$25 an Hour Overtime Calculator

If you earn $25 an hour, your overtime rate depends on your employer’s pay policy. 

Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), most U.S. workers must receive 1.5 times their regular pay for every hour worked over 40 in a week. 

Some employers also offer 2x or even 2.5x rates for holidays or weekend shifts.

How Overtime Pay Works at $25 an Hour

Here’s what your overtime pay looks like at different multipliers:

Overtime RateMultiplierHourly PayExample: 5 Overtime HoursTotal Overtime Pay
Standard Overtime (Time-and-a-Half)1.5x$37.50/hour5 × $37.50 = $187.50$187.50
Double Time2x$50/hour5 × $50 = $250$250
Weekend/Holiday Overtime (2.5x)2.5x$62.50/hour5 × $62.50 = $312.50$312.50

For example, if you worked 45 hours in one week, you’d earn $1,000 in regular pay (40 × $25) plus $187.50 in overtime (5 × $37.50) — for a total of $1,187.50 before taxes.

Example Quick Formula

Overtime Pay = Hourly Rate × Overtime Multiplier × Overtime Hours

For someone earning $25/hour with 6 overtime hours at 1.5x:
→ $25 × 1.5 × 6 = $225 in overtime pay.

That’s how easy it is to estimate your $25 an hour overtime rate — and see how much extra money those extra hours really bring in.

Find out how much you'd make a year if you earn $25 an hour.

25 Dollars an Hour Overtime Calculator FAQs

Multiply your hourly rate by your overtime multiplier and the number of overtime hours.

Example: $25 × 1.5 × 8 overtime hours = $300 in overtime pay.

Time-and-a-half means you earn 1.5 times your normal rate for overtime hours — $37.50/hour if you earn $25/hour. 

Double time means 2 times your hourly rate, or $50/hour, often applied to holidays or long consecutive shifts.

Most hourly employees in the U.S. are covered under the FLSA, which requires overtime pay after 40 hours in a week. 

Some salaried or exempt employees may not qualify, so always review your employer’s overtime policy and state labor laws.