Question presented

A dealership may describe many roles as “exempt.” Which exact federal or California overtime route is asserted, and do establishment, actual duties, compensation, time allocation, and period records establish every element?

There is no general dealership status. Federal section 13(b)(10), section 7(i), white-collar rules, and California commission, white-collar, and outside-sales routes ask different questions. Federal treatment does not remove California protections. Titles, annual earnings, and pay codes are evidence, not conclusions.

Rule architecture

Federal section 13(b)(10). This route covers only a salesman, partsman, or mechanic primarily engaged in selling or servicing automobiles, trucks, or farm implements at a nonmanufacturing establishment primarily selling those vehicles to ultimate purchasers. Truck and trailer wording needs special care. Both the establishment’s business and actual primary duty require proof.

In Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 584 U.S. 79 (2018), the Supreme Court held that service advisers primarily engaged in servicing automobiles fit the federal language. It does not classify every service-lane employee; other and mixed roles remain fact-specific. Section 13(b)(10) concerns FLSA overtime only, leaving California rules separate.

Federal section 7(i). This route requires a qualifying retail or service establishment, a regular rate strictly greater than one and one-half times the federal minimum wage in each overtime week, and more than half of representative-period compensation in commissions. At the current $7.25 federal minimum, the rate must exceed $10.875. California applies its own higher floor separately.

The commission-share test needs defensible classification, a proper representative period, and section 516.16 records. Salary, draw, and bonuses do not become commissions through one payroll code. DOL letter FLSA2003-1 relied on one dealership, a single qualifying establishment rather than separate finance business, sales-department work, exclusive dealer pay, retail sales, the required rate, and commission share. It placed that described F&I role outside section 13(b)(10). The guidance is fact-bound.

Federal white-collar routes. Executive and administrative treatment requires the selected salary-level, salary-basis, and duties predicates. At the July 18, 2026 cutoff, the federal level is $684 per week. Commissions may supplement a qualifying guarantee but cannot cure a missing guarantee, improper deductions, or duties. Executive analysis asks about management, two supervised employees, and personnel authority or influence. Administrative analysis asks whether office work relates to management or general business operations and includes discretion on matters of significance. Senior production work alone is insufficient.

California is a new decision tree. Dealer-connected sales, service, and parts commonly begin with Wage Order 7; a genuinely separate repair or transportation operation may implicate Wage Order 9 or another order. Employer, physical operation, and principal business matter more than branding.

Section 510 and the selected order provide daily and weekly overtime. Wage Order 7 section 3(D) requires earnings above 1.5 times the wage-order minimum-wage benchmark and more than half of compensation in California commissions. At the 2026 state minimum of $16.90, earnings must exceed $25.35 per hour. A higher local wage remains independently payable; this guide does not assume it rewrites the wage-order exemption benchmark. Peabody rejected backward commission attribution under the general payday regime while identifying section 204.1’s dealer provision as distinct.

California executive and administrative routes require a salary of at least twice the state minimum for full-time work and qualifying duties more than half of work time: $70,304 annualized statewide in 2026. Outside sales generally requires more than half of work time away from the employer’s business selling or obtaining orders; occasional deliveries or test drives do not establish it.

Decision sequence

  1. Define employer and operation. Identify the employing entity, worksite, dealer license, establishment boundaries, primary business, retail-sales facts, and whether a department is physically or organizationally separate.
  2. Reconstruct actual duties. Use representative-day samples to quantify selling, servicing, repair, parts, paperwork, customer contact, supervision, policy work, and offsite activity.
  3. Classify every pay component. Separate salary, hourly pay, true commissions, piece rates, draws, guarantees, bonuses, reimbursements, and reversals; identify earning and payment dates.
  4. Test federal routes one at a time. Apply section 13(b)(10), section 7(i), and the selected white-collar route without borrowing establishment, duty, or pay predicates across them.
  5. Select the California wage order. Then test the state commission, executive, administrative, and outside-sales routes independently by the state’s own periods and standards.
  6. Verify the record. Match duty evidence, punches, system events, plans, transaction output, payroll, representative-period schedules, and wage statements for the same dates.

Evidence map

Evidence Predicate tested Alternative explanation
Entity records, dealer license, sales mix, floor plan, leases Employer, establishment, primary business, wage-order selection A branded department may be a separate operation—or only a cost center
Job samples, calendars, repair orders, deal jackets, approvals Actual primary duty, management, discretion, selling/servicing work A managerial title may mask production work; isolated tasks may not be primary
Punches, schedules, DMS/CRM access, messages Workweek hours, daily overtime, duty timing, outside activity A system event proves a moment, not uninterrupted work
Signed plan, amendments, pay codes Promised salary, commission formula, representative period A complete plan may not match practice
Registers, statements, commission schedules Weekly regular rate, commission share, salary guarantee, state earnings High annual income can conceal a failed week or pay-period predicate
Customer, vehicle, parts and service records Retail character, qualifying vehicles, individual sale/service output Department totals may not establish one worker’s duties

Worked example

Assume one dealer employs a service adviser who opens repair orders, discusses recommended work with customers, coordinates technicians, performs no repairs, and spends 46 recorded hours on the premises in a week. Pay is a $900 recoverable draw plus 4 percent of identified customer-pay labor and parts. The dealer invokes section 13(b)(10), section 7(i), and California’s commissioned-employee route in the alternative.

For section 13(b)(10), Encino makes actual automobile-servicing duties central, but the dealer still must prove the establishment and vehicle-sales business. Primarily processing warranty paperwork could point differently.

For section 7(i), calculate this overtime week rather than an annual average. The rate must exceed $10.875, and qualifying commissions must exceed half of representative-period compensation. The draw ledger, later credits, formula, and section 516.16 records are essential. One federal route does not prove the other.

California starts over. Confirm Wage Order 7 for the integrated service lane, then test earnings above the state benchmark, a majority of true commissions, and payment timing. Federal treatment cannot erase daily overtime. The $900 weekly draw annualizes below $70,304, and the facts do not show predominantly administrative duties.

Strategic implications

For dealers: document each asserted route. Preserve establishment evidence, representative periods, duty samples, guarantees, commission classifications, and weekly calculations. Re-test after changes to ownership, location, duties, wage floors, or plans. Flag any route whose required record cannot be reproduced.

For workers: preserve schedules, personal time notes, plans, wage statements, job descriptions, representative work samples, system timestamps, and proof of where duties occurred. Compare what the policy calls the job with what occupied the workday. Identify the failed predicate precisely rather than treating all dealership roles alike.

Both sides should evaluate competing factual explanations. A worker may serve customers while primarily doing clerical processing; a high monthly commission may arrive after a low week; a department may appear separate on an org chart while sharing the same establishment. Those are record questions before they are legal conclusions.

Analysis limits

This guide does not select a wage order, classify an individual, establish an overtime route, determine hours worked, or calculate relief. Local wage floors, municipal rules, collective bargaining provisions, mixed establishments, truck or trailer roles, and later commission allocation may change the analysis. Agency opinion letters apply only to their stated facts. Current-law cutoff: July 18, 2026.

Primary authority

  • 29 U.S.C. §§207(i) and 213(b)(10): distinct federal retail-commission and dealership-duty routes.
  • 29 C.F.R. §§516.16, 779.372, 779.410–.421: representative-period records, dealership definitions, and section 7(i) predicates.
  • Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 584 U.S. 79 (2018): federal treatment of service advisers primarily engaged in servicing automobiles.
  • WHD FLSA2003-1: fact-limited section 7(i) guidance for the described F&I salesperson and a section 13(b)(10) distinction.
  • Federal white-collar regulations: 29 C.F.R. §541.100 and §541.200 supply the executive and administrative duty tests; §§541.600, 541.602, and 541.604 separately address salary level, basis, and additional compensation.
  • California Labor Code §510; Wage Orders 7 and 9; MW-2026: independent California overtime, wage-order, commission, duties, and pay tests.
  • Peabody v. Time Warner Cable, 59 Cal.4th 662, 668–670: period-specific commission treatment under the general payday regime and its express vehicle-dealer distinction.
Evidence boundaries 6 domains

Verify the inference

Evidence domains used in this guide

E01

Establishment and duty proof

  • Legal entities, dealer or franchise connection, business activity and sales records
  • Job descriptions, actual-duty samples, schedules, and time allocation
Can establish
Facts used to select a wage order, retail-establishment status, dealership status, employer identity, and duty-based exemption route.
Cannot establish alone
Pay accuracy for a period, the regular rate, hours worked, or whether the written job description matches actual work.
E02

Time proof

  • Raw punches and edit audit trail
  • Schedules, meal punches, attestations, and waivers
Can establish
Recorded work intervals, facial meal timing, schedule expectations, and who changed a punch for a stated reason.
Cannot establish alone
The complete span of controlled or suffered-permitted work, off-clock activity, or whether an authorized rest was actually provided.
E03

Plan proof

  • Signed commission plan, receipt, effective versions, and amendments
  • Piece-rate or incentive formula, policies, guarantees, and deduction terms
Can establish
The promised pay unit, written earning condition, formula, effective version, receipt, and stated treatment of advances or later events.
Cannot establish alone
Actual practice, actual duties, complete hours, whether a condition occurred, or whether a term satisfies every applicable wage rule.
E04

Pay proof

  • Payroll register, wage statements, earning codes, and rate tables
  • Draw reconciliations, bonus or spiff tables, premiums, and later true-ups
Can establish
Amounts paid, dates, rates and codes used, statement presentation, reconciliations, and changes between original and later payroll.
Cannot establish alone
Whether missing work occurred, whether every payment was correctly classified, or whether a written earning condition is valid and satisfied.
E05

Output and transaction proof

  • Flag ledger, repair orders, parts tickets, and warranty events
  • Deal jackets, delivery, funding, cancellation, return, and reversal records
Can establish
Units produced, transactions, attribution, timing, identified reversals, and the output or deal events used by a pay formula.
Cannot establish alone
All hours worked, whether a component is legally a commission or piece rate, or whether a debit from pay is permitted.
E06

System activity

  • DMS, CRM, repair-order, OEM training, access, and alarm timestamps
  • Messages, email, phone, device, and workstation events
Can establish
Activity at identified points, sequence, employer knowledge, regularity, and potential contradictions in the scheduled or recorded day.
Cannot establish alone
Continuous work between events, the legal character of every interval, or the amount of uncompensated time without a reasonable inferential method.
Authority boundaries 17 sources

Rule and boundary

Sources used in this guide

  1. federalstatute

    29 U.S.C. § 207

    Fair Labor Standards Act — overtime and regular rate

    Proposition
    Covered nonexempt employees generally receive overtime after forty hours in a workweek at one and one-half times the regular rate.
    Limit
    The section does not generally create daily overtime and does not displace more protective state law.
    Source checked 2026-07-1829 U.S.C. §§ 207(a), (e), (i)
  2. federalstatute

    29 U.S.C. § 213(b)(10)

    FLSA dealership overtime exemption

    Proposition
    The statute removes federal overtime for a qualifying salesman, partsman, or mechanic primarily engaged in selling or servicing qualifying vehicles at a qualifying nonmanufacturing establishment.
    Limit
    It removes only the FLSA overtime requirement; it does not remove federal minimum-wage or record duties or decide California obligations.
    Source checked 2026-07-1829 U.S.C. § 213(b)(10)(A)
  3. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. § 516.16

    Federal section 7(i) records

    Proposition
    An employer relying on section 7(i) must preserve the agreement or terms, compensation basis, representative period, and commission/noncommission records.
    Limit
    Record retention does not itself establish that the retail-establishment, regular-rate, or commission-share predicates are satisfied.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  4. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. § 541.600

    Federal EAP salary level

    Proposition
    The current regulation supplies the federal salary-level predicate for the executive, administrative, and professional exemptions.
    Limit
    Salary level is only one predicate; duties and salary-basis requirements remain separate and the threshold is time-sensitive.
    Source checked 2026-07-18

    The 2019 $684 weekly level was restored in 2026 after the 2024 thresholds were vacated.

  5. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. § 541.602

    Federal salary-basis rule

    Proposition
    Salary basis generally requires a predetermined amount not reduced because of variations in the quality or quantity of work, subject to specified exceptions.
    Limit
    A salary label or annualized amount does not establish salary basis or qualifying exempt duties.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  6. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. § 541.604

    Federal salary plus additional compensation

    Proposition
    Additional commissions, bonuses, or other pay can coexist with salary basis if the required guarantee and any reasonable-relationship rule are satisfied.
    Limit
    A commission supplement cannot cure a missing guarantee, an improper deduction practice, or nonqualifying duties.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  7. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. § 779.372

    Federal dealership exemption regulation

    Proposition
    The regulation addresses qualifying dealership establishments, primarily-engaged duties, and salesman, partsman, and mechanic categories.
    Limit
    Its older salesman wording cannot be used to exclude service advisors contrary to the Supreme Court’s later Encino decision.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  8. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. §§ 779.410–.421

    Federal retail commissioned-employee exemption regulations

    Proposition
    These regulations explain the retail-establishment, week-specific regular-rate, representative-period, and commission-share predicates for section 7(i).
    Limit
    A salary, draw, or commission label does not establish the exemption and each overtime workweek still requires the rate predicate.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  9. federalcase

    Encino Motorcars v. Navarro

    Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 584 U.S. 79 (2018)

    Proposition
    Qualifying service advisors are salesmen primarily engaged in servicing automobiles within section 13(b)(10), and FLSA exemptions receive a fair reading.
    Limit
    The decision does not establish every dealership predicate, cover ordinary F&I work, or decide California wage obligations.
    Source checked 2026-07-18584 U.S. 79, 85–90
  10. federalagency guidance

    WHD FLSA2003-1

    Department of Labor opinion letter concerning dealership F&I sales

    Proposition
    The letter applies section 7(i) to the specifically described F&I salesperson and distinguishes that route from section 13(b)(10).
    Limit
    An opinion letter applies its stated facts and does not establish that every F&I role, pay component, or dealership meets each predicate.
    Source checked 2026-07-18pp. 1–5
  11. federalagency guidance

    WHD salary thresholds

    Department of Labor current EAP earnings thresholds

    Proposition
    WHD identifies the currently enforced federal standard salary level as $684 per week and the highly compensated threshold as $107,432 annually.
    Limit
    The thresholds are date-sensitive and remain only compensation predicates within complete exemption tests.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  12. californiastatute

    Labor Code § 510

    California daily and weekly overtime

    Proposition
    California generally requires daily and weekly overtime and double time at specified thresholds for nonexempt employees.
    Limit
    Coverage, exemptions, alternative schedules, workday/workweek definitions, and the regular-rate calculation remain separate questions.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  13. californiawage order

    IWC Wage Order 7

    Mercantile Industry Wage Order

    Proposition
    Order 7 supplies mercantile-industry definitions and rules for hours, minimum wage, overtime, records, deductions, tools, uniforms, meals, and rests.
    Limit
    It applies only after classifying the business and work; standalone vehicle-repair businesses generally route to Order 9.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  14. californiawage order

    IWC Wage Order 9

    Transportation Industry Wage Order

    Proposition
    Order 9 supplies parallel hours, pay, record, tool, meal, and rest rules for covered transportation-industry operations, including many standalone repair businesses.
    Limit
    The classification guide is fact-dependent; a dealer-connected repair operation generally routes to Order 7 instead.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  15. californiawage order

    California MW-2026

    California Minimum Wage Order for 2026

    Proposition
    The official order sets the statewide minimum wage at $16.90 per hour effective January 1, 2026.
    Limit
    A higher local or industry-specific rate may apply, and the statewide figure does not select the rate for every location or date.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  16. californiaagency guidance

    DIR wage-order guide

    Which IWC Order? Classifications

    Proposition
    DIR’s guide routes dealer- or gas-station-connected vehicle repair to Order 7 and standalone repair garages generally to Order 9.
    Limit
    The guide is official guidance, not a safe harbor, and classification still depends on establishment and work facts.
    Source checked 2026-07-18pp. 22–23
  17. californiacase

    Peabody v. Time Warner Cable

    Peabody v. Time Warner Cable, Inc., 59 Cal.4th 662 (2014)

    Proposition
    Under the general payday regime at issue, later-paid commissions could not be attributed backward to cure an earlier commission-exemption shortfall.
    Limit
    The opinion expressly notes the distinct vehicle-dealer provision in section 204.1; dealer timing requires its own branch.
    Source checked 2026-07-1859 Cal.4th 668–670