Question presented

Service-advisor plans often combine hourly pay, sales percentages, customer-satisfaction incentives, spiffs, draws, and reversals. The role may include opening the lane, writing repair orders, selling service, communicating with customers, coordinating technicians, closing tickets, and post-shift phone follow-up.

The question is not whether the title “service advisor” carries one universal result. It is whether a particular establishment and the advisor’s actual duties satisfy a federal overtime route, then whether the independently applicable California rules were met for the same periods. The pay formula, time worked, break provision, and transaction history remain separate proof problems.

Rule architecture

Under Encino Motorcars v. Navarro, a qualifying service advisor can be a salesman primarily engaged in servicing automobiles within FLSA section 13(b)(10). That analysis requires a qualifying nonmanufacturing establishment primarily engaged in selling vehicles to ultimate purchasers and qualifying actual duties. The Department of Labor’s older description cannot exclude advisors contrary to Encino, but the establishment and duty predicates remain.

Section 13(b)(10) removes only federal overtime. It does not remove federal minimum-wage and record obligations, and it does not decide California overtime, minimum wage, meal or rest periods, wage statements, commission contracts, or expense reimbursement. Dealer-connected operations generally route to California Wage Order 7; a standalone service business may route to Wage Order 9. Entity, location, and business facts control that selection.

If the dealership route fails, section 7(i) is a separate federal path. It requires a retail or service establishment, a regular rate strictly above one and one-half times the federal minimum wage in each overtime workweek, and more than half of compensation representing commissions over a valid representative period. As of the source-check date, the threshold is strictly above $10.875: 1.5 times $7.25. California’s wage floor is not used in that federal formula. The agreement and compensation records remain part of the test.

California’s commissioned-salesperson overtime route appears in Wage Order 7 and must be tested separately; selecting a different order may remove that route. Using the 2026 state minimum, the wage-order earnings predicate is strictly above $25.35 per hour: 1.5 times $16.90. A higher local wage remains a separate payment obligation and should not be silently substituted into the exemption formula. More than half of compensation must represent commissions. A component’s label is insufficient; its earning event, relation to sales, and treatment of advances or earned wages matter. Section 2751 separately requires a written commission contract stating computation and payment, a signed copy, and a signed receipt.

Pay timing is its own branch. Peabody rejected backward attribution of later-paid commissions under the general regime at issue while noting Labor Code section 204.1’s dealer rule. That monthly timing applies only to qualifying commission wages; it does not transform other pay into commissions.

Time and breaks remain even when an overtime route is supported. Federal Part 785 addresses suffered-or-permitted work and employer knowledge. California adds its own hours-worked and break framework. Brinker addresses providing a relieved meal opportunity; Vaquero shows why a commission formula and recoverable draw may fail to compensate rest periods under the plan actually examined; and Ferra requires section 226.7 premiums to use the regular-rate concept, including nondiscretionary remuneration. A rest-pay line speaks to compensation, not whether a duty-free rest was provided.

Decision sequence

  1. Identify the establishment. Confirm entity, franchise or dealer connection, location, ultimate-purchaser sales activity, and the California wage-order route.
  2. Measure actual duties. Sample ordinary weeks and quantify selling service, customer intake, repair-order work, dispatch or coordination, clerical tasks, and any unrelated work. Do not rely only on a job description.
  3. Map the formula. For every earning code, state the unit, rate, earning event, payment date, conditions, draw treatment, and reversal rule. Classify by substance.
  4. Test federal overtime routes. Apply section 13(b)(10) to establishment and duty facts. If necessary, test section 7(i)’s retail, week-specific rate, commission-share, representative-period, and record predicates independently.
  5. Test California overtime. Determine whether the selected wage order supplies a commissioned-salesperson route and, if it does, apply every predicate to the correct periods and compensation. Do not import the Encino result.
  6. Reconstruct time and breaks. Align punches and edits with lane, DMS, CRM, message, and remote-work events. Evaluate meal records and rest evidence separately.
  7. Reconcile pay and later events. Trace each transaction from plan version through credit, payroll, wage statement, cancellation or adjustment, and any later debit.

Evidence map

Establishment records include the entity, licenses, business activity, retail sales data, and relationship between service operations and vehicle sales. Duty evidence should combine schedules and interviews with repair-order samples, lane observations, DMS activity, and weekly time allocation. A generic description does not establish actual work.

The plan packet should contain the signed agreement and receipt, effective versions, rate tables, CSI and draw terms, and reversal provisions. Repair orders, authorizations, invoices, warranty decisions, cancellations, and advisor attribution connect transactions to payroll. Pay records show earning codes, amounts, calculations, statements, and true-ups.

Punches, audit trails, meal entries, schedules, lane timestamps, logins, messages, and calls can reveal sequence and knowledge. A late message proves activity at that moment, not continuous work since clock-out. A facial meal exception can require explanation; lack of a rest punch does not establish a missed rest. Preserve required phone, vehicle, uniform, and device expense records too.

Worked example

Assume an advisor works at a franchised California automobile dealership. A representative week records 47 hours, including five nine-hour days and two weekend hours. Actual-duty sampling shows about 70 percent of time selling and arranging vehicle service, with the balance spent on related repair-order and customer tasks. The plan pays an $18 hourly base plus $900 tied to labor and parts sales for the week. Total compensation before any premium is $1,746, and the sales component is about 51.5 percent of that total.

Those facts support questions, not a final answer. The dealer’s establishment records and actual duties may support the section 13(b)(10) federal overtime route under Encino. If they do, federal overtime is the affected obligation; the 47 hours still matter for federal records and for California analysis.

For the California commissioned-salesperson route, $1,746 divided by 47 is approximately $37.15, above the illustrative wage-order benchmark of $25.35. The $900 component is slightly more than half of total compensation. But the analyst still must test the $900’s commission character, the governing measurement periods, and dealer-specific payment timing; any higher local wage remains separately payable. If a predicate fails, California daily and weekly overtime must be calculated. If all predicates are supported, the route concerns overtime only; time capture, breaks, statements, and expenses remain.

Suppose payroll removes $200 the next month because a repair was refunded. That entry is not resolved by calling it a “chargeback.” The plan and transaction records must show whether payment was an advance subject to a stated condition, whether the commission had already been earned, which transaction reversed, and how the debit appeared in payroll. Separately, if the advisor handled customer texts after clock-out, message and DMS events should be compared with the time and pay records. Neither the sales percentage nor the federal route answers that time question.

Strategic implications

For a dealer, the durable control is a role-and-period file rather than a blanket advisor classification. It should preserve the dealership predicate, sampled actual duties, signed plan version, transaction attribution, raw time, break evidence, payroll calculation, statement, and later adjustments. Payroll should label components only after their earning mechanics are documented, and managers should provide a reliable path for recording opening, closing, and remote customer work.

For an advisor, the most useful reconstruction links particular work and transactions to particular pay periods. Keep plan versions, schedules, statements, repair-order numbers, cancellation notices, and a contemporaneous record of work outside punches. Distinguish a complaint about transaction credit from one about uncompensated time, missed break provision, overtime classification, or a later debit; each follows different facts and rules.

A focused audit should sample threshold weeks, high-reversal months, opening or closing assignments, and periods with facial meal exceptions instead of treating one outlier as the entire history.

Analysis limits

This guide does not determine whether an establishment or advisor satisfies a federal or California overtime route, whether a pay component is a commission, whether a reversal condition is enforceable, or whether a particular break was provided. It does not calculate damages, statement injury, waiting-time consequences, or willfulness. Local wage rates, plan versions, actual duties, representative periods, employer knowledge, and current authority must be verified for the dates at issue.

Primary authority

The principal federal nodes are FLSA sections 6, 7, and 13(b)(10), 29 C.F.R. sections 516.16 and 779.372, the section 7(i) regulations, Part 785, Encino Motorcars v. Navarro, and WHD’s 2026 section 7(i) guidance. The California nodes include Labor Code sections 204.1, 226, 226.7, 2751, 2802, and 510; Wage Orders 7 and 9; MW-2026; and Peabody, Vaquero, Brinker, and Ferra. The authority panel provides each official source together with its bounded proposition and limit.

Evidence boundaries 7 domains

Verify the inference

Evidence domains used in this guide

E01

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.
E02

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.
E03

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.
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

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.
E06

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.
E07

Expense proof

  • Required-item inventory, policies, receipts, mileage, device, and subscription records
  • Reimbursement calculations, payment lines, apprentice status, and employee earnings
Can establish
What the work required, employee expenditure, amount, reimbursement method, earnings threshold, item category, and payment made.
Cannot establish alone
Whether an expense was legally necessary or whether a wage-order hand-tool exception applies without direction, item, establishment, and earnings facts.
Authority boundaries 22 sources

Rule and boundary

Sources used in this guide

  1. federalstatute

    29 U.S.C. § 206

    Fair Labor Standards Act — federal minimum wage

    Proposition
    Section 6 establishes the federal minimum-wage obligation for covered employees.
    Limit
    It does not select a higher state or local floor or decide whether particular time is hours worked.
    Source checked 2026-07-1829 U.S.C. § 206(a)
  2. 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)
  3. 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)
  4. 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
  5. 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
  6. 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
  7. federalregulation

    29 C.F.R. Part 785

    Federal hours-worked principles

    Proposition
    Part 785 addresses suffered-or-permitted work, employer knowledge, waiting, meals, rests, training, travel, and preliminary or postliminary activities.
    Limit
    Federal hours-worked rules do not displace California’s broader control test or create a federal duty to provide meal or rest periods.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  8. 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
  9. federalagency guidance

    WHD FLSA2026-4

    Department of Labor opinion letter on section 7(i)

    Proposition
    The letter states WHD’s current retail-establishment approach and computes section 7(i)’s rate threshold from the federal minimum wage.
    Limit
    It is agency guidance, acknowledges disagreement on part of the retail-establishment analysis, and does not decide state exemption tests.
    Source checked 2026-07-18pp. 2–4
  10. californiastatute

    Labor Code § 204.1

    California dealer commission definition and payday rule

    Proposition
    The statute defines covered commissions and permits specified DMV-licensed vehicle dealers to pay true commission wages monthly on a predesignated payday.
    Limit
    The timing rule does not convert base, hourly, salary, piece-rate, or other wage components into commission wages.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  11. californiastatute

    Labor Code § 226

    California itemized wage statements and payroll inspection

    Proposition
    The statute requires specified wage-statement fields, record retention, and payroll-record inspection and copy rights.
    Limit
    An underlying wage issue does not automatically establish statement injury, knowing-and-intentional failure, or a statutory penalty.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  12. californiastatute

    Labor Code § 226.7

    California meal, rest, and recovery premium pay

    Proposition
    The statute prohibits required work during mandated meal, rest, or recovery periods and provides an additional hour at the regular rate of compensation when a required period is not provided.
    Limit
    Whether a period was required and provided, and the rate and derivative consequences, require separate factual and legal analysis.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  13. californiastatute

    Labor Code § 2751

    California written commission contract

    Proposition
    Commission employment contracts must be written, state the computation and payment method, be provided in a signed copy, and have a signed receipt.
    Limit
    The requirement is commission-specific and does not substitute for separate piece-rate formula, wage-statement, or record obligations.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  14. californiastatute

    Labor Code § 2802

    California necessary-business-expense reimbursement

    Proposition
    An employer must indemnify an employee for necessary expenditures or losses incurred in direct consequence of duties or obedience to employer directions.
    Limit
    Necessity, direction, amount, notice, and the adequacy of a reimbursement method remain fact-specific; the statute is distinct from wage-order tool rules.
    Source checked 2026-07-18
  15. 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
  16. 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
  17. 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
  18. 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
  19. 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
  20. californiacase

    Vaquero v. Stoneledge

    Vaquero v. Stoneledge Furniture LLC, 9 Cal.App.5th 98 (2017)

    Proposition
    An activity/commission formula and recoverable draw did not separately compensate rest periods under the plan at issue.
    Limit
    The holding turns on the actual formula and does not require a separate statement line for every ordinary hourly pay plan.
    Source checked 2026-07-189 Cal.App.5th 108–115
  21. californiacase

    Brinker v. Superior Court

    Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court, 53 Cal.4th 1004 (2012)

    Proposition
    An employer must relieve meal-period duty, relinquish control, permit an uninterrupted opportunity, and neither impede nor discourage the period.
    Limit
    The employer need not police a bona fide relieved meal, although known work remains compensable and the records may require explanation.
    Source checked 2026-07-1853 Cal.4th 1038–1041

    The Court no longer serves its former S166350 opinion PDF from the archive; the official case record and a stable public full-text copy are both provided.

  22. californiacase

    Ferra v. Loews Hollywood

    Ferra v. Loews Hollywood Hotel, LLC, 11 Cal.5th 858 (2021)

    Proposition
    The section 226.7 regular rate of compensation uses the overtime regular-rate concept and includes nondiscretionary remuneration.
    Limit
    The correct rate still depends on classifying and allocating each pay component; it is not automatically the base hourly rate.
    Source checked 2026-07-1811 Cal.5th 878–882