Casino & Hospitality Worker Rights in Nevada
You keep Las Vegas running. Casinos, hotels, and resorts generate billions. Your rights under Nevada law protect you, but only if you know them and act before deadlines expire.
Led by Milan Chatterjee, former in-house counsel at Las Vegas Sands Corp. Best Employment Attorney fights for casino dealers, hotel workers, servers, valets, and all Nevada hospitality employees whose rights have been violated.
Tell us about your situation — we'll respond within 24 hours.
Deep Experience in Nevada Employment Law
Licensed in Nevada & California
Former Fortune 500 In-House Counsel
Proven Results for Employees & Employers
Deep Experience in
Nevada Employment Law
Licensed in
Nevada & California
Former Fortune 500
In-House Counsel
Proven Results for
Employees & Employers
Nevada's gaming and hospitality industry employs more than 300,000 workers across Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno, Laughlin, and Lake Tahoe. Casino dealers, hotel front desk workers, restaurant servers, cocktail waitresses, housekeepers, security personnel, valets, poker room staff, and food-and-beverage employees are the backbone of Nevada's economy — and some of the most frequently exploited workers in the state.
Deadlines Apply
Nevada employment law claims have strict time limits — as short as 30 days for OSHA retaliation and 300 days for discrimination. If your rights have been violated, contact an attorney before your deadline passes.
No Tip Credit in Nevada Full Minimum Wage Required
Statutory Authority — NRS § 608.250
Unlike most other states, Nevada does not allow tip credits. Your employer owes you the full $12.00 per hour minimum wage — and your tips on top of that. An employer who pays you less than minimum wage because "you make it up in tips" is violating Nevada law.
Nevada does not permit tip credits. Employers must pay tipped employees the full minimum wage of $12.00 per hour (effective July 1, 2024), regardless of tips received. Tips are in addition to, not a substitute for, minimum wage.
Tip Pooling — What's Legal and What's Wage Theft
-
Allowed: Tip pools among employees who regularly receive tips — servers, bartenders, bussers, cocktail staff, bellhops, valets, casino front-of-house personnel
-
Allowed: Employer-required tip pooling when compliant with FLSA and redistributed to eligible employees
-
Illegal: Employer or manager taking any portion of tips for themselves — under any circumstances
-
Illegal: Including managers or supervisors with authority to hire, fire, or discipline in tip pools (FLSA 2018 amendments)
-
Illegal: Diverting mandatory service charges (banquet fees, resort charges) without properly distributing to workers through payroll
2025 Tax Update: Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 4, 2025), tips received by employees in traditionally tipped roles are exempt from federal income tax up to $25,000/year — effective for the 2025 tax year through December 31, 2028. Tips remain subject to FICA (Social Security and Medicare). Your employer must still report tips on W-2 forms.
Common Tip Violations in Las Vegas Casinos & Hotels
Manager Tip Skimming
Managers taking a cut of dealer, server, or cocktail waitress tip pools. A clear FLSA violation every dollar taken is recoverable with penalties.
Service Charge Diversion
Casinos diverting mandatory banquet service charges without distributing them through payroll as wages to the workers who performed the service.
Improper Pool Inclusion
Requiring servers to pool tips with kitchen staff (cooks, dishwashers) who do not customarily and regularly receive tips violating FLSA tip pool rules.
Credit Card Fee Deductions
Deducting credit card processing fees from employee tip amounts paid by card potentially unlawful under Nevada law and FLSA interpretations.
Overtime Rights for Nevada Casino & Hospitality Workers
NRS § 608.018 Nevada Dual Overtime Rule
Employees earning less than $18.00/hr are entitled to overtime (1.5×) for hours over 8 in a 24-hour period (daily) AND hours over 40 in a workweek. The 24-hour "workday" begins when you start your shift — not at midnight.
Common Overtime Violations in Las Vegas Hospitality
Off-the-clock work: Mandatory pre-shift duties — chip counts, drawer counts, station stocking, security screenings, mandatory briefings — are compensable if your employer requires you to perform them.
Misclassification as "exempt": Casinos improperly classifying dealers, shift supervisors, or lead workers as "managers" to deny overtime pay. If your actual duties don't match a legitimate exemption, you may be owed back overtime.
Time record manipulation: Shaving minutes from time cards, automatic deduction of meal breaks not actually taken, or rounding down shift start times.
Improper 4-10 schedules: Scheduling you for four 10-hour days without a written agreement — a valid 4-10 schedule that waives daily overtime requires a specific written agreement between employer and employee.
Break Rights — Meal Periods & Rest Breaks (NRS § 608.019)
Unlike federal law (FLSA), Nevada law requires employers to provide breaks. These rights are routinely violated in fast-paced casino and hotel environments.
-
30-Minute Meal Period (Unpaid): Required after every 8 continuous hours of work. Working through your meal break at your employer's request makes that time compensable as paid work time.
-
10-Minute Paid Rest Break: Required for every 4 hours worked (or major fraction thereof). These breaks count as hours worked — your employer cannot dock your pay for them.
-
Each Denied Break Is a Violation: Casinos and hotels routinely pressure workers to skip breaks during peak hours, understaffed shifts, and special events. Each denied or shortened break is an actionable wage violation.
Wrongful Termination Casino & Hotel Worker Protections
Nevada is an at-will state. But that does not mean casinos and hotels can fire you for any reason. Under NRS 613.330, NRS 613.340, and related federal laws, you cannot be legally terminated for:
-
Filing a workers' compensation claim after a workplace injury (NRS 616C.097)
-
Reporting workplace safety violations to Nevada OSHA
-
Reporting tip theft, wage theft, or overtime violations to the Nevada Labor Commissioner
-
Opposing discrimination or harassment by a supervisor or guest
-
Your race, sex, age (40+), disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, or religion (NRS 613.330)
-
Discussing your wages with coworkers — NRS 613.330(3) explicitly protects this right
-
Taking protected FMLA leave for a serious health condition or family care
Constructive Discharge — When You're Forced to Quit
You don't have to be formally fired to have a wrongful termination claim. If your employer deliberately creates working conditions so intolerable that a reasonable person would feel compelled to resign, Nevada courts recognize this as constructive discharge legally equivalent to an illegal firing. Common examples: scheduling you to undesirable shifts after a complaint, cutting your section (and tips) after reporting harassment, or demoting you after filing a workers' comp claim.
Union Workers Additional CBA Protections
Many Las Vegas casino workers are represented by UNITE HERE Local 226 (culinary workers) and other unions. Your Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) provides "just cause" termination protection and grievance rights beyond Nevada's at-will baseline. However, CBAs do not bar discrimination or retaliation claims through NERC/EEOC — both avenues may be available to you simultaneously.
7 Rights Your Casino or Hotel Employer Won't Tell You
You Can Discuss Your Wages With Coworkers
NRS 613.330(3) and the NLRA protect your right to discuss pay. Policies that forbid wage discussions are illegal and unenforceable.
Your Employer Cannot Take Your Tips
Not to cover losses, not for "house" reasons never. Employer tip theft is a federal wage violation under the FLSA.
You Can Refuse Work That Poses Imminent Danger
If your workplace poses an imminent risk of death or serious physical harm, you can refuse that work and cannot be lawfully fired for doing so.
You Have the Right to Be Safe From Guest Harassment
"That's just part of the job" is not a legal defense. If you report guest harassment to management and they fail to act, your employer may be liable.
Filing Workers' Comp Cannot Be Used to Fire You
NRS 616C.097 expressly prohibits retaliation for filing a workers' compensation claim. If you were fired shortly after a claim, call us immediately.
Your Handbook May Give You More Rights Than You Think
Progressive discipline policies in your employee handbook can be legally binding. If your employer skipped steps, you may have a breach of implied contract claim.
You Don't Have to Sign a Severance Agreement Right Away
You have at least 21 days to consider (45 days for group layoffs) and 7 days to revoke after signing. Never sign without first consulting an attorney you may be waiving valuable claims.
Federal Court Response Deadline: 21 Days
Missing your answer deadline can result in a default judgment against your business. Call us immediately at (702) 381-2875 - we offer emergency consultations for employers facing litigation deadlines.
Casino & Hospitality Worker Rights Frequently Asked Questions
Related Employees Services
Milan Chatterjee
UCLA Law Graduate. Former in-house counsel at Las Vegas Sands Corp. Nevada & California Bar. Founding President, South Asian Bar Assoc. of Las Vegas.
Trusted Employment Lawyers for California and Nevada Workplaces
We offer end-to-end labor law services—from policy drafting to complex litigation and everything in between.
Our expertise includes handling Class Action & PAGA Claims, crafting Remote Work and Telecommuting Policies, and addressing Labor Union and Collective Bargaining Issues.
Our approach combines the flexibility of modern solutions with the expertise needed to address every employment legal challenge efficiently.
Trusted Employment Lawyers for California and Nevada Workplaces
We offer end-to-end labor law services—from policy drafting to complex litigation and everything in between.
Our expertise includes handling Class Action & PAGA Claims, crafting Remote Work and Telecommuting Policies, and addressing Labor Union and Collective Bargaining Issues.
Our approach combines the flexibility of modern solutions with the expertise needed to address every employment legal challenge efficiently.
Trusted Employment Lawyers for California and Nevada Workplaces
We offer end-to-end labor law services—from policy drafting to complex litigation and everything in between.
Our expertise includes handling Class Action & PAGA Claims, crafting Remote Work and Telecommuting Policies, and addressing Labor Union and Collective Bargaining Issues.
Our approach combines the flexibility of modern solutions with the expertise needed to address every employment legal challenge efficiently.