Planning on Hiring Summer Interns? Make Sure Your Pay Practices Don’t Trip You Up

Jackson Walker
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Jackson Walker

The end of the school year is on the horizon for high school and college students. Along with catching up on sleep and enjoying a break from classes, many students will want to spend at least part of the summer working for money, experience, or both. At the same time, many employers plan to hire interns for the summer to assist the regular staff, tackle long-neglected projects, or recruit potential employees for the future. However, many large and small employers trip up when it comes to compensating summer interns.

A number of federal and state laws affect pay practices for summer interns, and ensuring that your company complies with those laws can save you headaches down the road. Here is a quick refresher on some of the federal laws that regulate how summer interns must be treated.

Do Summer Interns Have to Be Paid at All?

First, some employers still do not pay summer interns. There are limited situations when non-paid internships are acceptable, but for most for-profit companies, those situations do not apply. Generally, interns must be paid as regular employees.

The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires companies to pay employees a minimum wage (currently $7.25 per hour) and a higher “time-and-a-half” rate when employees work overtime (over 40 hours in a week). The Act also sets out rules for youth employment that impose certain restrictions for workers who are under 18. The FLSA only applies to “employees,” and some companies can show that their interns are not employees, but only if the internship is tied to an intern’s formal education.

To determine whether interns at private sector employers can be classified as non-employee students who need not be paid minimum wage, courts ask “who is the ‘primary beneficiary’ of the relationship?” If the company is the primary beneficiary, the intern should be treated as an employee, and he or she must be paid at least minimum wage. If the intern is the primary beneficiary, he or she is deemed to be a student and need not be paid at all. Several factors guide this analysis, and no one factor is determinative, but courts examine:

  1. Whether the intern and the company understand that the internship is unpaid;
  2. Whether the internship provides training similar to that which would be given in an educational environment;
  3. Whether the internship is connected to a formal education program (such as required coursework or work for academic credit);
  4. Whether the internship accommodates the academic calendar;
  5. Whether the internship is limited in duration so that it corresponds to the time the intern is learning;
  6. Whether the internship complements, instead of displaces, the work of regular employees; and
  7. Whether the intern is promised a job at the end.

Simply put, if a company derives an immediate advantage from an intern’s work, the intern is most likely an employee. This will be the case for most for-profit companies. Work that is not designed to benefit the company is rare.

Can Summer Interns Be Classified as Independent Contractors?

Because most summer interns at for-profit companies don’t meet the FLSA’s test for being a student, some companies try to classify them as independent contractors and pay a flat per week or per month salary or stipend. That approach is often misguided.

Internships usually involve on-the-job-training and provide experience to people who have some background in a particular field or who want to learn more about that field. Supervision and direction in completing projects is thus a key part of the experience. A worker can generally only be classified as an independent contractor if he or she does not have direct supervision regarding how or when he or she completes a project. So, if daily job hours at a company’s office, training, and coaching are a part of an intern’s work, he or she most likely cannot be classified as an independent contractor.

Moreover, if an intern is not an independent contractor, the company has to comply with the FLSA’s minimum wage and overtime requirements, and paying an intern a flat per week or per month amount could thus run afoul of the FLSA.

What About Benefits Like Healthcare Coverage?

If an intern must be classified as an employee, many companies wonder whether the intern has to be included in the company’s health care or other benefit plans. The Affordable Care Act requires companies that have 50 or more full-time equivalent employees to offer healthcare insurance to their full-time employees or pay a penalty. A full-time employee under the ACA is generally an employee who works 30 hours or more each week. There are exceptions to the ACA’s requirements for “seasonal” employees that may be available for summer interns. However, those exceptions can sometimes be hard to meet, so categorical statements are difficult and an examination of each employer’s situation is needed.

To avoid having to offer healthcare benefits, some companies will only have interns work less than 30 hours per week. Other companies take a different approach. They offer interns healthcare insurance coverage because, as a practical matter, most are likely to be covered by a parent’s healthcare plan. Because children can be on a parent’s plan until they are 26, most summer interns won’t want to be on an employer’s plan. Other benefit plans have different standards for participation, and the terms of those other plans will control.

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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