The Domestic Worker Bill of Rights –
Frequently Asked Questions

You are a domestic worker if you provide services related to the care of people in the home, or maintain private households or their premises. Domestic workers include nannies, childcare providers, caregivers and personal attendants, housekeepers, cooks, and other household workers.

A personal attendant is someone employed by a private householder or any third party employer recognized in the health care industry to work in a private household. Duties of a personal attendant include supervising, feeding, and dressing a child or person who needs assistance due to advanced age, physical disability, or mental deficiency.

If a domestic worker spends more than 20 percent of his or her time performing work other than supervising, feeding, and dressing a child or person who needs supervision, he or she is not considered a personal attendant. Domestic workers who are NOT personal attendants are entitled to overtime under Wage Order No. 15 (see Question 4 below: “What overtime protections apply to domestic workers who are NOT personal attendants?”).

Personal attendants are entitled to overtime (1.5 x regular rate of pay) for any hours worked over nine (9) hours per day or over 45 hours per week, unless they are excluded employees or the employer is excluded under the Domestic Worker Bill of Rights.

The Domestic Worker Bill of Rights defines “domestic work employer” as any person, including corporate officers and executives, who directly or through an agent (such as temp services, staffing agencies, and the like), employs or controls wages, hours, and working conditions of domestic workers.

If you work in the home but you are NOT a personal attendant, then you are not covered by the Domestic Worker Bill of Rights. However, regular overtime protections apply under Wage Order No. 15, which sets overtime protections for domestic workers who are not personal attendants. There are different overtime protections depending on the type of work performed:

Summary table: overtime for domestic workers

Overtime
(1.5 x regular rate of pay)

Double time
(2 x regular rate of pay)

A personal attendant employed in a private household

> 9 hours/day
or
> 45 hours/week

Other type of domestic worker (not a personal attendant)

> 8 hours/day
or
> 40 hours/week

> 12 hours/day
or
> 8 hours on the 7th consecutive day of work

Wage Order No. 15
(normal overtime requirements)

> 9 hours/day
or
Up to 9 hours worked on the 6th or 7th day of the week

> 9 hours on the 6th or 7th day of the week

Wage Order No. 15
(special overtime requirements)

Personal attendants who do not work in the home are not covered under the Domestic Worker Bill of Rights. Their employment may be governed under Wage Order No. 5, which governs the public housekeeping industry, including hospitals, sanitariums, rest homes, child nurseries and care institutions, homes for the aged, and similar establishments offering board or lodging in addition to medical, surgical, nursing, convalescent, aged, or child care.

Under Wage Order No. 5, a personal attendant is an employee hired by a non-profit organization to supervise, dress, or feed a child or an adult with disability or advanced age.

Personal attendants employed by non-profit institutions under Wage Order No. 5 are only entitled to overtime for hours worked in excess of 40 in a week or for any hours worked on the 7th consecutive day of the workweek. Personal attendants under Wage Order No. 5 are not entitled to double-time compensation.

Note that workers in the public housekeeping industry who devote more than 20% of their time to duties other than the work of a personal attendant are not considered personal attendants under this wage order. This specific subcategory of domestic workers is entitled to normal overtime protections (as specified in the Wage Order No. 5): overtime pay (1.5 x the regular rate of pay) for hours worked in excess of eight (8) hours in a day or 40 regular hours in a week. They are also entitled to double time (2 x the regular rate of pay) for hours worked over 12 in a day or for hours worked over eight (8) on the seventh consecutive day of the workweek (in addition to regular overtime for the first eight (8) hours worked on the seventh consecutive day).

Calculating overtime pay rates

Yes. Domestic workers are entitled to the minimum wage, with the exception of babysitters under the age of 18 and the employer’s parent, spouse, or child. The Labor Commissioner enforces the California minimum wage. The Labor Commissioner may enforce local minimum wage laws if the work is performed in a city and/or county that has a higher minimum wage ordinance.

Yes. Meal and lodging credits can be applied. However, an employer must abide by the limits specified in Wage Order No. 15. That is, meals or lodging may only be credited against the minimum wage if the employer and the employee enter into a voluntary written agreement before the work is performed. (This requirement applies to all types of domestic workers.)