Employees have the right to uninterrupted meals and breaks, essential for health and productivity. Employers must provide them legally.
Meal Breaks
Rest Breaks
Federal Law (FLSA)
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) does not require breaks, but:
This means on-call, interrupted, or working meal periods must be paid.
While any employee can be impacted, violations are especially common among:
If your industry moves fast or is understaffed, you’re more likely to experience illegal break practices.
Meal Break Requirements
Rest Break Requirements
Premium Wage
This adds up quickly and many employees are owed thousands of dollars without realizing it.
Employers cannot punish, demote, cut your hours, or fire you for requesting the breaks you are legally owed.
Reading list
Yes. Rest breaks are typically paid in most states, including California.
If you felt pressured, understaffed, or too busy, the law often still counts it as a missed break.
No. Retaliation is illegal under state and federal laws.
Varies by state, but typically 2–4 years. California allows up to 4 years under certain claims.
Yes, interrupted, late, or shortened breaks may qualify.
If you’ve been treated unfairly at work, don’t wait. Contact Apollo Law Group for a free consultation and let us fight for your rights.
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