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Overtime compliance is one of the most significant labor cost variables for building services and commercial cleaning contractors. Workers who operate outside standard business hours, cover multiple sites, or pick up extra shifts frequently cross the 40-hour threshold — and the cost adds up fast at scale. That’s why some building services contractors look closely at the FLSA Section 7(i) retail and service exemption as a way to manage those costs legally.
This exemption allows qualifying employers to use a commission or incentive-based pay structure that satisfies overtime requirements differently than the standard time-and-a-half calculation. But it is narrowly defined, frequently misapplied, and not a fit for most building services operations. This guide explains how 7(i) works, when it applies, and what operators need to have in place if they rely on it.
Last updated: June 2026
What the FLSA Section 7(i) Exemption Actually Says
Section 7(i) of the Fair Labor Standards Act provides an overtime exemption for employees of retail or service establishments whose regular rate of pay exceeds 1.5 times the applicable minimum wage and whose compensation consists of more than 50% commissions on goods or services. When both conditions are met, the employer is not required to pay the standard overtime premium of one-half the regular rate for hours over 40 — because the regular rate itself is already high enough to satisfy the exemption’s threshold.
Three tests must all be satisfied simultaneously. First, the employer must qualify as a retail or service establishment — meaning at least 75% of its annual dollar volume of sales is not for resale and is recognized as retail sales or services in the industry. Second, the employee’s regular rate in the workweek must exceed 1.5 times the applicable federal or state minimum wage. Third, more than 50% of that employee’s earnings in a representative period must come from commissions on goods or services.
Does Building Services Qualify as a Retail or Service Establishment?
This is where most building services operators get tripped up. The DOL takes a narrow view of what constitutes a “retail or service establishment” for 7(i) purposes. Commercial cleaning companies that provide services directly to end-use clients — not for resale — generally can qualify as service establishments. However, the DOL has historically excluded certain commercial services from the retail concept, and its interpretation of this term has evolved through opinion letters and litigation.
Operators who believe they qualify should review the DOL’s guidance on FLSA exemptions and consult legal counsel before applying 7(i). The exemption has been the subject of significant litigation, and the consequences of misapplying it — back overtime pay plus liquidated damages for all affected employees in the applicable statute of limitations period — are severe. Per the FLSA, employers who willfully violate overtime rules face a three-year lookback period rather than the standard two years.
The Commission Requirement and How It Works in Practice
For building services workers, “commissions” in the 7(i) context don’t mean sales commissions in the traditional sense. They can include production bonuses, piece-rate pay, or other forms of variable compensation tied to output or service delivery — as long as those payments constitute more than 50% of the employee’s total compensation in the relevant representative period.
The representative period is important. The DOL allows employers to use a “representative period” of at least one month (and no more than one year) to evaluate whether the 50% commission requirement is met, rather than testing it week by week. This gives some operational flexibility — an employee who earns a large bonus in one month can use that period as representative, even if weekly pay varies.
The catch is that documentation requirements are significant. To defend a 7(i) exemption claim, you need accurate pay records showing the breakdown of hourly versus commission compensation for each employee in each representative period, evidence that the regular rate exceeded 1.5x minimum wage in each claimed workweek, and documentation that the employer qualifies as a retail or service establishment. Without that documentation, the exemption is indefensible in a DOL investigation or employee lawsuit.
When 7(i) Doesn’t Apply — and What Operators Should Do Instead
For most building services contractors, the 7(i) exemption either doesn’t apply or isn’t worth the administrative complexity and litigation risk. The standard path is simpler: track all hours accurately across all sites, calculate overtime on total hours worked per workweek, and manage overtime costs through scheduling rather than exemption claims.
The most effective overtime cost control in building services is prevention — catching workers before they hit 40 hours and adjusting schedules accordingly. Real-time overtime alerts in a connected time and attendance system flag employees who are approaching the threshold before overtime is triggered. Supervisors can redistribute hours across the workforce rather than absorbing the overtime cost on a subset of workers.
Netchex tracks total hours worked across all sites per employee, calculates overtime on the correct aggregate basis, and alerts managers in real time when thresholds are approached. That combination — accurate aggregation plus proactive alerts — eliminates both the compliance risk and the unnecessary cost that manual multi-site overtime tracking produces. See how Netchex for Building Services handles overtime for multi-site contract cleaning operations.
Frequently Asked Questions
The FLSA Section 7(i) exemption allows employers of retail or service establishments to pay commission-based employees without the standard overtime premium, provided the employee’s regular rate exceeds 1.5 times the applicable minimum wage and more than 50% of their compensation comes from commissions on goods or services. All three conditions must be met simultaneously to apply the exemption.
Potentially, but only if the employer qualifies as a retail or service establishment under the DOL’s definition and the pay structure meets the commission and regular-rate requirements. The DOL has historically taken a narrow view of what qualifies as a retail or service establishment for FLSA purposes, and building services operators should obtain legal guidance before applying the exemption.
At minimum, you need records showing the breakdown of hourly and commission compensation per employee per representative period, proof that the regular rate exceeded 1.5x minimum wage in each claimed workweek, and evidence that the employer qualifies as a retail or service establishment. Without this documentation, the exemption cannot be defended in a DOL investigation or employee litigation.
For most building services contractors, the most effective approach is proactive overtime prevention: tracking total hours across all sites in real time, setting alerts when employees approach 40 hours, and redistributing work before overtime is triggered. This eliminates both the compliance risk of misapplied exemptions and the unnecessary cost of overtime that could have been prevented with better visibility.
Ready to Manage Overtime Accurately Across Every Site?
See how Netchex tracks cross-site hours, triggers overtime alerts before the threshold is hit, and calculates overtime on the correct aggregate basis for building services contractors.
This guide reflects publicly available product information and independent reviewer data (G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Yelp, Better Business Bureau, Reddit, Software Advice, GetApp) as of 2026. Feature availability and pricing may vary by plan. Contact each provider for current details.
Disclaimer: Any product roadmap or future plans provided herein are for informational purposes only. They do not represent a commitment to deliver any material, code, feature, or functionality. Plans may change without notification. The development, release and timing of any features or functionality described remain at the sole discretion of Netchex, its affiliates, and partners. Netchex does not give legal, tax, or accounting advice. You are responsible for ensuring your use of Netchex product meets your individual business and compliance requirements.
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