• Night · Weekend · Holiday shifts · 2026

Shift Differential Pay Calculator

Calculate your total pay for any shift — including night, weekend, and holiday premiums — and see exactly how your differential affects your overtime rate.

5–15%
Typical night differential
15–30%
Typical weekend premium
25–75%
Holiday shift range
3 types
Differential structures

Percentage-based

A percentage added on top of your regular hourly rate for qualifying shift hours. The most common structure in healthcare and manufacturing.

e.g. base + 15%

Flat-rate

A fixed dollar or pound amount added per hour during the qualifying shift. Simpler to calculate and more predictable for budgeting.

e.g. base + $2.50/hr

Tiered

Different rates apply at different times — higher premium for overnight vs evening, or holiday vs weekend. Common in hospitals and utilities.

e.g. eve 10%, night 20%
Premium Pay Calculator

Shift Differential Pay Calculator

Calculate extra pay for night shifts, weekends, holidays & other premium shifts. Handles overtime overlap correctly.

Your regular rate of pay
$
How the premium is calculated
% added to base rate
%
Hours worked at the premium rate
hrs
Hours at standard rate this period
hrs
How often you get paid

For overtime check (FLSA: >40 hrs/wk)
hrs
Hours before OT kicks in
Total pay this period
Regular pay
Differential pay
Effective rate
blended $/hr
Hours typeHoursRatePay
⚖️ Important: Under US federal FLSA, shift differential must be included in the regular rate when calculating overtime. Your OT rate is based on the blended rate — not just the base rate. Failure to include differential in overtime calculations is a common and costly payroll mistake.

What is shift differential pay?

Shift differential pay is extra compensation for working shifts that fall outside standard business hours — typically nights, early mornings, weekends, and public holidays. It is paid on top of your regular hourly rate to make less desirable shifts more attractive and to help employers maintain round-the-clock staffing.

Unlike overtime pay, shift differential is not required by federal law for private sector employees. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) does not mandate it. Whether you receive shift differential pay, how much it is, and which shifts qualify is determined entirely by your employer’s policy or, in unionised workplaces, by your collective bargaining agreement.

That said, once an employer offers shift differential, strict rules apply to how it interacts with overtime — and this is where many employers get it badly wrong. More on that in Section 4.

How to use this calculator

The calculator handles both the two most common types of shift differential structure. Use the tabs to switch between them.

Percentage-based differential (most common): Enter your base hourly rate and the differential percentage your employer offers for that shift — for example, 15% for nights. The calculator adds the premium to your base rate, shows your effective hourly rate for that shift, and calculates your total pay for any number of hours worked.

Flat-rate differential: Enter your base hourly rate and the flat dollar amount added per hour — for example, $2.50 extra per hour for weekend shifts. The calculator adds the flat premium and shows your total pay breakdown.

Adding overtime: If you worked more than 40 hours in the week and some of those hours were on a differential shift, tick the overtime box and enter your total hours for the week. The calculator will correctly apply the blended regular rate — your base rate plus differential — before calculating your overtime at 1.5×. This is the legally correct method under the FLSA and the step most employers skip when underpaying shift workers.

Reading your results: The results show your base pay, your differential premium, your total shift pay, your effective hourly rate, and — if overtime applies — a separate overtime calculation using the correct blended rate.

The three types of shift differential

Employers structure shift differential pay in three main ways. Your payslip and employee handbook should specify which your employer uses.

Percentage-based differential

The most common structure. Your employer adds a set percentage on top of your base hourly rate for qualifying hours.

Formula: Effective hourly rate = Base rate × (1 + differential %)

Example: You earn $20/hour. Your employer pays a 15% night shift differential.

  • Differential amount: $20 × 0.15 = $3.00/hour extra
  • Effective night shift rate: $20 + $3 = $23.00/hour
  • For an 8-hour night shift: $184 total

Flat-rate differential

A fixed dollar amount added to your hourly rate for qualifying shifts, regardless of your base pay.

Formula: Effective hourly rate = Base rate + flat dollar amount

Example: You earn $18/hour. Your employer pays a $2.50/hour weekend differential.

  • Effective weekend rate: $18 + $2.50 = $20.50/hour
  • For a 10-hour weekend shift: $205 total

Tiered differential

Some employers — particularly in healthcare and manufacturing — use different rates for different shift windows. A common structure might be: no premium for day shift, 10% for evenings (3pm–11pm), 15% for nights (11pm–7am), and 20% for weekends and public holidays. Tiered differentials often stack — if you work a Saturday night, you may receive both the night differential and the weekend differential simultaneously. Always check your employee handbook or ask your HR department for the exact stacking rules.

The overtime trap — the rule most employers get wrong

This is the single most important section on this page. Read it carefully if you work regular overtime on shift differential shifts.

The rule: Under the FLSA, when a non-exempt employee works more than 40 hours in a workweek, overtime must be calculated at 1.5× the regular rate of pay. The regular rate includes all shift differential pay earned that week — not just the base hourly rate.

What many employers do wrong: They calculate overtime at 1.5× the base rate and treat the differential as a separate addition. This produces a lower overtime rate than the law requires and results in underpaying shift workers.

The correct method — worked example:

Maria is a nurse earning $32/hour base. She works 45 hours this week — 35 hours on the day shift and 10 hours on the night shift at a 15% differential.

Step 1: Calculate all compensation for the week

  • Day shift earnings: 35 hours × $32 = $1,120
  • Night shift earnings: 10 hours × ($32 × 1.15) = 10 × $36.80 = $368
  • Total compensation: $1,488

Step 2: Calculate the blended regular rate

  • Total hours: 45
  • Regular rate: $1,488 ÷ 45 = $33.07/hour

Step 3: Calculate the overtime premium

  • Maria has worked 5 hours over 40 (the overtime hours)
  • She has already been paid straight time for those 5 hours within the weekly total above
  • Overtime premium owed: 0.5 × $33.07 × 5 hours = $82.68
  • Total weekly pay: $1,488 + $82.68 = $1,570.68

What a wrong calculation looks like: If Maria’s employer only calculated overtime on the $32 base rate: 5 hours × ($32 × 0.5) = $80 overtime premium. That is $2.68 less per week — which compounds to over $139 per year for someone working regular overtime with this pattern. Multiply that across a whole hospital ward and the underpayment becomes significant.

The calculator on this page uses the correct blended rate method automatically.

Shift differential rates by industry — 2026 benchmarks

There is no legal standard for shift differential rates. These benchmarks reflect what employers typically offer in 2026 and are useful for checking whether your current differential is competitive.

Percentage-based differential benchmarks:

Industry Evening shift Night shift Weekend Public holiday
Healthcare (hospital) 10–15% 15–20% 15–25% 25–35%
Nursing / long-term care 10–15% 15–20% 20–30% 25–35%
Manufacturing 5–10% 10–15% 10–15% 15–25%
Warehousing / logistics 5–10% 10–15% 10–15% 15–20%
Retail 0–5% 5–10% 5–10% 10–15%
Hospitality / hotels 5–10% 10–15% 10–15% 15–25%
Call centres 5–10% 10–15% 10–15% 15–20%
Public safety / emergency services 10–15% 15–20% 15–25% 25–35%
 

Flat-rate differential benchmarks:

Industry Typical flat-rate range
Healthcare $3–$8/hour
Manufacturing $2–$4/hour
Retail $0.50–$2/hour
Hospitality $1–$3/hour
Warehousing $1.50–$3.50/hour
 

Federal government employees: Federal workers covered by the Federal Wage System receive mandated shift differentials — 7.5% for evening shifts (majority of hours between 3pm and midnight) and 10% for night shifts (majority of hours between 11pm and 8am). These are set by 5 CFR Part 532 and are not discretionary.

State-specific requirements: Most US states follow federal guidelines and do not mandate shift differential for private employers. However some states have specific requirements — Massachusetts mandates premium pay for retail employees working Sundays and certain holidays, and New York has additional rules for some healthcare and service workers on night shifts. Always check your state’s labour laws if you are in a regulated industry.

Shift differential vs overtime — what is the difference?

These two types of extra pay are completely separate and operate on different rules. Understanding both is important if you work non-standard hours.

Shift differential Overtime pay
What triggers it Working a qualifying shift (night, weekend, holiday) Working more than 40 hours in a workweek
Required by law? No — employer’s choice (with some state exceptions) Yes — FLSA mandates it for non-exempt employees
How it is calculated Percentage or flat amount added to base rate 1.5× the regular rate (which includes any differential)
Can you get both? Yes — if you work a differential shift AND go over 40 hours, you receive both
Taxed differently? No — both are treated as ordinary income
 

The key practical point: shift differential and overtime are not mutually exclusive. If you work a 45-hour week and 10 of those hours are on the night shift, you are entitled to both the night differential premium for those 10 hours and overtime pay for the 5 hours over 40. The overtime rate is calculated using the blended regular rate that already includes the differential.

FAQ

Does my employer have to pay me shift differential?

For most private sector workers in the US, no. The FLSA does not require shift differential pay. Whether you receive it depends on your employer’s policy or your collective bargaining agreement if you are in a union. Federal government employees do receive mandated differentials under federal wage regulations. Some states — including Massachusetts for Sunday retail work — have their own requirements.

Yes — and this is one of the most commonly misunderstood areas of payroll law. Under the FLSA, overtime must be calculated at 1.5× the regular rate of pay, and the regular rate includes shift differential. If your employer calculates your overtime only on your base rate and ignores the differential, they are underpaying you. This is a violation of the FLSA and you may be entitled to back pay.
Night shift differentials in the US most commonly range from 5–15% of base pay for most industries. Healthcare is typically higher at 15–20% for nights. In flat-rate terms, $1–$3 per hour is common across most industries, with healthcare at $3–$8 per hour. These are market rates — there is no legally required minimum for private employers.
It depends entirely on your employer’s policy. Many employers — particularly in healthcare — do allow differentials to stack, meaning a Saturday night shift earns both the night differential and the weekend differential simultaneously. Others pay whichever is higher but not both. Always check your employee handbook or collective bargaining agreement for your specific stacking rules.
No. Shift differential pay is treated as ordinary wages and is subject to federal income tax, Social Security (6.2%), and Medicare (1.45%) withholding — exactly the same as your base hourly pay. It is reported on your W-2 and taxed at your normal marginal rate. There is no special tax treatment for shift differentials.
In most cases, yes — if it was offered as a company policy rather than written into an employment contract or collective bargaining agreement. However, removing an established differential without notice can seriously damage morale and retention, and in some jurisdictions may constitute a unilateral change to terms and conditions that requires proper notice. If your employer removes your differential unexpectedly, check your employment contract and speak to HR or an employment attorney.
They refer to the same thing — extra pay for working unsociable hours. The terminology varies by industry and employer. In healthcare and manufacturing it is most often called a shift differential. In some corporate and government contexts it may be called a night allowance or unsociable hours supplement. The calculation method is the same regardless of what your employer calls it.

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DISCLAIMER:

Results from this calculator are for guidance purposes only. Calculations are based on standard shift differential practices
and US federal FLSA rules for overtime integration. The FLSA does not mandate shift differential pay for private sector
employees — rates and eligibility are determined by employer policy or collective bargaining agreement. Overtime integration
uses the blended regular rate method as required by the FLSA. Some states have additional requirements — always check your state’s labour laws. Federal employee differentials are governed by 5 CFR Part 532. Always verify your specific entitlements with your HR department, union representative, or a qualified employment attorney. US workers can contact the Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division at dol.gov/agencies/whd.
Last reviewed: April 2026.