Scroll to the bottom to watch the entire 20 mins explainer
Overview:
The
federal overtime salary baseline for most white-collar exemptions has been
formally restored to $684 per week, or $35,568 per year. For HR and payroll
teams, the important point is that this should not be treated as a new overtime
increase. It is better understood as a restoration of the 2019 federal baseline
after the 2024 overtime rule was vacated by federal courts.
This
free HR compliance video explains what the restored federal baseline means in
practical terms, why the 2024 threshold is no longer the operative federal
standard, and what employers should review before making classification,
payroll, or employee communication decisions.
The
session also reminds employers that salary alone does not determine exempt
status. HR must still review the salary basis requirement, the employee’s
actual duties, applicable state law, payroll settings, job descriptions, and
documentation before treating a role as exempt or non-exempt.
Areas Covered:
- What
the restored $684 per week federal salary baseline means
- Why
this update should not be described as a new overtime increase
- Difference
between the 2019 federal rule and the vacated 2024 overtime rule
- How
the Texas litigation affected the 2024 salary threshold increases
- Why
salary level alone does not make an employee exempt
- The
role of the salary basis test and duties test
- Executive,
administrative, professional, computer, and outside sales exemption
considerations
- Common
HR confusion around job titles, assistant managers, and administrative roles
- Impact
on salaried employees near the federal threshold
- What
employers should review if they prepared for or implemented 2024 rule changes
- Payroll
and timekeeping system checks HR should consider
- Employee
communication risks after the rule change
- Why
multi-state employers must check state overtime standards
- Training
needs for HR, payroll, managers, recruiting, compensation, and finance teams
- Practical
steps for documentation, classification review, and ongoing monitoring
Why
Should You Watch This Webinar?
Many
employers may assume the overtime issue is settled because the federal salary
baseline has returned to $684 per week. That assumption can create risk. The
restored federal number provides clarity, but it does not remove the need to
review actual job duties, salary basis, state requirements, payroll setup, and
classification records.
This
webinar is useful for HR and payroll teams that need a clear, practical
explanation they can apply inside the workplace. It helps separate the restored
federal baseline from the vacated 2024 rule, so teams do not communicate the
update incorrectly to managers or employees.
It
also helps employers treat this moment as a classification cleanup opportunity.
Rather than focusing only on the number, HR can use this update to review job
descriptions, payroll flags, exemption approvals, employee communications,
manager training, and state law overlays.
Who
Will Benefit?
This
short webinar is designed for professionals who are involved in employee
classification, payroll compliance, wage and hour decisions, job posting
approvals, compensation planning, and workforce communication. Those include:
- HR
Managers/HR Directors
- HR
Compliance Professionals/HR Business Partners
- Employee
Relations Professionals/Payroll Managers
- Payroll
Specialists/Compensation Managers
- Total
Rewards Professionals/Recruiting Managers
- Talent
Acquisition Professionals/Operations Managers
- Department
Managers/Finance Managers
- Business
Owners/Office Managers
- Compliance
Officers/Employment Law Support Teams
- Multi-State
Employer HR Teams
- Small and Mid-Sized Business Leaders
- People Managers Responsible for Scheduling and Overtime Approval
Watch the entire 20 mins explainer here:
This webinar is presented by Amorit Education’s in-house experts, who closely monitor regulatory, compliance, and workforce developments affecting employers and federal contractors. Their work is focused on turning complex updates into practical guidance that helps HR, compliance, and business teams understand what has changed, where the risks may sit, and what actions may deserve closer attention.

