Triple Time Calculator USA (Calculate 3x Overtime Pay Rate)
See Exactly What Triple Time Adds To Your Pay
Enter your base hourly rate and triple time hours to see how much extra you earn per shift, per week, and per month, using clear US overtime assumptions.
How This Triple Time Calculator Works
If you are paid hourly, the calculator uses your regular rate directly. If you are salaried, it converts salary to an estimated hourly rate using 40 hours per week and 52 weeks per year. For a precise conversion across pay frequencies, you can first use the salary to hourly calculator.
The tool calculates four rates: regular (1x), overtime (1.5x), double time (2x), and triple time (3x). Triple time pay is simply your base rate multiplied by three. These multipliers align with common US payroll practice, although only time and a half is required by federal law for non-exempt overtime.
For each type of hour you enter (regular, overtime, double time, and triple time), the calculator multiplies the hours by the appropriate rate. It then adds the amounts together to show total pay per triple time shift, per week, and per month based on your settings.
If you enter how many triple time shifts you work per week, the tool projects your weekly and monthly earnings from triple time alone and from your full schedule. You can combine it with the overtime calculator or double time calculator to model more complex schedules.
This tool shows gross earnings before tax. Triple time earnings are taxable and will increase your federal income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and state income tax over time. To estimate your net pay after taxes, use the take home pay calculator or net pay calculator.
Key Information About Triple Time & US Overtime Rules
Common Pay Multipliers
| Type | Multiplier | Example at $25/hr |
|---|---|---|
| Regular time | 1.0x | $25.00 per hour |
| Overtime | 1.5x | $37.50 per hour |
| Double time | 2.0x | $50.00 per hour |
| Triple time | 3.0x | $75.00 per hour |
Only the 1.5x overtime requirement is defined in federal law. Double time and triple time are policy- or contract-based.
Federal Overtime Basics (FLSA)
- Most non-exempt employees must receive overtime pay for hours worked over 40 in a workweek.
- The federal minimum overtime rate is at least 1.5 times the regular rate of pay.
- Overtime is calculated per workweek, not averaged across weeks.
- Some states, like California, add daily overtime and double time rules on top of federal law.
Triple time is not required by the Fair Labor Standards Act. It appears in some state-specific rules and union agreements instead.
Why Employers Offer Triple Time
- To cover hard-to-fill holiday shifts such as Christmas Day or New Year’s Day.
- To compensate for emergency outages, storm response, or critical maintenance windows.
- To meet union contract requirements in utilities, transit, and emergency services.
- To encourage employees to work a seventh consecutive day in some schedules.
Triple time policies vary widely. Always confirm your exact rate in your offer letter, union contract, or employee handbook.
Planning With Triple Time Pay
Triple time can create a large short-term bump in your paycheck. That can be helpful for saving goals, paying down debt, or covering big expenses. To see how triple time shifts translate into annual earnings, combine this tool with the weekly pay calculator or the biweekly pay calculator.
Triple Time Pay Examples
These examples use simple multipliers (1x, 1.5x, 2x, 3x) without tax. Actual net pay depends on your withholding, state, and other deductions.
You can use this tool together with the salary with overtime calculator or the time and a half calculator to explore more pay scenarios.
Triple Time Calculator FAQ
Triple time pay is three times your regular hourly rate. If your base rate is $22 per hour, triple time is $66 per hour. Employers sometimes offer triple time for holiday shifts, emergency work, or special events. Federal law does not require triple time, so the exact rules come from your employer or union contract.
No. Under the Fair Labor Standards Act, most non-exempt employees must receive at least 1.5 times their regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek. That is overtime, not triple time. Triple time is an additional premium created by employers or union agreements and is not mandated by federal law. Some states have extra overtime rules, but they usually reference time and a half or double time rather than triple time.
First, find your regular hourly rate. Multiply that rate by 3 to get your triple time rate. Multiply the triple time rate by the number of triple time hours you worked. For example, $18 per hour × 3 = $54 triple time rate. If you work 6 triple time hours, that is 6 × $54 = $324 in triple time pay. This calculator automates those steps for you and also compares regular, overtime, double time, and triple time amounts.
Overtime is usually paid at 1.5 times your regular rate, double time at 2 times, and triple time at 3 times your regular rate. The federal overtime requirement is 1.5 times the regular rate for hours over 40 in a week for non-exempt workers. Double time and triple time are additional premiums that employers or unions may offer for specific days, hours, or conditions. To see standard overtime amounts you can also use the overtime calculator.
Triple time pay is treated as regular taxable wages. It increases your gross pay, which over time raises your taxable income. Your employer will withhold federal income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and any applicable state and local taxes on your triple time earnings. The withholding formula is the same as for your other wages. To see your approximate net pay after tax, use the income tax calculator or the payroll tax calculator.
Some salaried non-exempt employees can receive overtime, double time, or triple time based on their regular rate of pay. Exempt salaried employees generally are not entitled to overtime under federal law, but some employers still provide additional pay or bonus time for holiday work or emergency duties. This tool converts salary to an estimated hourly rate so you can see how much triple time would be worth per hour.
Triple time policies should be listed in your union contract, collective bargaining agreement, employee handbook, or written pay policy. If you cannot find triple time in writing, ask your HR department, manager, or union representative to confirm the exact rate and when it applies. Always rely on official documents or HR confirmation, not only verbal statements.
Data Sources & Assumptions
This triple time calculator uses standard US overtime multipliers and guidance from official US labor resources. Triple time itself is a policy decision, so details vary by employer and state.
- US Department of Labor · Overtime Pay Requirements of the FLSA
- US Department of Labor · Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
- State labor department overtime pages for examples of daily overtime and double time rules (for example, California Department of Industrial Relations for daily overtime and double time scenarios).
- Union contracts and employer policies referenced in public agreements often use 2x for double time and 3x for triple time. This calculator follows those common multipliers.
Disclaimer: This tool shows gross pay using common US overtime multipliers. It does not interpret your specific union contract or state law. Always confirm your rights and rates using official employer documents or a qualified labor or employment professional.
This calculator runs fully in your browser. Your rates, hours, and pay details are not sent to a server, not stored in any database, and not shared with any third party. You can close the page at any time and your entries will clear.
This triple time calculator was developed and reviewed for accuracy and usability by Eman Ali Mughal. The logic uses standard US overtime multipliers and follows US Department of Labor guidance for overtime basics, while clearly explaining where employer policies and union contracts control the exact triple time rules.