In many countries, the legislations in place require the employers to give paid breaks to the employees. Those paid breaks also called rest breaks help the employee to stay focused and prevent overtiredness. The number of those paid breaks is usually based on the number of hours you have worked during the day, and this might change from a country to another, or even from a state to another.

For someone who is paid on an hourly basis, a paid break means they stop working and still get paid for the duration of the break.

 

For an employee working on contract in an orchard, meaning being paid based on how fast (and well!) they pick fruit or prune the trees, paid breaks are a bit different. Indeed, if you stop working for the duration of the break, you are not being paid as the number of pieces of fruit you pick doesn’t increase. The employer needs to pay those breaks based on how much money you make per hour when working on contract.

 

There are two ways to compute that hourly rate:

  1. You take into account only the real hours worked or
  2. You include the breaks.

 

For example, in a normal 8 hours day, in New Zealand you are entitled to two breaks of 10 minutes. In reality you haven’t worked 8 hours but 7 hours and 40 minutes. One way is to consider the latter as the number of hours worked and get your hourly rate from that. So if you earned $200 for the day, you would have an hourly rate of $200 / 7.67h, so roughly $26.08. The other way is to include those breaks in the equation. You end up with a slightly different results: $25 ($200 / 8h).

 

The first one favours the employee while the second one favours the employer.

 

From the employee perspective, it seems like it won’t change much, but for a company with hundreds of staff, the difference can be more obvious.

 

Conoce más insights from our team. Questions? Contact us at info@hectre.com.

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