Your employer may call it “just being available.” But if a pager, phone, dispatch app, or supervisor’s demands keep you from using your own time, that availability may be work – and work may have to be paid. Understanding on call pay laws matters for Texas workers in health care, oilfields, maintenance, security, IT, emergency services, and any job where the shift does not always end when you clock out.
The key question is not whether you received a call. It is how much control your employer had over your time. A worker who can go to dinner, attend a child’s game, or stay home without major restrictions is in a very different position from a worker who must remain near a jobsite, answer within minutes, stay sober, and report immediately. Employers do not get free labor simply by relabeling work time as on-call time.
What On Call Pay Laws Actually Require
For most Texas employees, federal wage law provides the starting point. The Fair Labor Standards Act requires covered employers to pay nonexempt employees for all hours worked, including certain time spent waiting or on call. Texas does not have a separate state law that broadly replaces those federal overtime protections, so the federal rules often control wage claims involving on-call time.
The legal distinction is usually framed this way: are you “engaged to wait,” or are you “waiting to be engaged”? If you are engaged to wait, the time generally counts as work time. If you are waiting to be engaged, it may not. The words sound technical, but the real-world test is straightforward: could you meaningfully use the time for yourself?
An employer cannot avoid paying by telling workers to clock out while requiring them to remain ready for immediate assignments. If the restrictions are serious enough, the law may treat the entire on-call period as compensable time, even if the phone never rings.
When On-Call Time Usually Must Be Paid
On-call time is more likely to be paid when the employer’s rules leave little room for personal life. Being required to stay at the workplace is a strong example. A security guard who must remain at a facility overnight, a hospital employee who must stay on the unit, or an oilfield worker who cannot leave the location may be working even during quiet periods.
Time at home can also be compensable. The location alone does not decide the issue. A worker required to respond within five or 10 minutes may effectively be unable to travel, shop, sleep normally, drink alcohol, take care of family, or participate in ordinary activities. Frequent calls can create the same problem. If you are interrupted repeatedly during an on-call period, your employer may be controlling your time far more than it admits.
Courts and investigators commonly look at practical facts, including:
- How quickly you must respond or report to work
- Whether you must stay within a limited distance or geographic area
- How often calls, texts, or dispatches occur
- Whether missed calls lead to discipline
- Whether you can trade on-call shifts with coworkers
- Whether you can use the time for normal personal activities
No single factor decides every case. A 30-minute response rule may be manageable for one worker and severely restrictive for another, depending on where they must report, traffic conditions, the frequency of callbacks, and the consequences of being late. Employers often focus on one convenient fact, such as allowing a worker to stay at home. The law looks at the full reality of the arrangement.
A phone alone does not always create paid time
Many workers are required to carry a phone. That fact, by itself, does not necessarily mean every off-duty hour is paid. If you can go where you want, do what you want, respond within a reasonable time, and rarely receive calls, the period may be treated as unpaid off-duty on-call time.
But a phone can become a leash when paired with strict rules. If your supervisor expects an immediate answer, punishes delayed responses, requires you to remain close to a site, or calls often enough to disrupt your life, the employer may owe wages. The written policy matters, but the actual expectations matter more. A company cannot hide behind a handbook if managers enforce a harsher unwritten rule.
Callbacks, Travel, and Remote Work Can Add Up
Even when the full on-call period is not paid, the work performed after a callback generally must be paid. That includes answering work-related calls, troubleshooting by phone, responding to work emails or dispatch messages, completing reports, and performing remote computer work.
Travel can matter too. Ordinary commuting to and from a regular jobsite is usually not compensable. However, travel that is part of responding to an emergency call, moving between jobsites, or performing a required assignment may count as paid work time. For workers dispatched after hours to repair equipment, inspect a site, handle an outage, or respond to a customer emergency, unpaid travel time deserves close review.
Employers sometimes pay only for the time spent physically fixing the problem. That may leave out the time spent receiving the call, preparing, driving to the location, and completing required follow-up. Small amounts of unpaid time on each callback can become substantial unpaid wages over weeks or months.
On-Call Hours Can Trigger Overtime Pay
For nonexempt employees, compensable on-call time counts toward the 40-hour workweek under federal law. Once total hours worked exceed 40, the employee is generally owed overtime at one and one-half times the regular rate of pay.
This is where many wage violations become expensive for employers. A worker may be paid for an eight-hour shift but required to remain heavily restricted overnight or through a weekend. If that time should have been counted, the worker may have crossed the overtime threshold without receiving proper overtime wages.
Being paid a salary does not automatically eliminate overtime rights. Job duties and pay structure determine whether an employee is legally exempt. Likewise, calling someone a contractor does not settle the issue if the company controls how, when, and where that person works. Misclassification is common, particularly in industries that rely on crews, field service, dispatch work, and rotating schedules.
Special Rules for Long Shifts and Sleeping Time
Some jobs involve 24-hour shifts, overnight duty, or live-in arrangements. The rules on sleeping time can be more complicated in those situations. Under certain conditions, an employer may be able to exclude a bona fide sleep period from paid hours during a shift of 24 hours or more. That does not mean the employer can exclude every overnight hour automatically.
Whether sleep time is deductible can depend on the length of the shift, the agreement between the parties, whether adequate sleeping facilities are provided, and whether interruptions prevent meaningful sleep. If calls, alarms, patient needs, security rounds, or jobsite demands repeatedly wake you, the employer may not be able to treat that period as unpaid rest.
Workers should be especially cautious when employers use blanket policies that deduct meal periods, sleep periods, or off-duty time regardless of what actually happens during a shift. Wage law is based on work performed, not simply what the timesheet was designed to show.
What Texas Workers Should Document
Do not rely on your employer’s timekeeping system to tell the full story. If you believe you are working unpaid on-call time, keep your own records. Save schedules, on-call policies, dispatch logs, text messages, call histories, GPS records, emails, and screenshots from work apps. Write down when you were placed on call, each time you were contacted, your response deadline, where you had to report, travel time, and when the work ended.
Also keep pay stubs and copies of timesheets. If a supervisor tells you not to record callback work, requires off-the-clock answers, or changes your reported hours, preserve that information. Do not alter company records or take materials you are not authorized to possess. Your own contemporaneous notes and communications can still be powerful evidence.
You should also pay attention to retaliation. An employer generally cannot lawfully punish a worker for asserting rights under federal wage law, asking about unpaid wages, or participating in a wage investigation. Retaliation can include reduced hours, threats, discipline, termination, or suddenly unfavorable assignments. Timing and documentation matter.
Do Not Let an Employer Turn Your Time Into Free Labor
Every on-call arrangement is fact-specific. Some are properly unpaid because the worker has real freedom. Others are wage theft hiding in plain sight because the employer controls the worker’s location, availability, and personal life without paying for it.
If your employer required you to stay ready, answer immediately, travel after hours, or perform work without recording the time, do not assume the policy is legal because everyone follows it. Moore & Associates fights for Texas employees seeking unpaid wages and overtime. A careful review of your actual schedule, restrictions, and pay records can show whether your employer owes you money – and whether it is time to take action.
