On Call Laws in Wisconsin (2026): Your Pay Rights Explained
Most people think being on call means you’re just waiting around. But in Wisconsin, whether you get paid for that time depends on where you’re waiting. Seriously. The rules are specific, and if you’re not getting paid when you should be, you’re leaving money on the table.
Let’s break down exactly when your employer has to pay you for on-call time.
What Does On Call Mean in Wisconsin?

On call means you’re available to work if your employer needs you. Pretty straightforward, right?
You might be waiting for a phone call. You might need to stay near work. Or you might just need to be reachable.
Here’s what matters: can you actually use that time for yourself? That’s the big question Wisconsin law cares about.
The Basic Rule for On-Call Pay
Wisconsin follows a simple principle. If you’re stuck somewhere because of work, that’s work time.
You’re entitled to at least minimum wage. You also get credit toward overtime if you hit 40 hours in a week.
But if you can go home and do whatever you want? That’s different. Stay with me here.
When You Must Get Paid for On-Call Time

Okay, this part is important.
You must be paid if you’re required to stay on your employer’s premises or so close that you can’t use the time for your own purposes. Think about a security guard who has to stay at the building. They’re working, even if nothing happens.
The law looks at whether the time benefits your employer or you. If your boss is controlling your time, you get paid.
Here are some situations where on-call time counts as work:
You have to stay at the workplace. This is the clearest case. If you can’t leave, you’re working.
You have to stay so close to work that you can’t do much else. Maybe you can go home, but you live two minutes away and need to be there in five minutes. That’s restrictive.
You’re working even during downtime. A telephone operator who must stay on duty for specific hours is working, even when permitted to sleep between calls.
Response times are super strict. If you need to show up in eight minutes or face penalties, that’s pretty limiting. Short response time requirements can prevent effective use of on-call time for anything except activities within a restricted geographic area.
Honestly, this is the part most people miss.
When You Don’t Get Paid for On-Call Time
Here’s the flip side.
Employers don’t have to pay if you’re allowed to leave the premises and only need to leave word where you can be reached. You can be at home, at the gym, shopping, whatever.
As long as you have a phone and can respond when called, you’re free. The key is that you can use the time effectively for yourself.
Not sure what counts as effective use? Let me break it down.
If you can run errands, that counts. If you can watch a movie at home, that counts. If you can have dinner with friends, that counts.
But if you need to respond in five minutes and you live 20 minutes from work? That doesn’t count as freedom.
What Courts Look at to Decide

Wisconsin courts and the Department of Workforce Development examine several factors. These help determine if your on-call time should be paid.
How fast do you need to respond? Fixed time limits that are unduly restrictive can make on-call time compensable. Eight minutes is very different from two hours.
Can you trade shifts easily? If you can swap on-call duties with coworkers whenever you want, that gives you more freedom.
Are there geographical restrictions? Do you need to stay within a certain area? The smaller the area, the more likely you should be paid.
How often do you actually get called? Increased frequency of call-ins can make on-call time compensable. If you’re getting called every hour, that’s work time.
Do you have penalties for not responding? If your employer threatens discipline for being too slow, that’s a restriction on your freedom.
Special Rules for 24-Hour Shifts
This one’s interesting.
When you work 24 hours or more, you and your employer can agree in writing to exclude meal periods and up to 8 hours of sleep time from your paid hours. But there are conditions.
Your employer must provide decent sleeping facilities. You need to actually be able to sleep without interruptions.
If your sleep gets interrupted by a call to duty, that interruption counts as work time. Makes sense, right?
And here’s the kicker. If you can’t get a reasonable night’s sleep because of frequent interruptions, the entire sleeping period must be counted as work time.
You need at least five hours of uninterrupted sleep. Otherwise, the whole period gets paid.
Shifts Under 24 Hours
For shorter shifts, the rules are stricter.
If you’re on duty for less than 24 hours, all that time counts as work, even if you can sleep or do other activities when not busy. No exceptions here.
This applies to jobs like overnight desk workers. Even if you sleep between tasks, you’re still working.
Living on the Employer’s Premises
Some jobs require you to live where you work. Think caretakers or property managers.
You’re not considered working every minute you’re on the premises. You get time for normal activities like eating, sleeping, and entertainment.
Wisconsin accepts reasonable agreements between you and your employer. The agreement should specify what time counts as work and what doesn’t.
This rule also applies to home care workers who stay on premises for at least 120 hours per week and have private sleeping quarters.
Emergency Call-Outs Count as Work
Wondering if this applies to you?
If you go home after your shift and get called out later to handle an emergency, all your travel time to the job site counts as work time. You get paid from the moment you leave home.
This is different from normal commuting. Your regular drive to work doesn’t count. But emergency calls? Those are work.
How Much You Get Paid
When on-call time is compensable, you earn at least minimum wage. That’s $7.25 per hour in Wisconsin right now.
Your on-call hours also count toward the 40-hour overtime threshold. Once you hit 40 hours in a week, you get time and a half.
Some employers pay a small stipend for on-call time. Like $2 per hour just for being available.
Here’s the thing, though. Those “inconvenience payments” don’t replace your actual wage requirements if the on-call time is legally compensable. You can’t accept $2 per hour if the law says you should get minimum wage.
What Happens if Your Employer Doesn’t Pay
Not getting paid for compensable on-call time is a wage violation. Pretty serious stuff.
You can recover up to double the amount of unpaid wages under federal law, plus attorney fees. The penalties depend on whether the violation was willful.
Under Wisconsin law, the penalties work differently. If you file with the Department of Workforce Development first and they complete their investigation, your employer might pay an additional penalty equal to your unpaid wages.
If you go straight to court, the penalty might be up to half the unpaid amount.
Failing to pay wages on time can result in liquidated damages up to 100% of unpaid wages. Repeated violations bring bigger consequences.
How Far Back Can You Claim?
Time matters here.
Under Wisconsin law, you can seek unpaid on-call wages for up to 2 years. Federal law is more generous.
Federal law allows claims for up to 3 years if the employer’s violation was willful. Willful means they knew they were breaking the law or didn’t care.
Most lawyers will file under both state and federal law. They use whichever gives you the better outcome.
How to Track Your On-Call Time
Keep records of everything. Seriously, this works.
Write down when you’re on call. Note the dates, times, and any restrictions your employer places on you.
Document response time requirements. If your boss says you need to arrive in 10 minutes, save that email or text.
Log every time you get called. Write down when the call came in and how long you worked.
Save your schedule. Keep copies of on-call rotations and any written policies.
Track where you had to be. If you couldn’t leave a certain area, document that.
Your records help prove your case if you need to file a claim. Don’t rely on your employer’s records alone.
What to Do if You’re Not Getting Paid
First, check your employment agreement. See what it says about on-call pay.
Look at your employer’s policy. Some companies have written rules about this.
Talk to your supervisor if you feel comfortable. Sometimes it’s just a misunderstanding. Maybe they don’t realize the law requires payment.
Contact the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development. You can file a wage claim with them.
Talk to an employment lawyer. Many offer free consultations. They can tell you if you have a case.
Don’t worry about retaliation. It’s illegal for employers to fire or punish employees for asking about overtime pay or filing wage claims. If they do, that’s a separate violation.
Common Misconceptions About On-Call Pay
Let me clear up some confusion.
“I’m salaried, so I don’t get overtime.” Wrong. Being salaried doesn’t automatically exempt you from overtime laws. Your job duties matter more than how you’re paid.
“My employer can call it whatever they want.” Nope. The legal definition of work time is what counts, not what your boss calls it.
“A small stipend covers it.” Not necessarily. If your on-call time is legally compensable, you need at least minimum wage.
“I signed an agreement saying I won’t get paid.” Employment agreements can’t override wage and hour laws. You can’t legally waive your right to minimum wage.
Industries Where This Matters Most
Healthcare workers deal with this constantly. Nurses, EMTs, and home health aides often work on-call shifts.
IT professionals frequently have on-call rotations. Network administrators need to be available for emergencies.
Maintenance workers get called out for repairs. HVAC techs, electricians, and plumbers often work on-call.
Property managers live where they work. Their on-call time gets complicated.
Emergency responders have strict response times. Firefighters and ambulance crews face unique rules.
What Employers Need to Know
If you’re an employer, listen up.
Evaluate your on-call arrangements carefully. Whether on-call time is compensable depends on specific facts of each situation. Don’t assume all on-call time is unpaid.
Document your policies clearly. Write down what you expect from on-call employees.
Keep detailed records. Wisconsin requires employers to maintain payroll records for at least 3 years. Track on-call schedules, actual calls, and all hours worked.
Review arrangements when circumstances change. Reevaluation is important if call frequency increases or other conditions shift.
Get legal advice if you’re unsure. The penalties for getting this wrong can add up fast.
Recent Changes and Updates
Wisconsin hasn’t made major changes to on-call laws recently. The basic framework comes from administrative rules that have been stable for years.
The rules come from Wisconsin Administrative Code DWD 272.12. These regulations mirror federal Fair Labor Standards Act guidelines.
Court cases continue to clarify gray areas. But the fundamental principle stays the same. If employees can’t use the time for their own purposes, it’s work time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I get paid for being on call from home?
It depends. If you just need to answer your phone and can do whatever you want at home, probably not. If you need to stay close and respond super fast, probably yes.
What if I never actually get called during my on-call shift?
Doesn’t matter. If the on-call time is restrictive enough to count as work time, you get paid whether you actually work or not.
Can my employer require me to be on call without paying me?
Yes, but only if you’re free to use the time for yourself. If the restrictions are too tight, they must pay you at least minimum wage.
How do I prove my on-call time was too restrictive?
Keep detailed records. Document response time requirements, geographical restrictions, how often you got called, and any penalties for slow response. Courts look at all these factors together.
What if I’m salaried and exempt from overtime?
Even exempt employees must receive their full salary. On-call work still needs to meet exemption requirements. But for most on-call issues, we’re talking about non-exempt employees who get overtime.
Final Thoughts
On-call laws in Wisconsin protect workers from getting stuck in limbo without pay. The key question is always the same: can you actually use the time for yourself?
If your employer controls your time, you should get paid for it. If you’re truly free to do what you want, they don’t have to pay.
Keep good records. Know your rights. Don’t assume a small stipend makes everything legal.
And if you think your employer isn’t following the rules? Talk to a lawyer or file a claim with the state. You might be owed more money than you realize.
