This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (2024)


This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to be 8 hours (lunch and coffee breaks count towards the total).

If we accept this convention, your workers are technically there for 9 hours a day for 4 days and 4 hours on Friday. Still clocking in 40 hours.

Nevertheless, I'm sure they enjoy their half day off on Friday and the work culture that put it in place.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (1)

softawre on Aug 19, 2016 | next [–]


Most places in the US don't count lunch. 8-5 or 9-6 are normal 8 hour days, or 8:30-5 if you take a 30m lunch.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (2)

aaronbrethorst on Aug 19, 2016 | parent | next [–]


I have never worked in a salaried position where this is true. Citation needed.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (3)

nommm-nommm on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Citation needed? Wtf?

Citation: I can't bill my customers for my lunch cause that's fraud. They don't pay me to eat. My employer provides no lunch charge number that I can charge overhead to.

Anyways, it's obvious that every employer has different policies for different things. "My employer doesn't give me disability insurance, citation needed yours does." (And mine does, I don't know how common that is)

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (4)

__derek__ on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Having anecdotes on both sides makes that "most" claim non-obvious and unsubstantiated. Now, if GP had led with "In my experience," that would be different.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (5)

tamrix on Aug 24, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Don't you have workplace laws which require breaks from using a computer all day? Those breaks are by law paid. Whether you have lunch on top of those breaks or not I don't care.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (6)

nocman on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I've never worked in salaried position where this WASN'T true. Lunch was never considered to be paid time.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (7)

mistersquid on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


In the US, "salaried" is not a legally meaningful designation of employment. The term that applies here is "exempt". Workers who are paid by the hour and are "non-exempt".

Exempt employees (i.e. "salaried" workers in the US) are not paid by the hour and, so, it does not matter if they eat lunch for 6 hours, code for 1, and sleep for 2.

Their remuneration has no relationship to the length of their lunch breaks nor to the length of hours they code, are in meetings, take water cooler breaks, etc.

So, if you've worked in a salaried position in the US, it is true "Lunch was never considered to be paid time" but only because for all exempt employees neither is coding/meeting/managing/planning/napping considered to be paid time.

In the US, exempt employees are remunerated irrespective of how many hours a week they work.

EDIT: spelling, capitalization.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (8)

nocman on Aug 26, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


You can use all the legal definitions you want (which, btw, I already knew all about exempt vs non-exempt employees). When did I say "salaried" was a "legally meaningful designation of employment"? No one I know uses "exempt" in casual conversation to describe what kind of employee they are. It's always "hourly" or "salaried" (or "on salary").

The point was that basically every place I've ever worked on a salary, you were expected to work at least 40 hours a week (that's the minimum). Yes, legally they are required to pay you your salary if you work less than 40 hours in a week. However, if you tried to get away with just working 35 hours, pretty much every place I've ever worked would call you on it, and if you didn't adjust you'd lose your job. They may not use "not working enough hours" as your reason for termination (they'd probably say something like "not getting enough work done"), but the real reason would be because you weren't putting in your 40.

So you can say "In the US, exempt employees are remunerated irrespective of how many hours a week they work.", and that is technically true, but the practical side of it is, if you don't work the minimum number of hours your employer expects, you won't have a job, so you'll stop getting paid at all.

There is a case where "In the US, exempt employees are remunerated irrespective of how many hours a week they work." is practically relevant -- when you work more than 40 hours a week. You will not be paid more for working more than 40 hours in a week. It's one of the downsides of being a salaried employee. But you put up with it because almost all of the higher paying jobs in the US are salaried positions.

While it is technically true that a salaried employee working 35 hours a week and taking an hourly lunch is not getting a "paid lunch", that is the way most people I know would describe it. People are geared to think of the work week as being 40 hours or more, and I'm sure that's why they'd describe 35 hours of actual work a week (with hour lunch breaks) as a salaried position with a "paid lunch".

Like I said originally, perhaps this is regional. I've only worked in the Midwest, but as far as I can tell, this is the way everyone I know perceives it.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (9)

riboflava on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Even service jobs occasionally give paid lunch hours. When salaried, the whole point is you don't need to track hours. Otherwise you need to bill for that 5 minutes of insight in the shower on Sunday when you have an idea that solves some important business problem. Anyway since I'm generally thinking about work related problems during lunch, frequently even eating at my desk, and lunch rarely takes a full hour, I've always considered my "lunch hour" as part of the total work day, and never had anyone higher up question it.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (10)

nommm-nommm on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


>When salaried, the whole point is you don't need to track hours.

Ummm... Keeping track of where man-hours is spent is good project management. Even when I worked jobs where I wasn't billing customers directly and my work was for the company's internal use I've always had to document where my hours were spent every day.

I can't imagine a project that doesn't keep track of man hours. Even if informally.

>Otherwise you need to bill for that 5 minutes of insight in the shower on Sunday when you have an idea that solves some important business problem.

I am not sure why you'd bill for that.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (11)

jocro on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Anecdotal, but I'm in exactly that situation at a fairly large tech employer. We log hours against different projects, are expected to log 40 hours a week, and are specifically instructed not to log anything for a non-working lunch.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (12)

taurath on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Billing clients or projects per hour is like billing lines of code. It's a metric that doesn't correlate to real productivity as much as some people think.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (13)

dredmorbius on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Billings and pay rate basis are parts of a large lie in business.

Revenues are based on customer value, supplier costs, and relative bargaining positions between the two, which moves the balance between the two. The party that can't walk away is the party that loses.

Pay needs to similarly compensate for the provisioning cost of labour, fully accounted.

If you're not paying your employees what theey need to survive and raise families, you're not creating wealth but are extracting liquidity. How you pay isn't terribly significant, though bad bases, such as piecework, are often long-term harmful.

Marginal cost and value are, I'm increasingly convinced, in many ways a distraction. Not entirely, but they confound the matter.

Guy named Smith had a lot to say on this a ways back.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (14)

r00fus on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Often especially for salaried consultants, the client billed hours count towards your bonus (which is a part of the overall compensation).

That said, most folks in such roles often work through the lunch. This is a bad habit but logical outcome of such comp structures.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (15)

greenshackle on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I guess it makes about as much sense as paying employees per hour.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (16)

JoshGlazebrook on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Umm, I'm here in Austin in a salaried position, work 40 hours per week, lunch doesn't count. If I work 9-5, and take a one hour lunch, that means I would have to work 9-6.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (17)

elihu on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I don't know if this is an Oregon thing or national, but I believe that employers are required to give employees a paid 15 minute break for every 4 hours of work. So, at least a paid half hour break per 8 hour day is mandatory.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (18)

meotai on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


8 to 5 here; lunch doesn't count.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (19)

35bge57dtjku on Aug 19, 2016 | parent | prev | next [–]


I've never been at a place where lunch was counted as working, and I'm in the US.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (20)

jhummel on Aug 19, 2016 | prev | next [–]


I guess I have never had a job that counts lunch as an hour, or heard of such a job! My wife, friends, etc. all seem to do a 8-5 with breaks and a lunch hour. I guess I've technically been working 45 hours all my life if that's the case.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (21)

bryondowd on Aug 19, 2016 | parent | next [–]


I've had the opposite experience. Spent 6 years working in one professional position and another year at a second, where my lunch counted toward my hours, so a 40 hour week meant I arrived at work 8 hours prior to leaving work. When I finally started my current position and they explained that my lunch break was off the clock, I was shocked. Now I've added this difference to the things I have to account for when considering a new position.

And, when it comes down to it, all that really matters to me is the number of hours that pass between stepping out my front door and returning through it. So I suppose unpaid lunch time falls in with commute time as time that I'm not technically giving to the company, but is still heavily impacted by my work requirements.

In fact, the main draw of my current position over the last was cutting over an hour commute to 15 minutes, each way. Saved over 8 hours in commute time at the cost of 2.5 hours for an unpaid half hour lunch.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (22)

kirykl on Aug 19, 2016 | prev | next [–]


lunch and coffee breaks count towards 8 hour work day? usually 8 hour work day = 4 hours work before lunch and 4 hours work after

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (23)

jawilson2 on Aug 19, 2016 | parent | next [–]


I count my work day as "time spent commuting, working, or anything else keeping me from spending time at home with my family."

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (24)

camelNotation on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Me too. It isn't time off just because I'm not producing for an employer. If it requires me to commute, walk, etc. and it is work related, I classify that as working hours because those are the hours of my day that are given to my employer, even if they are not getting an immediate, direct benefit from those minutes. I realize I am not being paid for that time, but it doesn't change the fact that I am doing that instead of something else.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (25)

jsprogrammer on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


If you are salaried, you are being paid for that time. The effect is to reduce your effective hourly wage.

I quit my last employer because the extra 2 hours required for commuting and dressing (both of which incur unreimbursed expenses) on top of my 9 billable hours was taking up a significant chunk of my compensation.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (26)

__derek__ on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I co-sign this. If you want me to be in a location, any time spent conveying myself or being there counts.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (27)

35bge57dtjku on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I wish I could live in that fantasy world, where my hour commute both ways and my lunch break counted as working. Then I'd only have to do 5 hours of work while my coworkers did 7, and we'd all get paid the same.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (28)

Hydraulix989 on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Perhaps you should take up smoking cigarettes then? My coworkers take four 20-minute smoke breaks a day.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (29)

35bge57dtjku on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


I try to get work done, not look for reasons to count commuting/smoking/etc. as time worked.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (30)

camelNotation on Aug 19, 2016 | parent | prev | next [–]


I work through lunch, eating at my desk. I prefer to do this over wasting time away from the office. 1 hour is not enough for me to go home and see my kids or work on my house or do anything legitimately useful or meaningful. Instead, I find myself being forced to fill it with something I wouldn't otherwise want to do. Therefore, I just grab a sandwich and eat while working. Officially, we aren't supposed to do this. Unofficially, no one has stopped me yet.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (31)

mk89 on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


In my experience, lunch with your colleagues is one of the indicators of a healthy work environment. When this doesn't happen, for whatever reason you may have, I have always found the team to be unhealthy. How is it for you?

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (32)

nommm-nommm on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


I don't do lunch with my colleagues because I don't eat lunch. Even if I did eat lunch I don't want to waste more time at work than I have to so I would nibble at my desk while coding. Our team is perfectly healthy.

I can't imagine lunch taking a full hour, seems like a waste of time to me though I know other people have different opinions on this, it's individual preference.

Do you have mandatory lunch times and locations? Doesn't anyone ever want to spend their lunch break exercising or taking a walk? Or even going home to eat with their families? These are all common in my office. What if you hired a Muslim who fasted for Ramadan? Will you force them to watch everyone else eat?

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (33)

mk89 on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


> Do you have mandatory lunch times and locations?

No. In some offices there is a canteen where you can sit down and have a lunch with your colleagues, though.

Times and locations are most of the time decided by people. For example, you might decide to go to a restaurant/pizzeria with 2-3 colleagues, or just one, or more people from different departments, etc.

> Doesn't anyone ever want to spend their lunch break exercising or taking a walk?

Normally, people here in Europe tend to eat at the same time - let's say 12:30, or 13:00, or 13.30 - depending on the country.

> Or even going home to eat with their families?

This is almost never the case - as far as I know.

> What if you hired a Muslim who fasted for Ramadan?

I had a Muslim colleague once, and while he was fasting, he just didn't join, which is fine. However, before/after he was always part of the group.

Mine was not a criticism, just an observation, because that's what I have noticed during the years. It doesn't imply anything, just that under the following circ*mstances:

- in a country where people tend to eat at the same time on average ( let's say at 12.30),

- there is a canteen/kitchen in the office, or restaurants nearby,

- nobody goes to see the family during lunch,

- nobody goes for a walk during lunch, except for reaching the restaurant, or in the case everyone in the group (that doesn't have to be the whole team/company) is willing to.

Then, I have noticed that when people don't sit at the same table (it doesn't have to be the whole company simultaneously), there are issues in the teams. As I said, this is a personal observation, and I want to thank you for answering because your response offered me different insights and points of view (like: exercising, going for a walk, eating with family, etc).

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (34)

nommm-nommm on Aug 21, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Oh OK I thought that there was mandatory lunch time for teambuilding.

Elective lunches and socialization is certainly a thing at my office too. It's just there is such a variety of lunch activities in my office and it's never been a hinderence to the team dynamics.

There's also some people with strong opinions on your relationship with your co-workers should be business-only and others who have met their best friend or even spouse at work.

None of this has ever hurt team dynamics though.

My office skews older though.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (35)

TeMPOraL on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I have similar approach. I like to eat lunch at my desk - even if my hands are full so I am not coding on the work project per se, I can at least be reading something. I have plenty of opportunities to talk to my teammates during the rest of the day anyway.

As for hour+-long lunches, I don't get it either. I guess some people like it - in the same way in which I like to come home and work on my own projects. Everyone wants to allocate time on stuff they like. I don't particularly fancy eating with people.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (36)

epalmer on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


I'm 62 and find my head hurts if I code all morning and then eat at my desk and get right back at it. So 1 to 2 times a week I eat in the cafeteria. I take a full hour and that helps. 3 days a week I take a power nap in my office even if my lunch was an hour. I used to feel guilty doing so. No longer. My productivity is high and my bosses count me as exceeding expectations.

I am lucky I don't have a micromanager as a boss.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (37)

nommm-nommm on Aug 21, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Oh wow I am the exact opposite. If I take breaks I have a very hard time getting back to work. I like to get in the zone and stay there.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (38)

epalmer on Aug 24, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


When I was much younger that was my prefered mode. Not sure what age has to do with it but I allow myself to try new approaches from time to time to see if old assumptions still hold true.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (39)

camelNotation on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I think we have a healthy work environment. No major conflicts or issues. I think the idea of lunch together as a team is nice, but not practical in my organization since we all run different projects and have conflicting schedules. We do try to do a monthly team lunch, where we go out to a local restaurant to eat together, but even those do not always happen due to scheduling conflicts.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (40)

mk89 on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


I have seen places where people don't have any reason except for "naaa, I don't wanna spend my time with them, I prefer to spend it alone".

When there is a justification that goes beyond that, for me it's okay - actually, I am okay with every decision.

However, I have seen places where people create real factions during lunch time, or they just tend to be alone, because of the reason mentioned above.

No criticism, just an observation, which is wrong apparently, if not all factors (different schedules, etc.) are taken into account. :)

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (41)

greenshackle on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Our team has lunch together every week or so. I wouldn't be happy with the norm of having lunch together all the time. I like to get out of the office and play stupid games on my tablet over lunch. Doing that around people is seen as antisocial so I prefer going off on my own.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (42)

protomok on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


In my team we usually eat lunch at our cubes while being stuck on conference calls with folks from our local office, California, and Europe. Not sure if this counts as having lunch with colleagues :)

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (43)

wojt_eu on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Then I believe such a "team building" activity should count towards working hours total.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (44)

projektir on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


That may be true in general, but some of us just don't enjoy going out for lunch that much. I've always eaten at my desk with a few exceptions when I do want to go to lunch with coworkers.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (45)

mk89 on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Thank you both for your answers! ;)

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (46)

vtlynch on Aug 19, 2016 | parent | prev | next [–]


It should, yes.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (47)

TeMPOraL on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Difference between US and Europe, maybe? In Europe so far I haven't seen the case where lunch time doesn't count into work time (assuming you get lunch time at all - many employers in low-skill fields use every dirty trick in the book to extract work out of people).

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (48)

vtlynch on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


It is certainly common practice to not include lunch as work time in the US. But I think that is unfair to the employee.

In the US almost all Low-skill jobs that pay by the hour dont count lunch as work time. At those jobs you usually explicitly "clock out" for lunch.

At salaried jobs it is less common, though I'd guess 50% or more don't count lunch as work time.

If that is the case, then workers should also be allowed to eat at their desk (or otherwise eat while working - reading emails on phone, etc) and leave early if they spend less than an hour at lunch.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (49)

nocman on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


Perhaps this is regional, but I don't know anyone in a salaried position that gets paid for lunch time. It is always expected that you are working 8 hours a day outside of the lunch hour.

To be clear, I live in the United States.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (50)

Jade_Jet on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


I started work at 9. I'm responding to your comment while eating lunch at a restaurant. I plan to leave around 5 today. This is my normal schedule. I'm salaried and live in the US as well. My last two jobs were the same way as well.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (51)

vtlynch on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | next [–]


That's great :)

Just how it should be.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (52)

nommm-nommm on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


I have a cousin with a union job. Her union negotiated 8 hour day with mandatory paid half hour lunch. The lunch is negotiated as mandatory so they go around and make everyone leave their cubicles at lunch time. Perhaps to make sure no bosses are expecting people to work through lunch.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (53)

Atropos on Aug 20, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Totally the opposite experience - normal 40 hour week means working 9 AM to 6 PM, due to 1 hour lunch break. This is even the case in most public administrations (Germany, France, EU Commission), I'm quite curious where a 9 AM to 5 PM day is normal...

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (54)

bencoder on Aug 19, 2016 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Same in UK - My work week is considered 37.5 hours with work day of 9-17:30.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (55)

mc32 on Aug 19, 2016 | prev [–]


Regardless whether you count lunch breaks or not as working hours, the fact they get to leave at twelve on Friday is different from most companies. I'd certainly prefer that schedule over the normal schedule.

This is great, but isn't that a 40 hour work week? Most places consider 9-5 to b... (2024)

FAQs

Is a 40 hour work week 9 5 or 8 5? ›

The traditional American business hours are 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday to Friday, representing a workweek of five eight-hour days comprising 40 hours in total. These are the origin of the phrase 9-to-5, used to describe a conventional and possibly tedious job.

How many hours is 9-5 with an hour lunch? ›

There are 8 hours between 9am and 5pm. However, most employers usually give 1 hour for lunch. Therefore, hours work gets reduced to 7 hours in a day. Multiply 7 hours a day by 5 days a week, you get 35 hours per week.

What happened to the 9-to-5 workday? ›

The 9-to-5 workday used to be standard for all employees, but that's changed quite a bit over the last few years. Freelancing and self-employment are on the rise, and there's been a steady shift toward implementing remote work plans.

Why we shouldn't have a 40 hour work week? ›

Given the right structure and environment, 25 hours per week will yield the same or better results than a 40-hour workweek. With less time to waste, most people will spend time focused on priority items. This will allow everyone to feel more productive instead of feeling just busy.

Why is it called 9-5 job? ›

The 9-5 work schedule, a standard eight-hour workday from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, originates in the labour and industrial developments of the 19th and 20th centuries. During the Industrial Revolution, factories and manufacturing facilities required structured work hours, leading to the rise of the 9-5 schedule.

Do 9 to 5 jobs include lunch? ›

An employer is required to provide a lunch break if the employee is working for 5 or more hours in a shift but the employer does not have to pay the employee for the break time. Some employers may provide a paid lunch break to employees but it is not required for non-exempt employees under California labor laws.

How many hours is 9am to 7pm with a 30 minute lunch? ›

9 to 12 is 3 hours, and 12 to 7 is 7 hours. Add to get a total of 10 hours. Then, subtract half an hour for lunch (. 5 hr) to get 9.5 hours.

How long is a 9-5 shift a day? ›

An 8-hour workday is a standardized workday during which employees work 8 hours per day. They typically work 8-hour shifts for 5 days in a row, up to a total of 40 hours per week. While working 9-5 is considered the usual working time in the US, an 8-hour workday doesn't depend on the time you start working.

Is a 45 hour work week normal? ›

According to studies, the ideal work hours for most individuals fall between 35 to 45 hours per week.

Is 9 to 5 outdated? ›

It is not, for now. But 9 to 5, 5 days a week will soon be obsolete and unsustainable. Because of technology and increased productivity, many jobs will be eliminated and massive unemployment will not be possible to avoid without shorter working hours and eventually shorter working weeks for the full pay.

Why do Americans work 9 to 5? ›

Pioneering employers — and a six-hour workday — make waves

In 1926, the Ford Motor Company, under the leadership of Henry Ford, famously instituted an eight-hour-a-day, five-day workweek. Then, in the Great Depression, owing to high unemployment, the idea for a 6-hour workweek came into focus.

How to avoid a 9'5" job? ›

Some alternatives to working a traditional nine-to-five job include:
  1. Freelancer.
  2. Business owner.
  3. Consultant.
  4. Real estate agent.
  5. Digital nomad.
  6. Entrepreneur.

Is a 40-hour work week outdated? ›

In conclusion, the 40-hour workweek, a standard instituted in the early 20th century, may no longer be an optimal structure for today's evolving workforce and economy. The shift from manufacturing to information and service-based work and technological advancements have dramatically changed the nature of work.

What is a healthy hours of work per week? ›

How Many Hours A Week Is Healthy To Work? Various personal circ*mstances, the type of employment, and the overall work-life balance might affect how many hours a week are deemed healthy to work. For full-time employment, experts and labor regulations generally advise a regular workweek of 40 hours.

Should America have a four-day work week? ›

The one-sided results showed 8 in 10 full-time workers want a four-day workweek instead of the usual five-day week. The top reasons workers cite for favoring a four-day workweek in the survey, as well as others, are it would improve work-life balance and physical and mental health.

Is an 8 hour work day 9-to-5? ›

An 8-hour workday is a standardized workday during which employees work 8 hours per day. They typically work 8-hour shifts for 5 days in a row, up to a total of 40 hours per week. While working 9-5 is considered the usual working time in the US, an 8-hour workday doesn't depend on the time you start working.

What is working 40 hours a week considered? ›

What is Full-Time in California? According to the California Department of Industrial Relations, a full-time employee works 40 hours per week. However, you won't want to confuse the 40-hour work week with the Affordable Care Act regulations, which identify full-time workers as those who work 30 hours per week.

How many 8 hour days is 40 hours a week? ›

A full-time employee is normally required to work an 8-hour shift every day for five days in a week. This gives us 40 hours for a full work week.

What set the 40-hour work week? ›

1938: Congress passed the Fair Labor Standards Act, which required employers to pay overtime to all employees who worked more than 44 hours a week. They amended the act two years later to reduce the work week to 40 hours. 1940: The 40-hour work week became U.S. law.

Top Articles
Envelope Budgeting: How it works (and can benefit you)
Association of Mutual Funds in India
Joliet Patch Arrests Today
Tj Nails Victoria Tx
Comcast Xfinity Outage in Kipton, Ohio
Craigslist Dog Kennels For Sale
Purple Crip Strain Leafly
Help with Choosing Parts
How to Store Boiled Sweets
Fredericksburg Free Lance Star Obituaries
Tracking Your Shipments with Maher Terminal
Q33 Bus Schedule Pdf
Tygodnik Polityka - Polityka.pl
Conan Exiles: Nahrung und Trinken finden und herstellen
Traveling Merchants Tack Diablo 4
Eine Band wie ein Baum
Bekijk ons gevarieerde aanbod occasions in Oss.
Aerocareusa Hmebillpay Com
Glover Park Community Garden
Craigslist Battle Ground Washington
Silky Jet Water Flosser
2021 MTV Video Music Awards: See the Complete List of Nominees - E! Online
Makemv Splunk
2011 Hyundai Sonata 2 4 Serpentine Belt Diagram
EVO Entertainment | Cinema. Bowling. Games.
Cal State Fullerton Titan Online
Hrconnect Kp Login
Combies Overlijden no. 02, Stempels: 2 teksten + 1 tag/label & Stansen: 3 tags/labels.
Xxn Abbreviation List 2023
130Nm In Ft Lbs
Askhistorians Book List
Rugged Gentleman Barber Shop Martinsburg Wv
Ff14 Sage Stat Priority
Devotion Showtimes Near The Grand 16 - Pier Park
Gina's Pizza Port Charlotte Fl
Aladtec Login Denver Health
Solarmovie Ma
Merge Dragons Totem Grid
Raisya Crow on LinkedIn: Breckie Hill Shower Video viral Cucumber Leaks VIDEO Click to watch full…
NHL training camps open with Swayman's status with the Bruins among the many questions
Google Flights Orlando
Gifford Christmas Craft Show 2022
Bartow Qpublic
The Attleboro Sun Chronicle Obituaries
Hello – Cornerstone Chapel
Secrets Exposed: How to Test for Mold Exposure in Your Blood!
Dietary Extras Given Crossword Clue
Horseneck Beach State Reservation Water Temperature
Heat Wave and Summer Temperature Data for Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Cvs Minute Clinic Women's Services
Wera13X
Houston Primary Care Byron Ga
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Emmett Berge

Last Updated:

Views: 6078

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Emmett Berge

Birthday: 1993-06-17

Address: 787 Elvis Divide, Port Brice, OH 24507-6802

Phone: +9779049645255

Job: Senior Healthcare Specialist

Hobby: Cycling, Model building, Kitesurfing, Origami, Lapidary, Dance, Basketball

Introduction: My name is Sen. Emmett Berge, I am a funny, vast, charming, courageous, enthusiastic, jolly, famous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.