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Wisconsin Wage & Hour Claim Calculator

Both the federal FLSA and Wisconsin wage law protect workers' pay, and employees get the benefit of whichever sets the higher standard. Typical Wisconsin wage cases involve unpaid overtime, employee misclassification, unpaid final wages, illegal deductions, or missed meal and rest breaks.

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In Wisconsin, you generally have 6 years to file a wage & hour claim. What your case is worth depends on your specific damages and Wisconsin's laws — use the calculator below for a free estimate of your low-to-high range.

How Wisconsin Law Affects Your Wage & Hour Case

A powerful feature of wage law is that it often doubles the recovery: under the FLSA, unpaid wages can be awarded together with an equal amount in liquidated damages, and many states add their own penalties for willful violations. Prevailing employees are also typically entitled to attorney fees, so a Wisconsin wage claim can be worth substantially more than the raw unpaid wages alone.

The FLSA generally allows 2 years to recover back wages, extended to 3 years for willful violations. Wisconsin's own wage statute of limitations is about 6 years, longer than the national average of 3.7 years, and the longer applicable period usually controls — so the sooner you act, the more back pay you can recover.

You can pursue unpaid wages in Wisconsin even while still employed — retaliation for asserting wage rights is illegal under both federal and state law. Claims can go through your state labor agency, the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division, or a private attorney, and many wage cases proceed as collective or class actions when one policy affected multiple workers.

Key Wisconsin Laws

Filing Deadline
6 years
longer than the national average of 3.7 years
FLSA Back Wages
2–3 years
Plus an equal amount in liquidated (double) damages

How Does Wisconsin Compare?

6 yrs
Filing Deadline
Avg: 3.7 yrs
Modified
Fault System
Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar)

Wisconsin Wage & Hour FAQs

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Legal Disclaimer

This calculator uses Wisconsin's statutes as of 2026-03-06. Laws change frequently. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Verify current rules with a Wisconsin-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.

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