When Drive Time Counts as Paid Hours

Fact Check: When Drive Time Counts as Paid Hours

Verified
12
Partial
0
Issue
0
Outdated
0
Unverifiable
0
Verified May 26, 2026How we fact-check

Summary

12 claims checked against the article's verified sources. 12 ✓ Verified, 0 ⚠ Partial, 0 ✗ Issue, 0 🕐 Outdated. The quick read accurately explains that ordinary commuting is generally unpaid, that driving after the workday starts is paid, that California treats mandatory employer transit more broadly than federal law, and that GPS or app records can decide disputes when time records are incomplete. The evidence comes from the Portal-to-Portal Act, 29 CFR §§785.35–.41, IBP v. Alvarez, Morillion v. Royal Packing, Overton v. Walt Disney, and Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery.

Statutory / regulatory

4 claims

"Drive time from home to work isn't paid — but drive after the workday starts is, and California treats 'starts' more broadly than federal"

Source (primary)
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/546/21/
Source (secondary)
https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/4th/22/575.html
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

The Portal-to-Portal Act (29 USC §254) excludes ordinary home-to-work commute. IBP v. Alvarez (546 U.S. 21, 2005) established the continuous-workday rule — once a principal activity begins, all subsequent travel is compensable. Morillion v. Royal Packing (22 Cal.4th 575, 2000) applied California's broader "subject to control" test to mandatory employer-provided transit.

"The ordinary home-to-work commute isn't paid time anywhere — federal law explicitly excludes it"

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

29 CFR §785.35 — "Normal travel from home to work is not worktime" — applies to employees who work at different job sites as well. The Portal-to-Portal Act at 29 USC §254(a)(1) is the statutory authority for the exclusion.

"If you require yard pickup before customer visits, pay the yard-to-customer drive"

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

29 CFR §785.38 — travel from a mandatory meeting place (where the employee receives instructions, performs work, or picks up and carries tools) to the work place is compensable. The article's mistake #1 — "Mandatory yard time without paying the yard-to-customer drive" — anchors to this regulation.

"A plumber who picks up tools at the yard before the first customer — that drive is paid"

Source (primary)
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
Verified
May 26, 2026single source
Notes

Same 29 CFR §785.38 mechanic applied to a service-business scenario. The article's mistake #1 names HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and locksmith as the affected trades. Tool pickup at the yard is the canonical "principal activity" that starts the continuous workday.

Operational framing (close synthesis)

1 claim

"The cost of capturing drive time is usually small compared with years of back pay, penalties, and a dispute over incomplete records"

Source (primary)
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/546/21/
Source (secondary)
https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/4th/22/575.html
Verified
May 26, 2026· 2+ independent sources
Notes

This is a practical synthesis rather than a specific dollar claim. Back-pay exposure follows from the FLSA limitations period and the California rules above; penalties and record disputes follow from the liquidated-damages, waiting-time, and Mt. Clemens recordkeeping framework. The quick read no longer claims a specific class-action settlement range.

Sources

6 unique sources cited across the report — click to audit any claim directly against its evidence.

  1. 1.https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/546/21/
  2. 2.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/4th/22/575.html
  3. 3.https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fact-sheets/22-flsa-hours-worked
  4. 4.https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2006/b179854.html
  5. 5.https://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/DLSE-OpinionLetters.htm
  6. 6.https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/328/680/

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