Payroll Deductions Can Be a Legal Landmine!
Here are some common payroll deduction errors:
– Giving a loan to an employee and allowing them to pay you back through payroll deductions.
– If an employee breaks an expensive piece of equipment recouping the expense by charging them for it through payroll deductions.
– Deducting advanced commissions from a sales representative without having a written and signed commission agreement in place.
– Misclassifying an employee as an Independent Contractor and making deductions from their pay for business expenses.
– Employment relationship ends prior to the employee paying the employer back for a loan, so the remaining balance is deducted from their final pay.
– Employees that quit prior to earning back used vacation time that caused their vacation pay balance to be negative, so the remaining balance is deducted that from their final pay.
– Charging an employee for uniforms through a payroll deduction, which causes their wages to dip below the minimum wage.
Authorized payroll deductions vary for most states. For a list by state, SHRM developed a great resource for employers SHRM Wage Deduction Laws by State. On a federal level, there are restrictions as well. So, what is the best course of action for employers to take?
Wage Deduction Best Practices
– Limit all deductions from wages to include only those that are required by law. For example, only deduct garnishments, taxes and insurance premiums for health, dental and other employee benefit plans.
– Be sure to have the employee provide an explicit signed authorization prior to taking any benefit deductions.
– Don’t pass on any business expenses to employees. Reimburse employees for all company expenses they incur while performing their work duties.
– Don’t use deductions from wages as a self-help remedy, even if the money is owed by the employee.
– If you loan an employee money, do not take repayment as a deduction from their paycheck. Have the employee sign a promissory note and write a personal check to pay the money back.
– Do not make any wage deductions to recover loss or damage, as this is either outright illegal in many states and could still expose you to a wage and hour claims in states where it is allowed under narrow circumstances.
– On a federal level, even with written authorization from an employee, don’t do any deductions, (besides for health benefits or 401k etc), that will bring the employee’s wages below the minimum wage, even with the employee’s signed consent.