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Holiday Pay 5 min read

Is Presidents Day Time and a Half? Holiday Pay Rules

Presidents Day premium pay depends on employer policy, public-sector rules, contract terms, and whether the shift creates overtime.

M. Imtinan Farooq

M. Imtinan Farooq

Data Engineer & Financial Analyst

Published July 1, 2026·Updated Jul 1, 2026

Presidents Day is not automatically time and a half for private-sector employees. Premium pay depends on employer policy, contract, public-sector rules, or whether actual hours exceed an overtime threshold.

The search intent behind "Presidents Day time and a half" is usually practical: you want to know whether the shift is paid at regular pay, 1.5x, double time, or some other premium. The safest answer is to separate legal overtime from employer holiday policy.

Is Presidents Day legally time and a half?

Presidents Day is a federal holiday, but the FLSA does not require private employers to pay a holiday premium.

Many private businesses stay open on Presidents Day and pay regular wages unless they have chosen to offer holiday premium pay.

Decision rule

  1. Check whether your employer lists Presidents Day as a premium holiday.
  2. Check whether a union contract, handbook, offer letter, or state rule applies.
  3. Count actual hours worked in the workweek to see whether overtime is triggered.
  4. Calculate the holiday premium separately from weekly overtime when both apply.

Presidents Day time and a half example

This example assumes the employer does pay 1.5x for Presidents Day. If the employer does not offer holiday premium pay, use the straight-time comparison instead.

Presidents Day shift at $17.00/hour

1Regular hourly rate
$17.00/hour
2Presidents Day premium rate
$25.50/hour
Math$17.00 × 1.5
38-hour Presidents Day shift
$204.00
Math8 × $25.50
432 regular hours
$544.00
Math32 × $17.00
Total weekly gross with holiday premium$748.00
Without holiday premium: 40 × $17.00 = $680.00. The premium adds $68.00.
Takeaway: The holiday name does not create the premium by itself. The premium appears only if a policy, contract, state rule, or overtime threshold applies.

Employers where this question often comes up

Workers most often ask about Presidents Day premium pay in workplaces that stay open when many offices are closed:

banks

Verify the current holiday schedule, pay code, and overtime threshold before assuming time and a half.

schools

Verify the current holiday schedule, pay code, and overtime threshold before assuming time and a half.

public employers

Verify the current holiday schedule, pay code, and overtime threshold before assuming time and a half.

retail stores

Verify the current holiday schedule, pay code, and overtime threshold before assuming time and a half.

Related guides

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Presidents Day automatically time and a half?+

No. Presidents Day is not automatically time and a half for most private-sector workers under federal law. Premium pay usually depends on employer policy, contract, state rule, or whether the shift creates overtime.

Can Presidents Day hours count toward overtime?+

Yes, if the hours are actually worked. Under federal overtime rules, actual hours worked over 40 in a workweek generally trigger overtime for covered non-exempt employees.

How do I calculate Presidents Day time and a half?+

Multiply the regular hourly rate by 1.5, then multiply that premium rate by the Presidents Day hours worked. Add regular pay for any non-holiday hours in the same workweek.

presidents day time and a half presidents day pay federal holiday pay

Run the numbers

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Last Reviewed: 2026-06-22
Educational Disclaimer

This calculator is for estimation only and is not legal, tax, or payroll advice. Actual wage calculations can vary based on local municipal ordinances, specific collective bargaining agreements, salary docking policies, or custom shift arrangements. Always consult official labor departments or qualified professionals for situation-specific guidance.