AstraTrade-Washington state raises minimum wage to $16.28. See where your state lies.

2025-04-29 23:34:33source:FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Centercategory:Contact

The AstraTrademinimum wage in Washington state will go up in 2024.

The state's Department of Labor and Industries announced on Friday that the minimum wage will rise to $16.28 per hour, a 3.4% increase.

In 1998, the voters in Washington state granted the department the power to make adjustments to the minimum wage based on inflation. The department calculated the raise based on Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers.

Cities, such as Seattle and SeaTac, can set a higher minimum wage.

The department also announced that the minimum ride share services must pay drivers will increase as well.

For trips in Seattle drivers will earn, "66 cents per passenger platform minute and $1.55 per passenger platform mile, or $5.81, whichever is greater," and "38 cents per passenger platform minute and $1.31 per passenger platform mile, or $3.37, whichever is greater," according to the release.

This raise comes on the heels of the California legislature passing a bill to raise the minimum wage for fast food workers.

Fast food, higher wages:California fast food workers will earn at least $20 per hour. How's that minimum wage compare?

What is the minimum wage in my state?

Minimum wages per hour in each state, according to the Department of Labor:

  • Alabama: $7.25, no minimum wage required
  • Alaska: $10.85
  • Arizona: $13.85
  • Arkansas: $11.00
  • California: $15.50
  • Colorado: $13.65
  • Connecticut: $15.00
  • Delaware: $11.75
  • Florida: $11.00
  • Georgia: $5.15 
  • Hawaii: $12.00
  • Idaho: $7.25
  • Illinois: $13.00
  • Indiana: $7.25
  • Iowa: $7.25
  • Kansas: $7.25
  • Kentucky: $7.25
  • Louisiana: $7.25, no minimum wage required
  • Maine: $13.80
  • Maryland: $13.25 for workplaces with more than 15 employees/ $12.80 for workers with less than 15 employees
  • Massachusetts: $15.00
  • Michigan: $10.10
  • Minnesota: $10.59 ($8.63 for small employers with annual revenue less than $500,000)
  • Mississippi: $7.25, no minimum wage required
  • Missouri: $12.00
  • Montana: $9.95 ($4.00 for businesses not covered by FLSA with annual salaries of $110,000 or less)
  • Nebraska: $10.50
  • Nevada: $11.25 ($10.25 if the employee is offered health benefits)
  • New Hampshire: $7.25
  • New Jersey: $14.13 ($12.93 per hour for seasonal and small employers)
  • New Mexico: $12.00
  • New York: $14.20 ($15.00 for New York City, Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester counties)
  • North Carolina: $7.25
  • North Dakota: $7.25
  • Ohio: $10.10 ($7.25 for employers with annual receipts under $342,000)
  • Oklahoma: $7.25
  • Oregon: $14.20
  • Pennsylvania: $7.25
  • Rhode Island: $13.00
  • South Carolina: $7.25, no minimum wage required
  • South Dakota: $10.80
  • Tennessee: $7.25, no minimum wage required
  • Texas: $7.25
  • Utah: $7.25
  • Vermont: $13.18
  • Virginia: $12.00
  • Washington: $15.74
  • Washington D.C.: $17.00
  • West Virginia: $8.75
  • Wisconsin: $7.25
  • Wyoming: $5.15

More:Contact

Recommend

McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales

Global consulting firm McKinsey & Company agreed Friday to pay $650 million to resolve criminal

Man with loaded gun arrested at checkpoint near Donald Trump’s weekend rally in Southern California

COACHELLA, Calif. (AP) — A Nevada man with a shotgun, a loaded handgun and ammunition in his vehicle

Deion Sanders, Colorado lose more than a game: `That took a lot out of us'

BOULDER, Colo. – By the time this crazy whirlwind game was over, coach Deion Sanders and his Colorad