State:
Free Special Resources
Get Your FREE Special Report. Download Any One Of These FREE Special Resources, Instantly!
Featured Special Report
Claim Your Free Cost Per Hire Calculator
This handy calculator lets you plug in your expenses for recruiting, benefits, salaries, and more.

Graphs automatically generate to show you your annual cost per hire and a breakdown of where you are spending the most money.

Download Now!
October 07, 2010
What Can You Deduct from Exempt Employees’ Pay?

Cheryl Orr and Heather Sager discuss exempt employee deductions in a BLR webinar entitled ‘Wage Payments: What You Can and Can’t Legally Deduct from Employees’ Pay’. They provide the following information about what an employer can legally deduct from exempt employees’ pay.

For a Limited Time receive a FREE Compensation Market Analysis Report! Find out how much you should be paying to attract and retain the best applicants and employees, with customized information for your industry, location, and job. Get Your Report Now!

Making improper deductions from an employee’s pay can expose a company to a huge liability and risk. Resolving the matter can also result in high settlements. Also, federal and state agencies are getting more aggressive in pursuing wage and hour deductions than such agencies have been in the past. Penalties for failing to properly deduct items from employees’ pays can go directly to the federal and state agencies that pursue offending companies. When can an employer deduct from exempt employees’ pay? Deductions can occur for certain circumstances. These include the following:

  • Partial day absences: Employers may make deductions form exempt employees’ vacation banks for partial day absences. However, monies cannot be removed from the exempt employees’ salary or pay.
  • Furloughs: There may be occasions when the employer may declare days in which employees cannot work because the company is shut down e.g. between Christmas and New Year. If an exempt worker works for a day in that week, they must receive their pay
  • Reduced work schedules: This is similar to the furlough case. However, there may be no definite return to the full work week
  • Late arrival/early departure: No deductions are permitted from the exempt employees’ pay
  • Sickness: No deductions are deducted for sick days, unless the employer has a sick leave program. In that case, deductions can be made in from the employees’ accrued sick leave
  • Workers’ compensation: Full day deductions can be made if a worker is receiving worker’s compensation benefits
  • Jury duty/Witness leave: This is similar to furloughs, if the employee is absent for a full week
  • Military leave: This is similar to furloughs, if the employee is absent for a full week
  • Disciplinary deduction: No pay can be deducted. However, employees can be put on leave without pay

Impermissible deductions place exempt classification at risk. Also, employers can pay exempt employees extra for extra work without risk.

Cheryl D. Orr, Esq. is a partner and co-chair of the national Labor and Employment Practice Group at Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP (www.drinkerbiddle.com). Heather M. Sager, Esq. is also a partner in the Labor and Employment Practice Group at Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP. Sager focuses her practice on management-side representation in collective and class actions, with particular experience in wage and hour litigation under state and federal law.

Featured Free Resource:
Cost Per Hire Calculator
Twitter  Facebook  Linked In
Follow Us
HCMNPWS1
Copyright © 2024 Business & Legal Resources. All rights reserved. 800-727-5257
This document was published on https://Compensation.BLR.com
Document URL: https://compensation.blr.com/Compensation-news/Payroll-Processing/Deductions-from-Paychecks/What-Can-You-Deduct-from-Exempt-Employees-Pay-