Colorado Minimum Wage Order Poster Mandatory
The Minimum Wage Order Poster is a Colorado minimum wage law poster provided for businesses by the Colorado Department Of Labor and Employment. This is a required poster for all Colorado employers, and any business that fails to post this notification may be subject to penalties or fines.
This mandatory labor law poster describes Colorado's minimum wage rate and the various exceptions to the law that exist. In general, no employee may be paid less than the Colorado minimum wage.
COLORADO OVERTIME & MINIMUM PAY STANDARDS ORDER Effective 1/1/24: must update annually ; (“COMPS Order”) #39, POSTER & NOTICE new poster available each December Colorado Minimum Wage: inflation-adjusted annually; $14.42/hour in 2024, (Rule 3) • Employees must be paid at least minimum wage (whether hourly, salary, commission, piecework, etc.) unless exempt • Unemancipated minors can be paid 15% less than full minimum wage • Use the highest minimum wage that applies; all local minimum wages are posted at ColoradoLaborLaw.gov Overtime: 1½ times regular pay rates for hours over 40 weekly , 12 daily , or 12 consecutive (Rule 4) • Overtime is required each week over 40 hours, or day over 12, even if 2 or more weeks or days average fewer hours • Employers cannot provide time off (“comp time”) instead of time-and-a-half premium pay for overtime hours • Key variances/exemptions (all are detailed in Rules 2.3-2.4): - Modified overtime in a small number of health care jobs; exemption for certain heavy vehicle drivers - No 40-hour weekly overtime in downhill ski/snowboard jobs (but 56-hour overtime for many under federal law) - Agriculture: overtime after 48-56 hours (based on size and seasonality); extra breaks and pay on long days Meal Periods: 30 minutes uninterrupted and duty-free, for shifts over 5 hours (Rule 1.9) • Can be unpaid, but only if employees are completely relieved of all duties, and allowed to pursue personal activities • If work makes uninterrupted meal periods impractical, eating on-duty must be permitted, and the time must be paid • To the extent practical, meal periods must be at least 1 hour after starting and 1 hour before ending shifts Rest Periods: 10 minutes, paid, every 4 hours (Rule 5.2) #Work Hours: Up to 2 >2, up to 6 >6, up to 10 >10, up to 14 >14, up to 18 >18, up to 22 >22 #Rest Periods: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 • Need not be off-site, but must not include work, and should be in the middle of the 4 hours to the extent practical • Rest periods are time worked for minimum wage and overtime purposes, and if employers do not authorize and permit rest periods, they must pay extra for time that would have been rest periods, including for non-hourly-paid employees • Key variances/exemptions: - In some circumstances, 10-minute rest periods can be divided into two of 5 minutes (Rule 5.2.1) - Agriculture: certain work requires more breaks; other is exempt (Rule 2.3, & Agricultural Labor Conditions Rules) Time Worked: Pay for time employers allow performing labor/service for their benefit (Rule 1.9) • All time on-premises, on duty, or at workplaces (but not just letting off-duty employees be on-premises), including: - putting on/removing work clothes/gear (but not clothes worn outside work), cleanup/setup, or other off-clock duty, - waiting for assignments at work, or receiving or sharing work-related information, - security/safety screening, or clocking/checking in or out, or - waiting for any of the above tasks. • Travel for employer benefit is time worked; normal home/work travel is not (details in Rule 1.9.2) • Sleep time, if suf ficiently uninterrupted and lengthy, can be excluded in certain situations (details in Rule 1.9.3) Deductions, Credits, Charges, & Withheld Pay (Rule 6, and Article 4 of C.R.S. Title 8) • Final pay: Owed promptly (if a termination by employer) or at next pay date (if employee resigned) • Vacation pay: Departing employees must be paid all accrued and unused vacation pay, including paid time off usable for vacation, without deducting or declaring forfeiture based on cause for termination, lack of resignation notice, etc. • Deductions from pay: Allowed if listed below or in C.R.S. 8-4-105 (including deductions required by law, in a written agreement for the benefit of the employee, for theft in a police report, or for property loss after audit/notice) • Tip credits: Employers can pay up to $3.02 below the highest applicable minimum wage (Colorado or local), if: (a) tips (not mandatory service charges) raise pay to full minimum, & (b) tips aren’t diverted to non-tipped staff/owners • Meal credits/deductions: Allowed for the cost or value (without employer profit) of voluntarily accepted meals • Lodging credits/deductions: Allowed if housing is voluntarily accepted by the employee, primarily for the employee’s (not the employer’s) benefit, recorded in writing, and limited to $25 or $100 per week (based on housing type) • Uniforms: Must be provided at no cost unless they are ordinary clothes without special material or design; employers must pay for any special cleaning required, and cannot require deposits or deduct for ordinary wear and tear Exemptions from COMPS (Rule 2.2 lists all; key exemptions are below) • Executives/supervisors, administrators, and professionals paid at least a salary (not hourly wages) of $55,000 in 2024 (then inflation-adjusted in future years), except $33.17/hour for highly technical computer work • Other highly compensated, non-manual-labor employees paid at least 2.25 the above salary ($123,750 in 2024) • 20% owners, or at a nonprofit the highest-paid/highest-ranked employee, if actively engaged in management • Various (not all) types of salespersons, taxi drivers, camp/outdoor education field staff, or property managers Record-Keeping & Notices of Rights (Rule 7) • Employers must give all employees (and keep for three years) pay statements that include time worked, pay rate (including any tips and credits), and total pay • This year’s poster must be displayed where easily accessible, or if not practical (such as for remote workers), provided within one month of beginning work and when employees request a copy • Employers must include a copy of this poster, or the COMPS Order, in any employment handbook or manual • Violation of notice of rights rules (posting or distribution), including by providing information undercutting this poster, may yield fines and/or ineligibility for employee-specific credits, deductions, or exemptions in COMPS Complaint & Anti-Retaliation Rights (Rule 8) • Employees can send the Division (contact info below) complaints or tips about violations, or file lawsuits in court • Employers cannot retaliate against, or interfere with, employees exercising their rights • Anonymous tips are accepted; anonymity or confidentiality are protected if requested (Wage Protection Rule 4.7) • Owners and other individuals with control over work may be liable for certain violations — not just the business, even if the business is a corporation, partnership, or other entity separate from its owner(s) (Rule 1.6) • Immigration status is irrelevant to these labor rights: the Division will not ask or report status in investigations or rulings, and it is illegal for anyone to use immigration status to interfere with these rights (Wage Protection Rule 4.8) This Poster is a summary and cannot be relied on as complete labor law information . For all rules , fact sheets , translations , questions , or complaints , contact: DIVISION OF LABOR STANDARDS & STATISTICS , ColoradoLaborLaw.gov , cdle _labor _standards @ state.co.us , 303-318-8441 / 888- 390-7936
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Get All-In-One Poster NowMore Colorado Labor Law Posters 21 PDFS
Minimum-Wage.org provides an additional twenty required and optional Colorado labor law posters that may be relevant to your business. Be sure to also print and post all required state labor law posters, as well as all of the mandatory federal labor law posters.
Colorado Poster Name | Poster Type |
---|---|
Required Notice to Employer of Injury | Workers Compensation Law |
Required Colorado Employment Security Act | Unemployment Law |
Required Colorado Employment Security Act (Spanish) | Unemployment Law |
Required Notice of Paydays Poster | Miscellaneous Law |
Required Minimum Wage Order Poster | Minimum Wage Law |
List of all 21 Colorado labor law posters
Colorado Labor Law Poster Sources:
- Original poster PDF URL: https://cdle.colorado.gov/sites/cdle/files/2024%20COMPS%20Order%20%2339%20Poster%20English%20%5Baccessible%5D.pdf , last updated January 2024
- Colorado Labor Law Poster Page at https://cdle.colorado.gov/posters
- Colorado Department Of Labor and Employment at https://www.colorado.gov/cdle
Labor Poster Disclaimer:
While Minimum-Wage.org does our best to keep our list of Colorado labor law posters updated and complete, we provide this free resource as-is and cannot be held liable for errors or omissions. If the poster on this page is out-of-date or not working, please send us a message and we will fix it ASAP.