The U.S. Department of Labor today announced a final rule delaying portions of the 2020 Tip final rule until December 31, 2021.
The remainder of the 2020 Tip final rule will become effective April 30, 2021 including the rules addressing:
- A prohibition on employers, including supervisors and managers, keeping tips received by workers, regardless of whether the employer takes a credit for workers’ tips toward their obligation to pay those workers minimum wage.
- The recordkeeping requirements for an employer that does not take a tip credit to include non-tipped workers, such as cooks and dishwashers, in nontraditional tip-sharing arrangements.
- An employer that collects tips for tip pools must fully distribute tips no later than the regular payday for the workweek or pay period in which the tips were collected.
The eight-month extension of the effective date for specific portions of the 2020 Tip rule allows the department time to address additional questions of law, policy and fact and complete separate rulemaking related to the assessment of civil money penalties, and the application of the FLSA’s tip credit provision to tipped employees who also perform non-tipped work.
For more information on protections for tipped workers and others under the FLSA, visit www.dol.gov/agencies/whd , or call toll-free 1-866-4US-WAGE to speak directly and confidentially to a trained Wage and Hour Division (WHD) professional. WHD protects workers regardless of immigration status, and can communicate with workers in more than 200 languages.