Shift Differential Calculator USA (Night Shift & Extra Pay Calculator)
Shift Differential Calculator USA 2026 — Calculate Your Night, Weekend & Holiday Pay
See Exactly How Much Your Night or Weekend Shift Pays
Enter your base pay, shift type, and differential rate. Get your adjusted hourly rate, total shift earnings, overtime pay if applicable, and a full annual projection — instantly.
Shift Differential Calculator
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Your Shift Differential Pay Breakdown
Under FLSA, overtime must be calculated on the "regular rate of pay," which includes shift differential pay. This tool applies the weighted average method for mixed-rate workweeks.
The Math Behind This Calculator
This tool supports the two methods US employers use most often. Check your offer letter or employee handbook to confirm which your employer uses.
Your differential premium is a percentage of your base hourly rate, added only to hours worked during the differential shift.
Example: $20/hr base × 15% = $3.00/hr premium. Adjusted rate = $23.00/hr.
A fixed dollar amount per hour is added to your base rate for each differential hour worked. Simple and predictable.
Example: $20/hr base + $3.00 flat = $23.00/hr adjusted rate.
If you work overtime in a week that includes shift differential hours, the FLSA requires overtime to be calculated on your "regular rate of pay." This is the weighted average across all hours and all pay for that workweek — not just your base rate.
See our Overtime Calculator for full FLSA overtime scenarios, and our Time and a Half Calculator for standard 1.5× pay.
What You Need to Know About Shift Differential Pay
Federal Law Does Not Set a Rate
The Fair Labor Standards Act does not require employers to pay any shift differential. The amount, eligibility, and conditions are set entirely by your employer, any applicable union contract, or in some cases by state or local law.
Always check your employee handbook, offer letter, or collective bargaining agreement to confirm your rate.
Industry Benchmarks (2026)
Rates vary significantly by industry:
- Evening shift: 10–15% or $1–$3/hr
- Night shift: 15–25% or $2–$5/hr
- Weekend shift: 10–20% or $1.50–$4/hr
- Holiday shift: 20–50% or $3–$8/hr
- Rotating shift: 5–10% or $0.75–$2/hr
Shift Differential and Taxes
Shift differential pay is ordinary taxable income. It is added directly to your gross wages and taxed at your normal federal and state income tax rates, plus Social Security and Medicare (FICA). No special tax treatment applies.
Use our Paycheck Calculator or Gross to Net Calculator to estimate take-home pay after taxes.
Salaried Employees
Some salaried positions — particularly in healthcare and public safety — include shift differential pay. For salaried employees, employers often calculate the premium as a percentage of base salary or convert to an hourly equivalent first.
To find your effective hourly rate from a salary: divide your annual salary by 2,080 hours. Then apply the differential. See our Salary to Hourly Calculator for help.
Shift Differential Pay in Practice
Base rate: $38.00/hr
Shift: Night (11 PM – 7 AM)
Differential: 18% percentage-based
Hours: 36 regular, 36 differential
Base rate: $17.00/hr
Shift: Weekend (Sat–Sun)
Differential: $3.00 flat per hour
Hours: 40 regular, 16 differential
Base rate: $22.00/hr
Shift: Night / 3rd shift
Differential: 20% percentage-based
Hours: 40 regular + 8 OT, 48 differential
Base rate: $15.50/hr
Shift: Holiday
Differential: 50% percentage-based
Hours: 8 regular, 8 differential
Want to see your full weekly or annual earnings? Use our Salary Calculator or Gross Pay Calculator alongside this tool.
Shift Differential Pay — Common Questions
Shift differential pay is a premium added to your base hourly rate for working less desirable hours — evenings, nights, weekends, or holidays. It can be calculated as a percentage of your base rate or as a fixed dollar amount per hour worked. The goal is to compensate workers for the inconvenience of non-standard schedules.
No. The FLSA does not require employers to pay a shift differential. It is a voluntary employer practice. Some state laws, union contracts, or individual employment agreements may require it. Always check your offer letter, union contract, or employee handbook to confirm your situation.
Under the FLSA, overtime is calculated on the employee's "regular rate of pay," which must include shift differential pay. This means your overtime base rate is higher than just your standard hourly wage. This tool applies the FLSA weighted average method when overtime hours are entered.
Most US employers offer between 10% and 25% for night and weekend shifts. Evening shifts typically carry a 10–15% premium. Night shifts (11 PM to 7 AM) typically carry a 15–25% premium. Holiday differentials can reach 50% or more depending on employer policy. Flat-rate amounts typically range from $1.00 to $5.00 per hour.
No. Shift differential pay is regular taxable wages. It is added to your gross income and taxed at your normal federal and state income tax rates along with FICA taxes. There is no special tax rate for shift premiums. To see your take-home pay after taxes, use our Paycheck Calculator.
Yes. Some employers pay salaried employees a shift differential, typically calculated as a percentage of base salary. To work with this calculator, convert your annual salary to an hourly rate by dividing by 2,080 hours. Then enter that hourly rate as your base rate.
State rules vary. Some states with specific mandatory rest or scheduling laws (such as California's predictive scheduling requirements in certain industries) may affect how differentials are structured or applied. A small number of public-sector union contracts include mandated differentials. This tool calculates based on the values you enter — check your state and local rules or employer policy for the correct rate to use.
It depends on your base rate, differential percentage, and how many hours per week you work at the premium rate. A nurse earning $38/hr with an 18% night differential working 36 differential hours per week earns over $12,800 in extra premium pay per year. Use this calculator to get your personalized projection.
Sources & Methodology
This calculator applies standard US payroll math based on the following official and authoritative sources:
- FLSA Overtime Rules: US Department of Labor — Fair Labor Standards Act
- Regular Rate of Pay (Overtime Calculation): DOL WHD — Regular Rate of Pay Guidance
- Shift Differential Industry Practices: SHRM Shift Differential Pay Practices Survey — shift premium benchmarks used in examples only
- Industry-Specific Differential Ranges: Typical market ranges (10–25% night/weekend, 20–50% holiday) reflect widely reported US employer practices. They are used for reference only, not as guaranteed rates.
Assumption note: This tool assumes a standard 40-hour workweek threshold for FLSA overtime. State-specific overtime rules (such as California's daily overtime threshold) are not applied. This calculator provides estimates only — not legal or payroll advice. Verify rates with your employer or HR department.
This tool was developed and reviewed for accuracy and usability by Eman Ali Mughal. Calculations follow FLSA regular rate of pay methodology and standard US employer payroll practices.