Stop a $20 Error from
Becoming a $4,800 Liability
California’s wage-and-hour penalties don’t come from the wages — they come from what happens after.
8,846 PAGA notices filed in 2024–2025 alone
25 new wage & hour lawsuits filed in California every day
Three years of payroll data. Just nineteen employees. Now imagine yours.
Late Lunches After 5 Hours
The 3 Violations Hiding in Your Payroll Right Now
These exist in 90% of California businesses with 10-100 employees
VIOLATION #1
Late Lunches After 5 Hours
If an employee clocks lunch at 5:01, that one minute triggers a meal period premium. If that premium is unpaid at termination, it triggers waiting time penalties under §203. One violation. One termination. $4,800.
VIOLATION #2
Short Lunches Under 30 Minutes
A 29-minute lunch requires a meal period premium — even if the employee chose to cut it short. Unpaid short lunch premiums are the single most common source of waiting time penalties we find in audits.
VIOLATION #3
Missing Rest Period Line Items
Employees paid on commission or piece-rate must receive separate compensation for rest periods, shown as a distinct line item on their wage statement. Missing this violates §226 — $50–$100 per employee, per pay period.
How We Help
We don't just identify exposure — we help you fix it before anyone files a claim.
Forensic Wage Audits
We model your exact exposure — primary wages and derivative penalties — under current California enforcement trends.
Compliance Counseling
Ongoing advisory covering hiring, leave, termination, wage practices, and the 2026 transparency mandates.
Strategic Risk Mitigation
Handbooks, arbitration agreements, wage theft prevention notices, and the operational protocols that keep you out of court.
Los Angeles Office Compliance Transformation
Case Study
The Problem
→ Modeled exposure: $251,834 for single location
→ 66% of entire business liability
→ 1,268 instances of non-compliant meal breaks
→ No tracking of AB 1513 requirements
Violation Breakdown:
1,268 total meal break violations:
→ 847 late lunches (4:59 Rule violations)
→ 312 short lunches (under 30 minutes)
→ 109 missed rest periods on production pay
→ Average exposure per violation: $198
→ 15 terminations in lookback period
→ Waiting time penalties: $167,400 (66% of total exposure)
The Solution
→ 32-minute software lockout implementation
→ The 4:59 Rule enforcement
→ Naranjo-Automatic Premium Payments
→ Manager training on compliance protocols
→ Payroll system reconfiguration
→ Clean Exit termination checklist
Don't Wait for a PAGA Notice or a
Wage & Hour Complaint
Every day of non-compliance increases your penalty multiplier. Get ahead of the problem with a confidential forensic risk assessment. We'll walk you through exactly what we'd look for, what the process looks like, and how we'd help you get to compliance.