Orange County Employee Misclassification Lawyer

Home » Orange County Employee Misclassification Lawyer
Orange County Employee Misclassification Lawyer-image

Employee Misclassification Attorney in Orange County, CA

Every employer operating in California must abide by the labor regulations in place at the federal, state, and local levels. Many of these regulations pertain to the classification of employees, designating certain rights and responsibilities for several employee classifications. Employers must classify their employees accurately. Unfortunately, this does not always happen as it should. An Orange County employee misclassification lawyer can help if you have been misclassified.

Our Orange County Attorneys

Our Founding Attorney

Trial Counsel

State and federal overtime rules do not cover certain categories of employment. Salaried workers can be required to work long hours without any extra pay. Independent contractors can be paid straight-time wages instead of premium wages. Many California employers have taken advantage of the misunderstandings regarding employee classification to avoid paying benefits and higher wages when they legally should.

Why Some Employers Deliberately Misclassify Workers

Some employers have also used employee misclassification to indirectly deny their workers overtime. Typically, overtime is paid at 1.5 times the normal hourly pay rate, so someone who typically earns $20 per hour would earn $30 per hour when they work overtime. Many such workers are knowingly misclassified by employers to avoid paying overtime. The California labor commissioner has spotlighted this rampant practice. If you were wrongly classified as exempt, you could be entitled to months or years worth of unpaid overtime compensation.

Some employers have also used employee misclassification to indirectly deny their workers overtime. Typically, overtime is paid at 1.5 times the normal hourly pay rate, so someone who typically earns $20 per hour would earn $30 per hour when they work overtime. Many such workers are knowingly misclassified by employers to avoid paying overtime. 

The California labor commissioner has spotlighted this rampant practice. If you were wrongly classified as exempt, you could be entitled to months’ or years’ worth of unpaid overtime compensation.

Other Types of Orange County Employment Law Cases We Handle Include

Choose the California Employment Counsel, APC to Represent Your Claim

When you have been knowingly misclassified in your employment and denied wages and benefits that you should have legally received, you need experienced guidance you need experienced guidance to help you pursue an employment misclassification case.

An Orange County employee misclassification attorney can help you recover your losses and hold your employer accountable for their illegal actions. At the California Employment Counsel, APC, our team focuses entirely on employment law and strives to provide every client we represent with individualized, comprehensive legal counsel.

California Employment Counsel, APC, has successfully represented salaried employees and contractors in misclassification claims in Orange County and Southern California. Our lawyers have helped individual clients and groups of employees recover back pay and other damages.

When you hire an employee misclassification lawyer from our firm, the team can thoroughly investigate the entire range of lost wages, benefits, and other compensation you were denied and make every effort to pursue full recovery.

Our firm can offer financially accessible legal services, including free initial consultations and a policy that says there are no attorney fees unless we win.

Free Initial Consultation · No Recovery, No Attorney Fee

Recent Verdicts & Settlements

$2,791,785

Verdict of $2,791,785 against a restaurant for sexual harassment of a teenager in Orange County Superior Court

$2,125,000

$2,125,000 in age discrimination case against a large hotel

$2,944,707

Total verdict of $2,944,707 against Amazon in a pregnancy discrimination case in Los Angeles Superior Court

Were You Wrongfully Classified As Exempt From Overtime in California?

Many California workers are more than willing to put in overtime hours to earn extra income. Some people rely on regular overtime to make ends meet. Unfortunately, some California workers mistakenly believe they are not entitled to overtime because of their employers’ intentional misclassification. Misclassification tends to fall into two categories:

  • Salaried employees such as managers, assistant managers, and administrators may work six or seven days a week, putting in upwards of 50 to 60 hours. Closer analysis often reveals that they do not meet the statutory criteria as exempt employees.
  • Independent contractors are also exempt from overtime pay. If they are contracted per project rather than per hour, they may not get any additional pay at all for working beyond 8 hours in a shift or 40 hours in a week. But many contractors are not in fact independent; they are arbitrarily designated as such by employers to get around the overtime rules.

Many employees in these situations often feel stuck, thinking they are making as much as they can when, in fact, they are legally entitled to much more. For example, an independent contractor who spends a full year performing a full-time employee’s duties and meeting California standards for full-time employment could potentially claim tens of thousands of dollars in missed compensation and benefits in this time. An assistant manager who regularly works ten or more overtime hours each week could be entitled to back pay for their overtime hours.

Identifying Employee Classification Errors

There are several criteria to examine when it comes to determining a California employee’s true employment status. Recent employment legislation passed in California aims to make it even more difficult for employers to misclassify and exploit their employees. Some of the factors that must be considered when weighing an employee misclassification claim include:

  • The nature of the employee’s work, whether it required professional credentials, advanced knowledge of a specialized field, extensive travel, or extreme skill and care.
  • The employee’s work schedule, including hours per week, hours per shift, and days off. California sets clear limits on how much certain types of employees may work before they qualify as different types of employees.
  • The employee’s compensation and benefits. California state law requires different types of compensation and benefits for different types of employees. For example, exempt employees may be unable to claim overtime, but only if they work a certain number of hours in a day or a pay period.
  • Whether the employee and employer had a formal employment contract. This contract should carefully outline each party’s rights and responsibilities, but some employment contracts are unenforceable. An Orange County employee misclassification attorney can help employees review their contracts and determine their legally owed employee classification.

Our knowledgeable employment law attorneys can examine your job duties, work schedule, autonomy, and other factors to gauge whether you should properly be classified as nonexempt (i.e., an hourly employee) according to employment misclassification laws. You may have a claim for hundreds of hours of unpaid overtime, plus interest and penalties.

Another benefit to pursuing a legal claim against an employer who intentionally misclassified you is the fact that your legal action could force the employer to revise its practices and prevent similar situations from occurring in the future. At California Employment Counsel, APC, we believe in holding employers who illegally take advantage of their employees accountable for the damage they cause.

What Our Clients Say

What to Expect from Your Claim

The first step in recovering your losses from employee misclassification is to hire an employee misclassification lawyer. Your attorney can help you determine what employment status applies most accurately to your situation under California state law and whether your employer’s classification aligns with legal statutes.

  • Backpay. This is the difference between what you actually earned and what you should have earned had you been properly classified.
  • Unpaid overtime. If you should have received overtime pay for your hours worked under California law, your Orange County employee misclassification lawyer will examine your employment record to calculate the number of overtime hours you are owed. Over a long period of time, this can be quite substantial.
  • Lost benefits. If your employer should have provided you with health insurance or other benefits and you were forced to pay out of pocket for expenses that should have been covered, you may be able to claim these expenses as damages in your claim as well.

With a strong claim, your proceedings should be fairly straightforward. Your Orange County employee misclassification lawyer will help prepare you for all your court appearances and the various phases of litigation until you and your employer arrive at a settlement. In some cases, employee misclassification can be a symptom of larger problems with a company. Your employee misclassification claim can shed light on these situations and even potentially lead to criminal proceedings against your employer.

Success with your employee misclassification claim can yield compensation for all the wages, benefits, and overtime pay you should have rightfully earned under applicable employment laws. At California Employment Counsel, APC, our goal is to pursue our clients’ full recovery in every case.

The Specific “Duties Test” for Exempt vs. Non-Exempt

In California, employee classification is not determined simply by whether someone is paid a salary. To qualify as exempt from overtime and other wage protections, an employee must meet both a salary requirement and a duties-based test.

Many misclassification cases arise because employers focus on job titles or pay structures, yet they overlook what the employee actually does on a daily basis. Understanding these criteria is essential for identifying whether a worker has been properly classified under the law.

The salary requirement is the first threshold. Under California Labor Code Section 515, an employee must earn a monthly salary equivalent to at least twice the state minimum wage for full-time employment. 

If this threshold is not met, the employee is generally considered non-exempt, regardless of job duties. However, meeting the salary requirement alone is not enough. The second and often more contested element is the “duties test,” which focuses on how the employee actually spends their time. 

California recognizes several “white-collar” exemptions, including executive, administrative, and professional roles. Each category has specific criteria, but they all share a critical requirement: the employee must spend more than 50% of their time performing exempt duties.

  • Executive employees are expected to manage a department or supervise others.
  • Administrative employees are expected to perform office or non-manual operations.
  • Professional employees generally have advanced specializations and knowledge.

If a manager spends most of their time stocking shelves, for example, they may be subject to confusion about their classification, as their title and job duties don’t align perfectly. This creates a lot of confusion and divided opinion in an employee misclassification case. Some employers may make arguments that a person’s responsibilities change, or that certain periods of work don’t represent the full scope of the position.

The Importance of Understanding Deliberate and Mistaken Misclassification

For employees, understanding the duties test is key to recognizing when something is wrong. If your daily responsibilities do not align with the legal definition of an employment role, you may have been misclassified. It’s important to note that while some companies deliberately misclassify employees as a means to save on payroll and benefit costs, mistakes can happen as well. Consider how complex the California employment landscape is:

While the massive pool of workers and conflicting classifications create room for error, even honest mistakes can be corrected by employee misclassification laws. It’s not a worker’s responsibility to simply deal with a loss of rightfully earned pay and benefits because of someone else’s oversight.

Our law firm can help you confront these issues, determine what went wrong, and move forward professionally. Whether the employer tried to intentionally misclassify you or the matter was a result of a simple error, our firm can help you pursue what you are legally owed.

With the right legal counsel, you can approach your employment misclassification issue with clarity and confidence. 

Hire an Orange County Employee Misclassification Lawyer to Defend Your Rights

If you believe your employer misclassified you, you have options.  It can be difficult to determine how your employment situation should be legally classified, and an experienced Orange County employee misclassification attorney can help clarify your situation. 

Our team can help discern whether you have been wrongfully misclassified and denied benefits and compensation. If you suffered losses due to this mistake, whether it was intentional or not, our team can build a case and help you recover what you’re rightfully owed. We’ve got many positive reviews showing how hard we work on behalf of California workers.

Employment law is all we do. Our employee misclassification attorneys offer a free consultation and take cases on a contingency fee basis — it costs you nothing upfront to explore your potential claim. Contact us online today to get started.

Orange County Employment Law Resources

Se habla español.

California Employment Counsel – Orange County Office

555 Anton Blvd,
Suite 150
Costa Mesa, CA 92626

Call: 714-361-0864

Nofees Left Image

You Should Never Be Afraid to Assert Your Rights as an Employee

No Fees Until We Win

Headquarters

555 Anton Blvd., Suite 150,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626

Contact Us Today

714-462-8376

Contact Us Today

Fields marked with an * are required

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Address*
*

Copyright © 2026 California Employment Counsel, APC• All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer | Site Map | Privacy Policy. Digital Marketing By: rizeup media logo *Images are obtained under license from Canva and other third-party stock image providers, with attribution included where required.