Quick Answer
Washington minimum wage is $16.28/hour (2026), indexed annually. Seattle: $19.97/hour. NO tip credit—tipped workers get full minimum wage. Know your rights.
Washington has one of the highest state minimum wages in the nation at $16.66 per hour (2026), more than double the federal minimum wage of $7.25. Washington's minimum wage increases annually based on inflation, and the state prohibits tip credits—meaning tipped workers receive the full minimum wage before tips.
Seattle has an even higher minimum wage of $20.76/hour (2026 for all employers), making it one of the highest municipal minimum wages in the United States.
Understanding your wage rights in Washington—including meal and rest break requirements—is critical to ensuring you're paid fairly.
Washington Minimum Wage Rates (2026)
Statewide: $16.66/Hour
2026 Washington minimum wage: $16.66 per hour
Applies to: All employees in Washington (with very limited exceptions)
Annual adjustment: Indexed to Consumer Price Index (CPI) for urban wage earners and clerical workers—increases each January 1
History of Washington minimum wage:
- 2026: $16.66/hour
- 2024: $16.28/hour
- 2023: $15.74/hour
- 2022: $14.49/hour
- 2021: $13.69/hour
- 2020: $13.50/hour
Comparison to other states:
- Washington: $16.66/hour ✅ (highest statewide minimum wage)
- California: $16.50/hour
- Illinois: $15.00/hour
- Ohio: $10.70/hour
- Pennsylvania: $7.25/hour
- Georgia: $7.25/hour (federal)
- Federal: $7.25/hour
Washington is $9.41 higher than federal minimum wage
Seattle: $20.76/Hour (All Employers)
Seattle has higher minimum wage than Washington state:
2026 Seattle minimum wage rates:
All employers (regardless of size):
- $20.76/hour
Change in 2026: Seattle eliminated the tiered system based on employer size and medical benefits. All employers now pay the same rate.
Annual adjustment: Seattle minimum wage increases each January 1 based on CPI
Example: You work at any company in Seattle, regardless of size. Employer must pay you $20.76/hour.
No Tip Credit Allowed
Washington PROHIBITS tip credits—a major advantage for tipped workers:
What "no tip credit" means: Employers must pay tipped workers the full minimum wage ($16.28 statewide, $19.97 in Seattle for large employers) before tips. All tips are in addition to minimum wage.
Contrast with tip credit states:
Texas (tip credit state):
- Tipped minimum: $2.13/hour
- Server works 40 hours, earns $200 in tips
- Base pay: $2.13 × 40 = $85.20
- Total: $285.20 ($85.20 wages + $200 tips)
Washington (no tip credit):
- Tipped minimum: $16.66/hour (full minimum)
- Server works 40 hours, earns $200 in tips
- Base pay: $16.66 × 40 = $666.40
- Total: $866.40 ($666.40 wages + $200 tips)
Difference: Washington server earns $581.20 more for the same work and tips.
Seattle example:
- Server works 40 hours at $20.76/hour, earns $300 in tips
- Base pay: $20.76 × 40 = $830.40
- Total: $1,130.40 ($830.40 wages + $300 tips)
This is one of Washington's strongest worker protections.
Meal and Rest Break Requirements
Washington REQUIRES meal and rest breaks (unlike most states):
Meal Breaks (Unpaid)
Required:
- 30-minute meal break for shifts over 5 hours
- Must be provided no later than 5 hours into shift
- Additional 30-minute meal break for shifts over 11 hours
Unpaid: Can be unpaid if employee completely relieved of duties
Example: You work 8-hour shift. Employer must provide 30-minute meal break no later than 5 hours into shift (e.g., if you start at 9am, meal break by 2pm).
Example: You work 12-hour shift. Employer must provide:
- First 30-minute meal break (within first 5 hours)
- Second 30-minute meal break (before end of shift)
Rest Breaks (Paid)
Required:
- 10-minute paid rest break for every 4 hours worked (or major fraction thereof)
- Rest breaks must be in middle of work period (not at beginning or end)
"Major fraction": 2+ hours counts as major fraction
Example: 8-hour shift requires two 10-minute paid rest breaks:
- First break around 2 hours into shift
- Second break around 6 hours into shift
Example: 6-hour shift requires two 10-minute paid rest breaks (6 hours = one full 4-hour period + 2-hour major fraction)
Example: 3-hour shift requires one 10-minute paid rest break (3 hours = major fraction of 4)
Minors (Under 18)
Additional break requirements for minors:
- 30-minute meal break after 4 hours (more frequent than adults' 5 hours)
- Same paid rest break requirements as adults
Violations and Penalties
If employer denies breaks: Must pay employee additional wages for each violation
Meal break violation: Up to one additional hour of wages at regular rate
Rest break violation: Up to one additional hour of wages at regular rate
Example: Employer routinely denies your 30-minute meal break during 8-hour shifts. You work 100 shifts over 6 months. For each violation, employer owes penalty. Penalties can add up significantly.
Overtime Requirements
Overtime Rate: 1.5× Regular Rate
Washington overtime law:
- Time and a half for hours over 40 in a workweek
- Follows federal FLSA standards generally
Example: You earn $18/hour and work 50 hours.
- Regular time: 40 hours × $18 = $720
- Overtime: 10 hours × $27 (1.5 × $18) = $270
- Total owed: $990
Minimum wage workers:
- $16.66/hour × 1.5 = $24.99/hour for overtime
Seattle workers:
- $20.76/hour × 1.5 = $31.14/hour for overtime
Exempt vs. Non-Exempt
Exempt employees (no overtime required):
- Executive, administrative, professional employees meeting specific tests
- Must earn at least $1,468.80/week ($76,377.60/year) for 2026 under Washington state threshold (higher than federal)
- Must perform primarily exempt duties
Washington salary threshold is higher than federal: More employees qualify for overtime in Washington
Find Out If You Have a Case
Not sure if your employer broke the law or what your claim is worth? Get a free, no-obligation evaluation from an experienced employment attorney.
Common Minimum Wage Violations
Paying Below Minimum Wage
Illegal: Paying less than $16.66/hour (or applicable higher local minimum)
Common violations:
- Paying "under the table" below minimum
- Misclassifying employees as independent contractors
- Averaging wages across weeks to avoid overtime
- Failing to include all hours worked
Example: Employer pays you $14/hour. This is $2.66 below Washington minimum wage and violates state law.
Illegal Deductions
Washington law prohibits deductions that reduce wages below minimum wage:
Illegal:
- Deducting for broken dishes, cash register shortages, customer walk-outs if it brings wage below minimum
- Requiring payment for uniforms if it reduces wage below minimum
- Charging for equipment or tools if it reduces below minimum
Example: You earn $17/hour, work 40 hours = $680. Employer deducts $40 for broken dishes. Net = $640 ÷ 40 = $16/hour, below minimum wage of $16.66. This deduction is illegal.
Unpaid Off-the-Clock Work
All hours worked must be paid:
Violations:
- Requiring work before clocking in or after clocking out
- Unpaid prep work or closing duties
- Automatic meal break deductions when employee works through break
- Mandatory unpaid meetings or training
- Required off-site work (emails, calls) without compensation
Example: You're required to arrive 15 minutes early daily for unpaid setup and stay 15 minutes after for unpaid cleanup. That's 30 minutes/day × 5 days = 2.5 hours/week unpaid. This violates minimum wage and overtime laws.
Denied Meal or Rest Breaks
Violations:
- Not providing 30-minute meal break for 5+ hour shifts
- Not providing 10-minute paid rest breaks for every 4 hours
- Scheduling breaks at beginning or end of shift (rest breaks must be in middle)
- Automatic meal break deductions when employee works through meal period
Penalty: Additional hour of wages for each violation
Example: Employer routinely schedules you for 8-hour shifts with no meal break. This violates Washington law and employer owes penalty (up to 1 hour wages) for each shift.
Filing Wage Claim in Washington
Washington Department of Labor & Industries (L&I)
For minimum wage, overtime, or break violations:
Phone: 1-866-219-7321
Website: lni.wa.gov
Online complaint: lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/workplace-complaints
What to file:
- Unpaid minimum wage
- Unpaid overtime
- Denied meal or rest breaks
- Illegal deductions
- Final paycheck issues
Deadline: 3 years to file wage claim
Investigation and Recovery
L&I investigates:
- Contacts employer
- Reviews pay records
- Calculates unpaid wages
- Orders employer to pay if violation found
Can recover:
- Unpaid wages
- Interest on unpaid wages
- Civil penalties (up to double unpaid wages for willful violations)
Private Lawsuit
Can also file lawsuit in Washington state court:
Damages:
- Unpaid wages
- Interest
- Liquidated damages (can double unpaid wages)
- Attorney's fees if you prevail
Statute of limitations: 3 years
Class action: If employer violated wage laws against multiple employees, can join together for class action lawsuit
Washington Equal Pay and Opportunities Act
In addition to minimum wage, Washington has strong equal pay law:
Prohibits:
- Paying employees less based on protected characteristics (sex, race, etc.) for substantially similar work
- Wage discrimination
- Retaliation for discussing wages
Requires:
- Equal pay for equal work
- Allows employees to discuss wages without retaliation
Wage transparency: Washington requires employers to include wage information in job postings (starting January 2023)
Common Questions
Does minimum wage apply to all workers in Washington?
Yes, with very limited exceptions:
- Most employees must be paid Washington minimum wage
- Some agricultural workers have different rules
- Independent contractors (if properly classified) not covered
- Some disabled workers may be paid less under special certificates (rare)
No "training wage": Washington doesn't allow lower wage for training periods
Can my employer pay me less than minimum wage if I'm salaried?
No. Salaried employees must still receive at least minimum wage.
Calculate: Divide weekly salary by hours worked. If below $16.66/hour, employer violates law.
Example: You're "salaried" at $600/week and work 50 hours/week. Hourly rate = $600 ÷ 50 = $12/hour, below Washington minimum of $16.66. This violates law (and you're likely also entitled to overtime).
Do I get paid for rest breaks in Washington?
Yes. 10-minute rest breaks every 4 hours are PAID in Washington.
Meal breaks (30 minutes) can be unpaid if you're completely relieved of duties.
What if I work in Seattle—which minimum wage applies?
Seattle's higher minimum wage applies if you work within Seattle city limits:
- All employers: $20.76/hour (as of January 2026)
If Seattle minimum is higher than state ($16.66), Seattle rate applies.
Can my employer deduct for uniforms or equipment?
Only if it doesn't bring wage below minimum.
Example: You earn $20/hour, work 40 hours = $800. Employer deducts $50 for uniform. Net = $750 ÷ 40 = $18.75/hour, still above minimum. Legal.
But if you earn $17/hour and same deduction, net = $650 ÷ 40 = $16.25/hour, below minimum of $16.66. Illegal.
How does Washington compare to other states for tipped workers?
Washington is one of the BEST states for tipped workers because:
- ✅ Full minimum wage required ($16.66) before tips
- ✅ NO tip credit allowed
- ✅ Tips are entirely on top of base wage
Contrast: Most states allow tip credit (paying tipped workers as low as $2.13/hour if tips make up difference).
Only 7 states ban tip credits: California, Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, Minnesota, Alaska
Resources for Washington Workers
State Agency
Washington Department of Labor & Industries (L&I):
- Wage and hour enforcement
- Phone: 1-866-219-7321
- Website: lni.wa.gov
- Online complaints: lni.wa.gov/workers-rights/workplace-complaints
Washington State Attorney General - Worker Protection Unit:
- Wage theft enforcement
- Phone: 1-833-660-4877
Federal Agency
U.S. Department of Labor - Wage and Hour Division:
- Seattle: 206-398-8039
- National: 1-866-487-9243
- Website: dol.gov/agencies/whd
Free Legal Assistance
Columbia Legal Services:
- Phone: 1-888-201-1014
- Website: columbialegal.org
Northwest Justice Project:
- Phone: 1-888-201-1014 (CLEAR hotline)
- Website: nwjustice.org
Related Topics
- Washington Employment Law: Complete Guide
- Washington Overtime Laws
- Washington Unpaid Wages
- Washington Workplace Retaliation
Get Help with Unpaid Wages
Think your employer is violating Washington wage laws? Get a free consultation from an employment law expert.
Washington provides some of the strongest wage protections in the nation: $16.66/hour minimum wage (2026), Seattle $20.76/hour, NO tip credit (tipped workers get full minimum wage), and required meal and rest breaks. Understanding your rights and the 3-year statute of limitations for wage claims is critical to recovering unpaid wages.
Disclaimer: The information provided on this page is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Washington minimum wage rates are subject to annual adjustment. For advice specific to your situation, please consult with a licensed employment attorney in Washington. Employment Law Aid is not a law firm and does not provide legal representation.
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What is seattle: $20.76/Hour (All Employers)?
What is no Tip Credit Allowed?
What is meal and Rest Break Requirements?
What is meal Breaks (Unpaid)?
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