as the “Regular Rate of Pay”

The regular rate is not always the same as the hourly wage. Under the FLSA (29 C.F.R. § 778.108), the regular rate includes:

  • Base hourly rate or salary equivalent
  • Non-discretionary bonuses and incentive pay
  • Shift differentials
  • Commissions
  • Piece-rate earnings

The regular rate does NOT include:

  • Discretionary bonuses (e.g., holiday gifts)
  • Employer contributions to benefit plans
  • Vacation, holiday, or sick pay when no work is performed

Maine law tracks federal law on this point: 26 M.R.S. § 664(3) defines the regular hourly rate as including “all earnings, bonuses, commissions and other compensation that is paid or due based on actual work performed,” and excludes any sums excluded from the regular rate under 29 U.S.C. § 207(e).

Calculation Example

Example — Weekly overtime in Maine:

An employee earns $15.10/hour (Maine minimum wage) and works 48 hours in one workweek:

  • Regular pay: 40 hours × $15.10 = $604.00
  • Overtime pay: 8 hours × ($15.10 × 1.5) = 8 × $22.65 = $181.20
  • Total weekly gross pay: $785.20

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 664; 29 C.F.R. § 778.108–778.122

For the current Maine minimum wage used in this calculation, see Maine Minimum Wage.

Who Is Exempt from Overtime in Maine?

Not all employees in Maine are entitled to overtime pay. Certain employees are classified as “exempt” under federal and/or state law.

Federal FLSA Exemption Requirements

To be exempt from overtime under the FLSA, an employee must meet ALL THREE criteria:

1. Salary basis test: Paid a predetermined, fixed salary each pay period (not hourly)

2. Salary level test: Earn at least $684 per week ($35,568 per year)

3. Duties test: Perform specific job duties in one of these categories:

Exemption Key duty requirement
Executive Manages enterprise or department; directs 2+ employees; authority to hire/fire
Administrative Office/non-manual work related to management or business operations; exercises independent judgment
Professional Work requiring advanced knowledge in science or learning (prolonged specialized study)
Computer employee Systems analysis, programming, software engineering — $684/week salary OR $27.63/hour
Outside sales Primary duty is making sales away from employer's place of business

Source: 29 C.F.R. Part 541

What Happened to the 2024 DOL Salary Threshold Increase?

In April 2024, the U.S. Department of Labor issued a final rule that would have raised the exempt salary threshold to $1,128 per week ($58,656/year) effective January 1, 2025.

On November 15, 2024, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas vacated that rule nationwide in Texas v. U.S. Department of Labor (No. 4:24-cv-00499).

The federal salary threshold remains $684/week ($35,568/year) as of 2026.

Maine’s Exempt Salary Threshold (2026)

Maine sets its own, higher salary threshold for the executive, administrative, and professional exemption:

Amount
Maine threshold (2026) $871.16/week ($45,300.32/year)
Federal FLSA threshold $684/week ($35,568/year)
Difference Maine requires $187.16 more per week to qualify for exemption

What this means: An employee in Maine earning between $684/week and $871.15/week is exempt under federal law but NOT exempt under Maine law. Since Maine law is more favorable to the employee, the Maine standard applies.

Calculation basis: Maine law requires the exempt salary to exceed 3,000 times the state minimum wage. With a 2026 minimum wage of $15.10/hour, 3,000 × $15.10 = $45,300, or $871.16 per week. This threshold rises automatically each time the minimum wage increases.

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(E); Maine Department of Labor — https://www.maine.gov/labor/news_events/article.shtml?id=13338762

Maine Department of Labor OBBBA exemption page: https://www.maine.gov/labor/labor_laws/overtime.html

Employees Specifically Exempt from Maine Overtime Under 26 M.R.S. § 664(3)

Maine law exempts certain categories of employees from the overtime requirement regardless of salary level. These include:

  • Automobile mechanics, parts clerks, service writers, and salespersons paid by commission or flat-rate (interpreted consistently with 29 U.S.C. § 213)
  • Drivers or driver’s helpers not paid hourly who are subject to Motor Carrier Act requirements (49 U.S.C. § 31502)
  • Employees of seasonal employers (industries operating fewer than 26 weeks per calendar year)
  • Certain agricultural workers (with the exception of employees at egg processing facilities with over 300,000 laying birds, who are covered)
  • Public sector employees of the State’s executive and judicial branches engaged in fire protection or law enforcement activities, eligible for overtime under the FLSA 207(k) framework

Note on agricultural workers: Effective January 1, 2026, Maine extended its minimum wage to agricultural workers for the first time. However, the agricultural overtime exemption under 26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(A) remains in place for most farm workers. The FLSA’s agricultural overtime exemption (29 U.S.C. § 213(b)(12)) also continues to apply at the federal level.

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 663; 26 M.R.S. § 664(3); https://legislature.maine.gov/statutes/26/title26sec663.html

States with Higher Exempt Salary Thresholds Than Federal (2026)
State Weekly threshold (2026) Annual equivalent Basis
Washington $1,541.70 $80,168 2× state min wage
California $1,352.00 $70,304 2× state min wage
New York (NYC) $1,199.10 $62,353 Region-based
Colorado $1,123.08 $58,400 Adjusted annually
Maine $871.16 $45,300.32 3,000× state min wage ÷ 52
Federal $684.00 $35,568 29 C.F.R. § 541

Source: Respective state DOL websites

Overtime Tax Deduction: "No Tax on Overtime" (2025–2028)

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law 119-21), signed on July 4, 2025, created a new federal income tax deduction for qualified overtime compensation under Internal Revenue Code § 225.

This deduction is available for tax years 2025 through 2028.

Who Is Eligible

  • Nonexempt employees covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C. § 207)
  • Must have a Social Security number valid for employment
  • Cannot use the Married Filing Separately filing status

Who is NOT eligible:

  • Exempt (salaried) employees who do not receive FLSA overtime
  • Independent contractors (1099 workers) who are not FLSA-covered
  • Employees receiving overtime only under state law, employer policy, or collective bargaining (if that overtime is not also required by the FLSA)

What Is Deductible

The deduction covers the premium portion of overtime pay — specifically the amount that exceeds the regular rate of pay.

Overtime type What is deductible Example ($30/hr regular rate)
Time-and-a-half (1.5×) The "half" — 1/3 of total OT pay $15/hr per OT hour ($45 − $30)

IRS shortcut for 2025: If you only know your total overtime pay and were paid time-and-a-half, divide the total overtime amount by 3. (Source: IRS Notice 2025-69)

Deduction Limits
Filing status Maximum annual deduction Phase-out begins
Single $12,500 $150,000 MAGI
Married filing jointly $25,000 $300,000 MAGI
W-2 Reporting
Tax year Employer reporting requirement
2025 NOT required to separately report (transition year — IRS Notice 2025-62). May voluntarily report in W-2 Box 14 as "QUAL OT" or provide a separate statement
2026 and later REQUIRED to separately report qualified overtime compensation. The IRS has published a draft W-2 form indicating Box 12, Code TT for this purpose (draft form, subject to change before finalization)

If an employer did not separately report overtime for 2025, the IRS allows employees to use “any reasonable method” to calculate the deductible amount, including one-third of total overtime pay (for time-and-a-half workers), payroll records, or employer statements.

What This Deduction Does NOT Do

  • Does NOT exempt overtime from Social Security (6.2%) or Medicare (1.45%) taxes
  • Does NOT change how much overtime pay an employee receives — it reduces taxable income when filing
  • Does NOT apply to overtime paid solely under state law or employer policy that exceeds FLSA requirements

Source: IRS FAQs on Qualified Overtime Compensation Deduction; IRS Notice 2025-69; IRS Notice 2025-62; IRC § 225; P.L. 119-21, § 70202; Schedule 1-A (Form 1040)
Official IRS page: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/questions-and-answers-about-the-new-deduction-for-qualified-overtime-compensation

Maine Income Tax and Overtime — Non-Conformity

The federal overtime deduction applies to federal income tax only. Maine imposes a progressive state income tax at rates ranging from 5.8% to 7.15%.

Maine has not conformed to the IRC § 225 overtime deduction for state income tax purposes.

Maine uses fixed-date conformity, conforming to the IRC as of December 31, 2024. The OBBBA’s changes — including the overtime deduction under IRC § 225 — did not automatically take effect in Maine. On October 1, 2025, Governor Mills issued a Determination and Direction to the State Tax Assessor adopting limited OBBBA provisions (IRC § 179 expensing and certain small-business R&D deductions), but explicitly declining to conform to the overtime and tips deductions for tax year 2025.

The Governor cited a projected cost of approximately $27.8 million to exempt overtime from Maine income tax, in the context of a constitutionally required balanced budget.

What this means for Maine workers:

  • The federal IRC § 225 overtime deduction reduces your federal taxable income only
  • Overtime pay in Maine remains fully subject to Maine state income tax at applicable rates
  • Your Maine state return and your federal return will reflect different taxable income amounts if you claim the federal overtime deduction

Pending legislation — LD 2010:
The Governor’s conformity bill, LD 2010, was introduced in the Second Regular Session of the 132nd Maine Legislature (convened January 2026). Governor Mills’s proposal recommends against conforming to the overtime deduction. The Legislature is weighing this and other OBBBA provisions as part of the 2026 supplemental budget process. Status: Under review by the Legislature’s Taxation Committee as of March 2026.
Source: Maine Legislature — https://legislature.maine.gov/bills/

Pending legislation — LD 599:
LD 599 (“An Act to Expand Overtime Protections”) passed the Maine Legislature and would raise the state’s annual salary threshold for overtime exemption from $45,300.32 to $58,656 — aligning with the vacated 2024 federal DOL rule. As of March 2026, this bill awaits further action.
Source: Maine Legislature — https://legislature.maine.gov/bills/

Source (conformity): Maine Revenue Services, 2025 Income Tax Important Update — https://www.maine.gov/revenue/sites/maine.gov.revenue/files/inline-files/25_1040me_gen_instr_w_cover_pg.pdf
Governor’s October 1, 2025 Determination — https://www.maine.gov/governor/mills/
Cross-reference: For Maine income tax details, see Maine Income Tax.

Can an Employer Require Overtime in Maine?

Maine is one of the few states to impose a statutory cap on mandatory overtime.

Federal Baseline

Under the FLSA, there is no federal limit on the number of hours an employer can require an adult employee (age 16 and older) to work in a workweek, as long as the employee is properly compensated for all overtime hours.

Maine’s Mandatory Overtime Cap

Under 26 M.R.S. § 603, employers may not require an employee to work more than 80 hours of overtime in any consecutive 2-week period. An “overtime hour” means any hour worked beyond 40 in a workweek, so the cap translates to a maximum of approximately 120 total hours over two weeks.

Exceptions: The 80-hour cap does not apply to:

  • Work performed during a Governor-declared state emergency
  • Employees performing essential public services (utility service, snowplowing, road maintenance, telecommunications)
  • Employees whose work is necessary to protect public health or safety, outside the normal course of business
  • Salaried executives earning more than 3,000 times the state minimum wage annually
  • Employees of seasonal employers (industries operating fewer than 26 weeks per year)
  • Medical interns and residents in approved graduate educational programs
  • Employees involved in annual maintenance shutdowns or construction/repair of production machinery (for no more than 4 consecutive weeks)

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 603 — https://www.mainelegislature.org/legis/statutes/26/title26sec603.html

Special Protections for Nurses

Under 26 M.R.S. § 603, a registered nurse or licensed practical nurse who has worked 12 consecutive hours of mandatory overtime at a healthcare facility may refuse to work additional mandatory hours and cannot be disciplined for that refusal. Exceptions apply for declared emergencies and when the nurse is the only available qualified staff member. This protection applies regardless of the 80-hour biweekly cap.

Protections That Always Apply

Regardless of mandatory overtime policies, the following protections apply in Maine:

  • All overtime hours must be compensated at the applicable overtime rate (26 M.R.S. § 664)
  • Employers cannot retaliate against employees who file wage complaints (29 U.S.C. § 215(a)(3))
  • Disability accommodation requests under the ADA may limit overtime requirements
  • Child labor laws restrict hours for employees under 18

Source: 29 U.S.C. § 207; 26 M.R.S. § 603; 26 M.R.S. § 664

Industry-Specific Overtime Rules in Maine

Healthcare — Nurse Mandatory Overtime Protections

Maine has specific statutory protections for nurses in mandatory overtime situations. Under 26 M.R.S. § 603, a registered nurse or licensed practical nurse who has already worked 12 consecutive mandatory hours at a healthcare facility may refuse to work additional hours. An employer may not discipline, threaten, or otherwise retaliate against a nurse for exercising this right.

Exceptions apply when:

  • A state of emergency has been declared by the Governor
  • The nurse is the only available qualified staff member to perform the required work
  • The situation involves a patient already under the nurse’s direct care whose continuity of care requires the nurse’s continued involvement

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 603 — https://www.mainelegislature.org/legis/statutes/26/title26sec603.html

Healthcare — 8-and-80 Alternative

Under the federal FLSA (29 U.S.C. § 207(j)), hospitals and residential care facilities may use a 14-day work period instead of the standard 7-day workweek. Overtime is due after 8 hours in a workday OR 80 hours in the 14-day period, whichever calculation results in more overtime pay. This arrangement requires a prior written agreement between the employer and employees before the work is performed.

Source: 29 U.S.C. § 207(j)

Agriculture

Under the FLSA, most agricultural workers are exempt from federal overtime requirements (29 U.S.C. § 213(b)(12)). Under Maine law (26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(A)), most agricultural workers are also exempt from the state overtime requirement. One exception applies under state law: individuals employed at egg processing facilities with more than 300,000 laying birds are covered by Maine’s overtime provisions.

New in 2026 — Minimum wage extension: A law signed by Governor Mills in June 2025 extended Maine’s state minimum wage to agricultural workers effective January 1, 2026. This change does not affect the overtime exemption for farm workers — it applies to minimum wage coverage only.

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(A); 26 M.R.S. § 663(3)(A); Maine Department of Labor — https://www.maine.gov/labor/news_events/article.shtml?id=13338762

Retail and Commission Employees

Under 29 U.S.C. § 207(i), retail or service establishment employees may be exempt from FLSA overtime if: (1) their regular rate of pay exceeds 1.5 times the applicable minimum wage, and (2) more than half of their total compensation for a representative period comes from commissions. Maine does not add to this exemption at the state level.

Source: 29 U.S.C. § 207(i)

Public Sector — Compensatory Time

Under 29 U.S.C. § 207(o), public employers (state and local government) in Maine may offer compensatory time off instead of overtime pay, provided:

  • A prior agreement exists between the employer and employee (or applicable union)
  • Comp time accrues at 1.5 hours for each overtime hour worked
  • The cap is 240 hours of accrued comp time for most public employees, or 480 hours for public safety, emergency response, and seasonal employees

Private-sector employers cannot offer comp time in lieu of overtime pay. An employee who works overtime must be compensated at 1.5 times their regular rate in wages, not in time off.

Maine law (26 M.R.S. § 664(4)) expressly incorporates the federal comp time framework for executive and judicial branch employees, to the extent permitted by 29 U.S.C. § 207(o).

Source: 29 U.S.C. § 207(o); 26 M.R.S. § 664(4)

Transportation — Motor Carrier Exemption

Employees in Maine whose duties affect the safe operation of motor vehicles in interstate commerce, and whose employer is subject to the Secretary of Transportation’s jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C. § 31502, are exempt from FLSA overtime. This exemption applies to drivers, driver’s helpers, loaders, and mechanics affecting safe operation. Maine law (26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(K)) mirrors this exemption for non-hourly drivers subject to federal motor carrier regulations.

Source: 49 U.S.C. § 31502; 26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(K)

Fishing and Aquaculture

Under 26 M.R.S. § 663(3)(G), individuals employed in the catching, harvesting, farming, or first processing of fish, shellfish, crustaceans, sponges, seaweeds, or other aquatic life are exempt from Maine’s overtime and minimum wage provisions. The FLSA provides a parallel exemption for fishing operations.

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 663(3)(G)

How to File an Overtime Wage Complaint in Maine

Employees in Maine who believe they have not received proper overtime pay have three options:

Option 1: Maine Department of Labor — Wage and Hour Division

Details
Agency Maine Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division
Online filing https://www.maine.gov/labor/complaint/
Phone (207) 623-7900 (TTY: Maine relay 711)
Hours Monday–Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Deadline 6 years from the date of violation (14 M.R.S. § 752)

The Wage and Hour Division enforces Maine’s wage and hour laws, including minimum wage, overtime, tip rules, and the mandatory overtime cap under 26 M.R.S. § 603.

Source: Maine Department of Labor Wage and Hour Complaint Portal — https://www.maine.gov/labor/complaint/

Option 2: U.S. Department of Labor — Wage and Hour Division

Details
Online https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/contact/complaints
Phone 1-866-487-9243 (toll-free)
Deadline 2 years from violation (3 years if willful)

Option 3: Private Lawsuit

Employees may file a lawsuit against their employer in state or federal court. Under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), a federal FLSA lawsuit may recover:

  • Back wages owed
  • Liquidated damages (an additional amount equal to the unpaid wages)
  • Reasonable attorney’s fees and court costs

Under Maine law, the statute of limitations for private wage claims is 6 years under 14 M.R.S. § 752, giving Maine workers significantly more time to recover back wages than the federal FLSA affords. Note that for state employees of the executive or judicial branch, a separate 2-year limitation (3 years for willful violations) applies under 26 M.R.S. § 670-A, without recovery of liquidated damages or attorney’s fees.

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 670; 26 M.R.S. § 670-A; 14 M.R.S. § 752; 29 U.S.C. § 216(b)
Maine DOL Wage & Hour information: https://www.maine.gov/labor/labor_laws/wagehour.html

Retaliation Protection

Under the FLSA (29 U.S.C. § 215(a)(3)) and Maine law, employers cannot retaliate against employees for:

  • Filing an overtime wage complaint
  • Participating in an investigation
  • Testifying in proceedings related to overtime violations

Penalties for Overtime Violations in Maine

Federal FLSA Penalties
Penalty type Amount
Back wages Full amount of unpaid overtime owed
Liquidated damages Equal to unpaid wages (effectively doubles recovery)
Civil monetary penalty Up to $2,451 per violation (willful/repeated — adjusted annually)
Criminal prosecution Willful: fines up to $10,000; second offense: up to 6 months imprisonment

Source: 29 U.S.C. § 216

Maine Penalties

Under Maine law, violations of the wage and hour statutes (including the overtime provisions of 26 M.R.S. § 664 and the mandatory overtime cap under 26 M.R.S. § 603) expose employers to:

  • Back wages: Full recovery of all unpaid overtime compensation
  • Civil penalties: The Maine Department of Labor may assess monetary penalties for violations discovered through complaint investigations or enforcement actions. The Department publishes annual summaries of enforcement actions at https://www.maine.gov/labor/bls/whv/
  • Private right of action: Employees may sue directly to recover unpaid wages and may recover attorney’s fees and court costs in successful actions (26 M.R.S. § 670)
  • 6-year lookback: Maine’s 6-year statute of limitations means employers can be held liable for up to 6 years of back wages in a private action, compared to 2–3 years under the FLSA

Source: 26 M.R.S. § 670; Maine Department of Labor Wage and Hour Violations — https://www.maine.gov/labor/bls/whv/

Maine Overtime Law Updates (2025–2026)

Federal Changes Affecting Maine

  • July 4, 2025: One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21) signed — created federal overtime tax deduction for tax years 2025–2028 (IRC § 225)
  • November 15, 2024: DOL salary threshold rule vacated by federal court (Texas v. U.S. Department of Labor, No. 4:24-cv-00499) — federal exempt threshold remains $684/week ($35,568/year)

Maine Changes

  • January 1, 2026: Maine minimum wage increased from $14.65 to $15.10/hour, based on a 3.1% increase in the Northeast Region CPI-W. The minimum overtime rate rose accordingly to $22.65/hour (1.5× $15.10). Source: Maine Department of Labor — https://www.maine.gov/labor/news_events/article.shtml?id=13338762
  • January 1, 2026: Maine’s exempt salary threshold increased from $845.21/week ($43,951/year) to $871.16/week ($45,300.32/year), reflecting the new minimum wage. Source: Maine Department of Labor — https://www.maine.gov/labor/news_events/article.shtml?id=13338762
  • January 1, 2026: Maine’s state minimum wage extended to agricultural workers for the first time, following enactment of “An Act to Establish a State Minimum Hourly Wage for Agricultural Workers” (signed June 2025). This does not affect the existing agricultural overtime exemption.
  • October 1, 2025: Governor Mills issued a Determination and Direction to the State Tax Assessor, adopting limited OBBBA tax provisions but declining to conform to the IRC § 225 overtime deduction for 2025 state income tax purposes. Source: Maine Governor’s Office — https://www.maine.gov/governor/mills/

Pending Legislation

  • LD 2010 — Governor Mills’s conformity bill, under consideration by the 132nd Maine Legislature in its Second Regular Session (January 2026). The Governor proposes to conform to selected OBBBA provisions (standard deduction, charitable contributions) but recommends against conforming to the overtime or tips deductions. Public hearing held February 2026. Status: Under review by the Taxation Committee.
    Source: Maine Legislature — https://legislature.maine.gov/bills/
  • LD 599 — “An Act to Expand Overtime Protections” — Passed by the Maine Legislature; would raise the annual salary threshold for overtime exemption from $45,300.32 to $58,656 (matching the vacated 2024 federal DOL rule). As of March 2026, awaiting further action.
    Source: Maine Legislature — https://legislature.maine.gov/bills/

Last reviewed: March 5, 2026
Next scheduled review: June 5, 2026

Frequently Asked Questions About Overtime in Maine

Does Maine have its own overtime law?

Yes. Maine has its own overtime law under 26 M.R.S. § 664, which mirrors the federal 40-hour weekly threshold but adds important protections: a higher exempt salary threshold ($871.16/week in 2026), a statutory cap on mandatory overtime (80 hours per 2-week period), and a 6-year statute of limitations for wage claims. When Maine law is more favorable than the FLSA, the Maine standard applies.

What is the overtime rate in Maine in 2026?

The overtime rate in Maine is 1.5 times the employee’s regular rate of pay for all hours over 40 in a workweek. Based on the Maine minimum wage of $15.10/hour, the minimum overtime rate is $22.65/hour. Maine does not require daily overtime or double time.

Does Maine require daily overtime?

No. Overtime in Maine is calculated on a weekly basis only. Working more than 8 hours in a single day does not trigger overtime unless total hours in the workweek exceed 40. Neither Maine law nor the FLSA imposes a daily overtime requirement in Maine.

Is mandatory overtime legal in Maine?

Employers in Maine may require adult employees to work overtime. However, Maine is one of the few states with a statutory cap: under 26 M.R.S. § 603, employers cannot require more than 80 hours of overtime in any consecutive 2-week period. Additionally, registered nurses and licensed practical nurses who have already worked 12 consecutive mandatory hours may refuse further mandatory hours without fear of discipline.

Am I exempt from overtime in Maine?

Exemption depends on salary level, salary basis, and job duties. Under Maine law, employees must earn at least $871.16/week ($45,300.32/year) on a salary basis AND perform executive, administrative, or professional duties to qualify for the EAP exemption. This is a higher bar than the federal threshold of $684/week. Meeting the salary threshold alone is not sufficient — the duties test must also be satisfied.

Can salaried employees get overtime in Maine?

Yes. Being paid a salary does not automatically make an employee exempt from overtime. Salaried employees who earn less than $871.16/week or who do not meet the duties tests under 29 C.F.R. Part 541 are nonexempt and entitled to overtime pay at 1.5 times their regular rate.

Is overtime taxed in Maine?

Overtime pay is subject to both federal and Maine state income tax. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (2025–2028), FLSA-covered nonexempt employees may deduct up to $12,500 (or $25,000 for joint filers) of the premium portion of overtime from federal taxable income. However, Maine has not conformed to this federal deduction for state income tax purposes. Overtime pay remains fully subject to Maine’s state income tax (rates 5.8%–7.15%). The Legislature is considering conformity legislation (LD 2010) as of early 2026, but the Governor has recommended against adopting the overtime deduction.

How do I calculate the federal overtime tax deduction?

For time-and-a-half pay, the deductible amount is one-third of total overtime pay. For example, if you earned $9,000 in total overtime at time-and-a-half, the qualified overtime compensation deductible on your federal return is $3,000. The IRS confirms this method in IRS Notice 2025-69. This deduction applies only to your federal Form 1040 (Schedule 1-A) — it does not reduce your Maine state taxable income under current law.

How do I file an overtime complaint in Maine?

File a wage claim with the Maine Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division online at https://www.maine.gov/labor/complaint/ or by phone at (207) 623-7900. You may also file with the U.S. DOL Wage and Hour Division at 1-866-487-9243. The state statute of limitations is 6 years; the federal FLSA deadline is 2 years (3 if willful).

Can my employer fire me for refusing overtime in Maine?

Maine is an at-will employment state, and employers may generally discipline or terminate employees who refuse to work overtime. However, there are important limits: employers cannot require more than 80 hours of overtime in any 2-week period, nurses may refuse additional hours after 12 consecutive mandatory hours, and employers cannot retaliate against employees who file overtime complaints or participate in investigations (29 U.S.C. § 215(a)(3)).

Can my employer give comp time instead of overtime pay?

Under the FLSA, private-sector employers in Maine cannot offer compensatory time off in lieu of overtime pay. An employee who works overtime must be paid at 1.5 times their regular rate in wages. Public-sector employers (state and local government) may offer comp time at 1.5 hours per overtime hour, up to 240 hours for most employees (480 hours for public safety and emergency response workers), under a prior written agreement (29 U.S.C. § 207(o); 26 M.R.S. § 664(4)).

Does working on weekends or holidays count as overtime in Maine?

No. Under both Maine law and the FLSA, working on a weekend or holiday does not automatically trigger overtime. Overtime depends on total hours worked in the workweek (a fixed 168-consecutive-hour period), regardless of which days those hours fall on. Employers are not required by law to pay a premium for weekend or holiday work unless overtime hours are triggered.

What is the statute of limitations for overtime claims in Maine?

Under Maine law: 6 years from the date of the violation (14 M.R.S. § 752). Under the FLSA: 2 years (3 years if the violation is willful). Maine’s longer deadline applies to claims under state law, giving workers more time to recover unpaid wages. For state employees of the executive or judicial branch, a separate 2-year limit applies under 26 M.R.S. § 670-A.

What happens if my employer doesn’t pay overtime?

Under the FLSA, employees may recover unpaid overtime wages, liquidated damages equal to the unpaid amount, and attorney’s fees (29 U.S.C. § 216(b)). Under Maine law, employees may recover back wages, civil penalties assessed by the Maine DOL, and attorney’s fees through a private action (26 M.R.S. § 670). Maine’s 6-year statute of limitations allows recovery of significantly more back wages than the federal 2-year window.

What is Maine’s threshold for mandatory overtime — can I be forced to work unlimited hours?

No. Maine is one of the few states that limits mandatory overtime by statute. Under 26 M.R.S. § 603, employers may not require employees to work more than 80 hours of overtime in any consecutive 2-week period — the equivalent of roughly 120 total hours over two weeks. Exceptions apply for emergencies, essential services, and certain seasonal or maintenance activities.

Does Maine’s exempt salary threshold increase automatically each year?

Yes. Maine’s exempt salary threshold is set at 3,000 times the state minimum wage. Because Maine’s minimum wage is adjusted annually on January 1 based on the Northeast Region’s Consumer Price Index, the salary threshold increases automatically at the same time. As of January 1, 2026, the threshold is $871.16/week ($45,300.32/year). Source: 26 M.R.S. § 664(3)(E); Maine Department of Labor — https://www.maine.gov/labor/news_events/article.shtml?id=13338762

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Legal Disclaimer: Nature of This Compilation This document is a compilation of publicly available information from official government sources. It is NOT: Legal advice An interpretation of laws or regulations A substitute for consultation with a licensed attorney A comprehensive treatment of all applicable laws Guaranteed to be complete or current