Overtime

Overtime is work in excess of the limits for ordinary working hours. Employees are entitled to additional pay for overtime work. Overtime cannot be a regular arrangement, and the employer can only use overtime in special situations.

What is overtime?

Overtime is work in excess of the limits for ordinary working hours. The limits for ordinary working hours are normally

  • 9 hours per 24-hour period
  • 40 hours per 7-day period

Employees who work in excess of the limits of ordinary working hours, are said to work overtime.

Agreed working hours and additional hours

What are agreed working hours?

Many workplaces have agreed shorter workdays and work weeks than the limits of ordinary working hours. The employment contract shall specify the number of working hours per work day and per week. The agreed working hours are the working hours specified in the employment contract.

What are additional hours?

An employee who works more than the agreed working hours, but whose working hours are still within the limits of ordinary working hours, is said to work additional hours.

Many employees are entitled to overtime pay even when they are working additional hours. This could, for example, be specified in their employment contract or in a collective agreement. For employers to order additional hours, the conditions for overtime work must be met.

Example of additional hours

When is overtime permitted?

Overtime cannot be a regular arrangement. An employer may only order employees to work overtime if there is an exceptional and time-limited need for it.

Such exceptional needs include

  • under-staffing due to absence. There must be a risk that the under-staffing may disrupt ordinary operations.
  • situations where there is a risk of damage to plant, machinery, raw materials or products
  • unexpected demand for work
  • increased demand for work due to seasonal fluctuations or shortage of labour with specialized skills or expertise

In addition, the need must be time-limited. This means that overtime cannot be made a regular arrangement. The employer must implement measures to reduce the need for overtime.

How much overtime can an employer order?

In cases of exceptional and time-limited need, the employer may order employees to work up to

  • 10 hours overtime over a 7-day period
  • 25 hours overtime over a period of 4 consecutive weeks
  • 200 hours overtime over a 52-week period

Limits on how much an employee may work

Even if the employer orders an employee to work overtime,

  • cumulative working hours cannot exceed 13 hours per 24-hour period
  • the average cumulative working hours in an 8-week period cannot exceed 48 hours per week

This means that the employee may work more than 48 hours in a single week, provided they work proportionately less in another week.

Extended limits for overtime

Some workplaces may, on certain conditions, have extended limits for overtime. This includes if

  • the employer and employee representatives in an undertaking bound by collective agreement, agree on extended limits for overtime
  • the employer has been granted permission by the Norwegian Labour Inspection Authority to extend the limits for overtime
  • the employer and central employee representatives in a trade union with right of nomination (a trade union with more than 10,000 members) have negotiated a collective agreement with extended limits for overtime

Remember that overtime work within the extended limits can only be assigned to an employee who is willing to work.

Overtime compensation

When performing overtime work, the employee is entitled to a premium of at least 40 percent of the agreed hourly rate. In other words, it is not legal to agree a premium lower than 40 percent.

The employer and employee may agree a fixed salary increase to compensate for overtime pay. In this case, the agreement must clearly specify what is ordinary salary and what is overtime compensation. The agreed overtime compensation must, as a minimum, match the mandatory overtime compensation.

It is possible for employees to agree with the employer to take the overtime hours as compensatory leave, either in full or in part, at an agreed time. This agreement must be made in writing. In any event, the employee must be paid the overtime compensation of at least 40 percent.

Are you an employee who has not received overtime compensation or pay? Read more about what to do

Exemptions from overtime rules

The rules concerning working hours and overtime normally apply to all employees, but the Working Environment Act grants exemptions to employees in

  • senior posts
  • particularly independent posts

What are the characteristics of senior and particularly independent posts? (Norwegian only)

Exemption from overtime and additional hours

In some cases, employees have the right to be exempted from work in excess of agreed working hours:

Dispute resolution and terms

Sometimes, employers and employees disagree on whether the employee can be exempted from working in excess of the agreed working hours. In this case, they may bring the matter before the Dispute Resolution Board (Norwegian only) (nemdene.no).

The term for initiating proceedings in the Dispute Resolution Board is four weeks from the date on which the employee received a written rejection of their request for exemption from the employer.