Virginia’s New Overtime Law Threatens Double and Treble Damages For Employers Who Don’t Pay Up


Following the flood of employee-friendly legislation during the Virginia General Assembly’s 2020 session, which included a significantly strengthened wage payment law that we previously discussed, the 2021 session resulted in the passage of yet another new wage-related law that employers need to be aware of.  This new law – the “Virginia Overtime Wage Act” – goes into effect on July 1, 2021 and will usher in the first overtime pay requirement in Virginia’s history.

The new Virginia overtime law largely mirrors the federal Fair Labor Standards Act’s (FLSA) overtime requirement and its mandate that an employer pay non-exempt employees one and one half times their regular rate of pay for hours worked in excess of 40 in any workweek.  The new law relies on similar exemptions, and it also borrows from the FLSA by permitting employees to pursue collective actions for overtime violations.

However, a few key provisions make Virginia’s overtime law different from, and more punitive than, the FLSA:

In sum, Virginia’s new overtime law will subject Virginia employers to overtime lawsuits using a longer statute of limitations and more significant penalties than the FLSA.  This risk is multiplied by the availability of a collective action brought in a Virginia state court, where summary judgment is rarely granted and judges are not as accustomed to addressing overtime claims as federal judges.  As a result, Virginia employers should review their exemption classifications and overtime pay practices to avoid running afoul of the new overtime law and subjecting themselves to a collective action in which they could be ordered to pay triple damages.


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National Law Review, Volume XI, Number 130