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Understanding how to calculate overtime in Egypt is now a front-line compliance priority for every employer operating in the country. Labour Law No. 14 of 2025, fully effective across 2025 and 2026, codified the overtime premium structure that payroll teams must follow: a minimum of 135 % of the regular hourly wage for daytime overtime, 170 % for night overtime, and enhanced premiums for work performed on a weekly rest day or public holiday. The penalties for miscalculation extend well beyond back-pay; inspectors are issuing fines for missing records and unsigned overtime authorisations.
This guide walks HR managers, in-house counsel and external payroll providers through the exact formulas, three worked numeric examples, required documentation fields and a ready-to-use employer checklist, everything needed to run a compliant Egypt payroll in 2026.
Law No. 14 of 2025 replaced the long-standing Labour Law No. 12 of 2003 as the principal statute governing overtime and working hours in Egypt. Published in the Official Gazette and translated by leading firms including Andersen in Egypt and Sadany & Partners, the new law applies to most private-sector employees across all industries unless a specific exclusion is stated. Overtime provisions appear principally in the articles dealing with working hours, rest periods and wage protection. Employers who have not yet updated their payroll rules, employment contracts and HRIS configurations should treat 2026 as the final compliance window.
For a broader overview of every employer obligation under the new statute, see the Egypt Labour Law 2026, employer guide.
Before any overtime formula can be applied, the payroll team must establish the baseline. Egypt working hours time under Law No. 14 follows a structure that most employers in the region will find familiar, but specific definitions matter when classifying hours as “regular” or “overtime.”
Industry observers expect the Ministry of Manpower to continue issuing clarifying circulars on night-work boundaries for specific sectors, so payroll teams should monitor regulatory updates throughout 2026.
The overtime pay Egypt framework under Law No. 14 sets minimum statutory premiums. Employers may offer higher rates through collective agreements or individual contracts, but may never go below the statutory floor.
| Scenario | Statutory Minimum Rate | Payroll Line-Item Example |
|---|---|---|
| Daytime overtime (regular working day) | 135 % of base hourly wage (base × 1.35) | OT-Day × 2 hrs × rate 1.35 |
| Night overtime (within statutory night-work window) | 170 % of base hourly wage (base × 1.70) | OT-Night × 1 hr × rate 1.70 |
| Weekly rest-day / public holiday | Double the ordinary daily wage + compensatory rest day (commonly interpreted as 200 %, base × 2.00) | Holiday-Pay × 8 hrs × rate 2.00 |
Conservative employer approach: Where the statute refers to an “additional premium” rather than specifying an exact multiplier for rest-day work, the widely adopted interpretation, supported by firm analyses from Andersen in Egypt and Sadany & Partners, is to pay double the ordinary daily wage and grant a compensatory day off. Employers should document the method they adopt and apply it consistently.
This section provides the core payroll formulas for both hourly and salaried employees, followed by three fully worked numeric examples. If you prefer to use an Egypt overtime calculator in spreadsheet form, the downloadable Excel template at the end of this guide uses the same formulas.
For employees paid an agreed hourly rate, the calculation is straightforward:
Overtime Pay = HR × Multiplier × Overtime Hours
Example 1, Hourly worker, daytime overtime
Overtime pay = 72 × 1.35 × 2 = 194.40 EGP
Payroll journal entry:
| Account | Debit (EGP) | Credit (EGP) |
|---|---|---|
| Overtime expense, Day | 194.40 | |
| Salaries payable | 194.40 |
For salaried employees, an intermediate step converts the monthly base into an hourly equivalent. Two conventions are common in Egyptian payroll practice:
Whichever convention the employer selects, it should be documented in the payroll policy and applied uniformly.
Example 2, Salaried worker, night overtime
Overtime pay = 36.06 × 1.70 × 3 = 183.91 EGP
Payroll journal entry:
| Account | Debit (EGP) | Credit (EGP) |
|---|---|---|
| Overtime expense, Night | 183.91 | |
| Salaries payable | 183.91 |
When an employee is called in to work on a weekly rest day or public holiday in Egypt, the overtime calculation typically uses the double-pay multiplier (200 %) plus a compensatory rest day. The calculation below covers both a full-day and a partial-day scenario.
Example 3a, Full rest day worked (8 hours)
Rest-day pay = 36.06 × 2.00 × 8 = 576.96 EGP
The employee is also entitled to a compensatory day off within the following week.
Example 3b, Partial rest day worked (4 hours)
Rest-day pay = 36.06 × 2.00 × 4 = 288.48 EGP
Payroll journal entry (Example 3a):
| Account | Debit (EGP) | Credit (EGP) |
|---|---|---|
| Overtime expense, Rest Day | 576.96 | |
| Salaries payable | 576.96 |
Payroll tip: Always create a separate pay code for rest-day and public-holiday work. This simplifies audit trails and ensures the compensatory-leave obligation is tracked alongside the monetary payment.
Not every working arrangement falls neatly into the standard formula. Law No. 14 includes several important carve-outs and limits that payroll teams should build into their overtime policy.
Labour inspectors in Egypt increasingly focus on documentation failures as a standalone violation, even where the correct amounts were paid. Every employer should maintain a structured overtime register that captures, at minimum, the fields listed below.
| Field | Why It Is Needed | Example Format |
|---|---|---|
| Employee ID and role | Traceability and exemption classification | Numeric ID; role = “machine operator” |
| Date, clock-in / clock-out times | Determines day vs. night and rest-day status | ISO date (2026-05-18); hh:mm (08:00–18:30) |
| Regular hours / overtime hours | Calculation basis and daily-cap check | Decimal hours (8.00 regular; 2.00 OT) |
| Multiplier applied | Compliance verification at audit | 1.35, 1.70 or 2.00 |
| Authorising manager | Evidence the overtime was lawfully required | Name + digital signature or wet-ink |
Retention period: While Law No. 14 does not prescribe a single universal retention period for all payroll records, the conservative practice, supported by limitation periods for wage claims, is to retain overtime documentation for a minimum of five years. Employers operating under sector-specific regulations (e.g., oil and gas, construction) may face longer retention requirements. Filing a labour complaint in any jurisdiction is significantly easier when digital records exist; Egypt is no exception.
Under Law No. 14, the Ministry of Manpower’s labour inspectorate has broadened its powers and raised fine thresholds for wage-related violations. The most frequently cited findings during overtime audits include:
Fines under the new law are assessed per employee per violation, meaning a systemic payroll error across a workforce can scale rapidly. Early indications suggest that inspectors are prioritising industries with high overtime volumes, such as manufacturing, hospitality and construction.
Use the following checklist to confirm your organisation is fully aligned with the overtime and working hours requirements of Egypt labour law 2026.
To operationalise the formulas and recordkeeping requirements described above, the following resources are recommended:
Knowing how to calculate overtime in Egypt under Law No. 14 is not optional, it is a payroll compliance requirement with direct financial and legal consequences. The formulas themselves are not complex: identify the hourly rate, apply the correct multiplier (1.35 for day, 1.70 for night, 2.00 for rest-day and public-holiday work) and document everything. The real risk lies in inconsistent application, missing records and failure to update legacy payroll systems. Employers who act now, auditing their payroll configurations, training their teams and building digital overtime workflows, will avoid the back-pay exposures and per-employee fines that are already emerging across Egypt’s labour inspectorate in 2026.
This article provides general guidance on overtime and working hours in Egypt. It does not constitute legal advice. Employers should consult an Egypt-qualified labour lawyer for a payroll compliance audit tailored to their specific workforce and industry.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Assem Al Hawy at Shield Advocates – Al Hawy and Hassane, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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