A company truck leaves the yard at 5:30 a.m. Your crew does not reach the job site until 7:00. Your employer pays you starting at 7:00. Or you finish one service call, drive 45 minutes to another, and are told that time is “just part of the job.” Those missing minutes can add up fast. Travel time pay eligibility is a common wage issue for Texas workers, especially in construction, oilfield, trucking, maintenance, healthcare, and field service jobs.
Employers often treat all driving as an unpaid commute. That is not the law. Some travel is ordinary commuting time, but other travel is work time that must be paid. When an employer controls where you must go, when you must go, or requires you to perform duties while traveling, the company may owe wages and, in many cases, overtime.
When Does Travel Time Pay Eligibility Apply?
Federal wage law generally controls travel-time pay questions in Texas. The key issue is not whether you were behind the wheel. It is whether the travel was part of your principal work activities or occurred during the workday for your employer’s benefit.
Your normal trip from home to your regular workplace is usually not compensable, even if the commute is long. A two-hour drive to the same office, plant, or yard every morning can still be an unpaid commute under federal law. That rule frustrates many workers, but it has limits.
Once the workday starts, travel between job locations is usually paid time. If you report to a company yard, pick up tools, attend a safety meeting, load equipment, or receive your assignments before heading to a customer or job site, your paid workday may have already begun. The drive that follows may count as hours worked.
The same is often true when you travel from one client, well site, construction project, or service call to another. An HVAC technician driving from one repair to the next, a home health worker traveling between patients, or an oilfield worker moving from a yard to a remote site may be performing compensable travel. Employers cannot simply label that driving “commuting” to avoid paying for it.
A required meeting can change the answer
A common dispute involves workers told to report first to a central location. If you must clock in, join a crew meeting, complete paperwork, inspect a vehicle, load supplies, or wait for dispatch instructions at the yard, those duties may start your workday. The travel to the actual job site after that point may be compensable.
Employers sometimes tell workers not to clock in until they arrive at the final destination. That instruction does not erase time that the law requires the employer to pay. The facts matter: what was required, where did it happen, who controlled the schedule, and what did workers do before reaching the site?
Travel That Often Should Be Paid
No two jobs operate exactly alike, but several travel situations regularly raise unpaid-wage concerns:
- Travel between job sites, customer locations, or work assignments during the day.
- Travel after required work at a company yard, warehouse, office, or meeting point.
- A same-day special assignment in another city when the employer sends you away from your usual work location. Your employer may generally subtract your ordinary commute time, but it cannot ignore the rest of the work-related trip.
- Out-of-town travel that cuts across your normal working hours, even if it occurs on a weekend and even if you are riding instead of driving.
- Required travel in a company vehicle when you are transporting equipment, crew members, materials, or performing other job duties.
Overnight travel has more complicated rules. As a general rule, travel away from home that occurs during your regular work hours may be paid, including corresponding hours on nonworkdays. Travel outside normal work hours as a passenger may be treated differently. But if you are required to drive, work while traveling, answer work calls, transport tools, or remain on duty, the employer may still owe pay. Do not assume an unpaid travel policy is lawful just because the company calls the trip voluntary or off-the-clock.
Why Travel Time Can Also Create an Overtime Claim
Unpaid travel is not just a dispute over an hourly wage. It can push your total hours over 40 in a workweek.
For most nonexempt employees, federal law requires overtime pay at one-and-one-half times the regular rate for hours worked over 40. If an employer excludes five, eight, or ten hours of paid travel each week, it may be underpaying both straight-time wages and overtime. This is especially significant for field crews and oilfield workers whose schedules already run long.
For example, suppose you are paid for 38 hours at the job site but spend six additional hours traveling between required locations. If that travel time counts as work time, you worked 44 hours, not 38. The employer may owe four overtime hours, along with any other unpaid compensation.
Some workers are exempt from overtime rules based on their duties and pay structure. Others may fall under industry-specific rules or exemptions. A job title such as “manager,” “field supervisor,” or “independent contractor” does not decide the issue by itself. Employers frequently rely on titles and paperwork that do not match what workers actually do.
Red Flags That an Employer May Be Taking Your Time for Free
Pay attention if your employer requires early arrival but delays your clock-in time, directs you to meet at a yard before dispatching you elsewhere, or edits your time records to remove drive time. The same concern exists when a company requires workers to transport equipment, ride in a crew vehicle, use a work app while traveling, or respond immediately to calls during the drive.
Another red flag is a blanket rule stating that no travel is paid. A company can have a travel policy, but it cannot use a policy to override wage law. The legal question depends on the actual work required, not the label the employer gives the time.
Workers should also be cautious when an employer pays a flat day rate. A day rate does not automatically eliminate overtime obligations. If you work long days, travel between locations, or perform duties before and after the assigned shift, the company may still owe additional wages.
What to Save If You Think You Are Owed Travel Pay
Wage claims are won or lost on details. Your employer has payroll records, dispatch systems, GPS information, and schedules. You should preserve your own evidence before it disappears.
Keep copies of timecards, pay stubs, work schedules, text messages, dispatch instructions, job tickets, mileage logs, calendar entries, and photos showing when you arrived or left. If you used a company app, note when assignments appeared and when they were completed. Personal phone location history, toll receipts, fuel receipts, and maps can also help reconstruct travel.
Write down your typical day while it is fresh. Include the time you arrived at the yard, the time your crew departed, each job location, work performed during travel, and the time you were released. Do not take confidential company documents you are not authorized to possess, and do not alter records. Preserve what you already have lawful access to and make accurate notes.
Avoid waiting until months after you leave the job. Memories fade, devices are replaced, and employers may change systems. There are deadlines for wage claims, and the time available can depend on the claim and the employer’s conduct.
Do Not Let a Pay Policy Decide Your Rights
Many Texas employees stay quiet because they fear losing hours, being blacklisted, or getting fired. Those concerns are real. But wage laws prohibit certain forms of retaliation when workers raise good-faith concerns about unpaid wages or assert their rights. Retaliation can include reduced hours, discipline, threats, schedule changes, or termination after you complain.
You do not need to accept a supervisor’s statement that travel “does not count” as the final word. The decisive facts are what your employer required, when your workday began, what you did during the trip, and whether the unpaid time caused lost overtime.
If required travel has been left off your paycheck, gather your records and get a clear assessment of your situation. Moore & Associates fights for Texas workers whose employers take their time and wages without paying for either. A careful review now can help protect the pay you have already earned and the treatment you receive going forward.
