Does Minnesota have daily overtime?
No. Like most states, Minnesota follows the federal standard: overtime is owed only after 40 hours in a workweek, not for long single days, weekends, or holidays by themselves. Four states — California, Alaska, Nevada, and Colorado — add daily overtime; Minnesota is not one of them. Employer policy or a union contract can still provide extra premiums.
The federal rule that always applies in Minnesota
Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), covered non-exempt employees in Minnesota must be paid at least 1.5 times their regular rate for every hour worked over 40 in a workweek. The math is two steps: overtime rate = regular rate × 1.5, then overtime pay = overtime rate × overtime hours. The authoritative federal reference is the U.S. Department of Labor overtime page. Rules change — confirm anything time-sensitive with Minnesota's state labor department before relying on it.
No tax on overtime in Minnesota
Overtime has never had a special higher tax rate — it is ordinary income. And under the 2025 federal law commonly called “no tax on overtime,” eligible workers in Minnesota can deduct the premium portion of FLSA overtime (the extra 0.5x) from federal taxable income, up to annual caps, for tax years 2025 through 2028. Because it is federal, it applies in Minnesota the same as every other state. Estimate what it is worth with the no tax on overtime calculator.
Run your Minnesota numbers
Use the calculator above for a quick 1.5x figure, add double-time hours in the overtime calculator if your schedule qualifies, and compare every state's rules on the overtime rules by state page. This site does the math; your Minnesota labor department and the U.S. DOL are the authorities on classification and eligibility.