$30 an Hour Overtime Calculator
If you earn $30 an hour, your overtime pay depends on your employer’s overtime rate.
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) typically requires 1.5 times your regular rate for hours worked beyond 40 in a week.
However, some companies pay higher rates for weekends, holidays, or special shifts.
How Overtime Pay Works at $30 an Hour
Let’s break it down:
| Overtime Rate | Multiplier | Hourly Pay | Example: 5 Overtime Hours | Total Overtime Pay |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Overtime (Time-and-a-Half) | 1.5x | $45/hour | 5 × $45 = $225 | $225 |
| Double Time | 2x | $60/hour | 5 × $60 = $300 | $300 |
| Weekend/Holiday Overtime (2.5x) | 2.5x | $75/hour | 5 × $75 = $375 | $375 |
So, if you worked 45 hours this week, you’d earn $1,200 in regular pay (40 × $30) plus $225 in overtime (5 × $45) — for a total of $1,425 before taxes.
Example Quick Formula
Overtime Pay = Hourly Rate × Overtime Multiplier × Overtime Hours
For someone earning $30/hour with 6 overtime hours at 1.5x:
→ $30 × 1.5 × 6 = $270 in overtime pay.
That’s the power of understanding your $30 an hour overtime rate — small changes in hours or multipliers can make a big difference in your paycheck.
Find out how much you'd make a year if you earn $30 an hour!