Æðµã´«Ã½

Labor Department Issues Final Joint Employer Rule

Codes and Standards
Published

The Labor Department (DOL) yesterday to provide a clearer methodology for determining joint employer status. The rule will provide employers clarity and certainty regarding their responsibility to pay federal minimum wage and overtime for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek.

Where an employee performs work for the employer that simultaneously benefits another individual or entity, the Labor Department provides a four-part test to determine whether the potential joint employer actually exercises the power to:

  • Hire or fire the employee;
  • Supervise and control the employee’s work schedules or conditions of employment;
  • Set the employee’s pay rate and method of payment; and
  • Maintain the employee’s employment records.

Whether a person is a joint employer will depend on all the facts in a particular case. Additional factors may also be relevant in determining whether another person is a joint employer in this situation, but only when they show whether the potential joint employer is exercising significant control over the terms and conditions of the employee’s work.

The new rule will take effect on March 16. It includes a set of joint employment examples to further assist in clarifying joint employer status.

“This final rule furthers President Trump’s successful, government-wide effort to address regulations that hinder the American economy and to promote economic growth,” said Secretary of Labor Eugene Scalia.

Æðµã´«Ã½ welcomes the rulemaking from DOL's Wage and Hour Division as two other federal agencies similarly seek to narrow their definitions of joint employment. Under the broader interpretations utilized by the Obama administration, builders faced uncertainty about what level of necessary oversight and coordination of their subcontractors might trigger joint employer liability.

For more information, contact David Jaffe.

Subscribe to Æðµã´«Ã½Now

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from Æðµã´«Ã½Now

Advocacy

Oct 22, 2025

Æðµã´«Ã½ Recommends Permitting Improvements to EPA and Corps

On Oct. 16, Æðµã´«Ã½ met with political leadership from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps) to discuss the agencies’ regulatory priorities for 2026 and beyond.

Advocacy

Oct 21, 2025

Senate Panel Passes Æðµã´«Ã½-Backed Forestry Bill

The Senate, Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee today advanced the Fix Our Forest Act, Æðµã´«Ã½-supported legislation that will contribute to better forest management practices, help strengthen the nation’s housing supply chain and promote affordable housing opportunities for all Americans.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Oct 20, 2025

Nationwide, the share of non-conventional financing for new home sales accounted for 31% of the market per Æðµã´«Ã½ analysis of the 2024 Census Bureau Survey of Construction (SOC) data. This is 1.7 percentage point lower than the 2023 share of 32.4%. As in previous years, conventional financing dominated the market at 69.3% of sales, higher than the 2023 share of 67.6%.

Economics

Oct 17, 2025

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is a key nonpartisan score keeper that measures the effects of policy changes by the Federal Government. With several policy changes since January of this year, including the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), stricter immigration, and higher tariffs, the CBO updated its economic projections through 2028.

Economics

Oct 16, 2025

Even as builders continue to grapple with market and macroeconomic uncertainty, sentiment levels posted a solid gain in October as future sales expectations surpassed the 50-point breakeven mark for the first time since last January.