Can a Texas employer reduce employee hours instead of laying employees off?
Managing workforce changes in Texas often leads employers to consider reducing hours instead of layoffs. This question matters because it touches on legal compliance, operational impact, and employee relations during challenging times.
Last updated: May 31, 2026
Direct Answer
Yes, Texas employers can reduce employee hours instead of laying off employees, but they must do so carefully to stay compliant and maintain operational fairness. The practical concern is balancing workforce needs while avoiding wage and hour law violations or morale damage.
What This Means for Employers
Reducing employee hours rather than laying off staff can be a practical way to manage costs during downturns or budget constraints. It allows employers to retain valuable institutional knowledge and maintain some level of workforce stability. However, this approach requires clear communication and consistent application to avoid confusion or perceived unfairness among employees.
From a compliance perspective, employers must be mindful of wage and hour laws, including overtime rules and any contractual obligations. Operationally, reducing hours impacts scheduling, payroll, and employee engagement. What I see employers often underestimate is how these changes ripple through daily work and leadership accountability, making documentation and transparent processes essential.
What Employers Usually Miss
What employers commonly miss is that simply cutting hours without adjusting pay policies or updating employee agreements can lead to compliance gaps. For example, exempt employees may lose their exempt status if their hours drop below certain thresholds. Additionally, failure to communicate changes effectively often results in employee distrust or grievances, which undermines operational stability.
Another overlooked risk is inconsistent application across teams or departments. In my experience, when managers implement hour reductions unevenly, employees perceive favoritism or confusion about expectations. This not only increases turnover risk but also exposes employers to potential discrimination claims if reductions disproportionately impact protected groups.
Key Risks of Reducing Employee Hours
Employers must recognize operational and legal risks when reducing hours to avoid costly consequences. These risks often stem from inconsistent processes, poor communication, and failure to align policies with practice.
- Misclassifying exempt employees after hour reductions
- Inconsistent application between departments or teams
- Lack of clear documentation for hour changes
- Failing to update employee agreements or policies
- Employee morale decline leading to turnover or grievances
What to Review Before You Act
Before reducing employee hours, review employment agreements, exempt status criteria, and any collective bargaining obligations. Examine payroll systems to ensure accurate tracking of hours and overtime. Also, assess how changes will affect scheduling and workload distribution to maintain operational efficiency without overburdening remaining hours.
Additionally, evaluate communication plans for announcing hour reductions. Leadership should have clear, consistent messaging that explains the business rationale and expected duration. Managers need frameworks to fairly apply adjustments and document decisions. This practical review reduces legal and morale risks while supporting accountability.
When to Get HR Help
Engage HR professionals when you face complex scenarios such as mixed exempt/nonexempt workforces, multiple employee classes, or union presence. HR can help design compliant, operationally sound hour reduction strategies that align with your specific business context and workforce dynamics.
Also seek HR support if you notice employee pushback, increased grievances, or confusion among managers about implementing hour changes. Early intervention with expert guidance helps prevent escalation into costly disputes or turnover that disrupts business continuity.
Need Guidance on Reducing Employee Hours?
Faulkner HR Solutions can help Texas employers design compliant and practical hour reduction strategies that protect your workforce and operations. Contact us to ensure your approach balances legal risks with real-world leadership demands.
Get HR HelpThis page provides general HR information for employers and is not legal advice. For legal interpretation or representation, consult qualified employment counsel.