Quick-read1 min

When Off-the-Clock Work Counts as Paid Time

Apple paid about $30M to settle a California bag-check class action — a reminder that state law can treat the same minutes differently than federal law.

When work outside a shift counts as paid time

Federal law excludes many pre- and post-shift activities from paid time unless they are "integral and indispensable" to the job. California is broader: if you require it or control it, it is often paid time. Bag checks, mandatory transit, and required system logins can all count in California.

The trap catching multi-state employers: California rejects the federal "small amounts don't count" defense for regular off-the-clock work. A few minutes after clock-out, repeated every shift, can become a wage claim. Apple paid roughly $30M to settle a California bag-check pattern after a similar theory lost under federal law at the Supreme Court.

How to track every minute of work

  • List every pre-shift or post-shift task employees do (bag check, login, gear, closing).
  • If you have California employees: every one of those tasks is paid time.
  • For everyone else: ask whether the task is "integral and indispensable" to the job.
  • For remote employees: track after-hours messages when non-exempt employees are expected or allowed to answer them.
  • Capture the time at the actual start and end of work, not just the shift schedule.

Where small amounts of unpaid work become big lawsuits

  • A California cashier doing a 3-minute bag check after every shift — every shift is a violation.
  • A Starbucks shift supervisor locking up after clock-out — federal small-amounts rule doesn't apply in California.
  • A remote employee regularly answering after-hours Slack messages that managers see — likely paid time.
  • A factory worker putting on protective gear before clock-in — federally required to be paid if the gear is required.

Match California, cover everywhere

The gap between federal and California rules on off-the-clock work is wider than on almost any other wage-hour topic. Capture every minute employees actually work — bag checks, logins, gear changes, closing tasks, after-hours messages — for every employee, regardless of state. The marginal pay is small; missing it in California is class-action exposure measured in tens of millions.

Full-length articleOff-the-Clock Work Laws by StateThe 5 most expensive off-the-clock mistakes — federal Portal-to-Portal vs California's stricter "control" test, the named cases (Frlekin, Troester, Tyson), and remote-work exposure.

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About this guide

Clockspot has been making time-tracking software for small businesses since 2007. Every quick-read article we publish is fact-checked. Each claim is verified against the underlying laws and court cases, with a dated report published alongside the piece so any reader can audit it.