For example, an employer cannot cut the wages of a non-exempt employee to make the employee pay for the amount the owner lost in theft if so doing would reduce the employee’s pay below any required minimum wage or overtime pay that is due. In the case of exempt employees, the U.S. Department of Labor has ruled that salary deductions to pay for cash shortages or the cost of lost or damaged equipment “would violate the salary basis requirement.”
When Employers Can Make a Wage Deduction
If the Employee Authorized the Deduction Plan
For example, the employee may agree to contributions to a “flower fund” to pay for flowers for funerals, or for United Way or other charities. The employee must approve of this in writing. Employees must also agree to pay deductions for benefit contributions. An exception to this rule is if an employee makes a deduction for items that are necessary for the business, like uniforms.
For Income Tax Withholding
Every employee must complete Form W-4 at hire specifying the amount of withholding for federal taxes. For all states where the employee works which have income tax, the employee must also complete a withholding form. The withholding form allows the employer to take withholding (a specific form of deduction) from employee pay. The employee gets to specify the amount of the deduction by completing the W-4 Form.
By Contract
In a union contract, for example, employee pay may be deducted for union dues, depending on the contract and state laws. The employee may have an individual employment contract which authorizes certain specific deductions. Employer loans to employees may also be deducted.
By a Court
A court may require you to garnish employee wages for child support, non-payment of debts, or other purposes. The employee does not have to consent to this deduction.
Employee-Requested Deductions
These can be made at any time. An example might be an employer loan to an employee (a loan agreement should be signed), which the employee is paying back with payroll deductions. Other employee-requested deductions, such as to the United Way, U.S. savings bonds, or union dues, should also have a signed agreement in the employee’s file.
What Deductions Are Not Allowed
Employers may not deduct the following from employee pay, under any circumstances:
Employment taxes required to be paid by employers, such as federal unemployment tax (FUTA) or state unemployment tax. The cost of bonding an employee. Service charges or fees for garnishments (although these may be permitted by state law).
Employers are not allowed to require employees to pay for or reimburse the employer for any items considered primarily for the benefit or convenience of the employer. For example, if the employer wants employees to wear uniforms, that something that benefits the employer, not the employees. Some deductions without the express consent of the employee are restricted or limited, including:
Lost or damaged toolsCash shortages (like a cash drawer)Employer-required physical examinationsUniforms or cleaning uniforms, when requiredInterest owed on an employer loan to an employee.
Deductions for Exempt Employees
Exempt employees are those who are exempt from overtime (non-exempt employees can be paid overtime). Reductions in the predetermined salary of an exempt employee will ordinarily cause a loss of the exemption. In addition, if the employee’s pay falls below at least $684 per week, you may need to pay that person overtime. Employers are not usually allowed to take unauthorized deductions from the pay of exempt employees. Some deductions for non-exempt employees are limited or restricted:
Involuntary deductions cannot result in the employee being paid less than the federal or state minimum wage, whichever is higher.And deductions cannot be taken in a week when the employee worked overtime.
Payroll Taxes
The only exception to the requirement for specific employee authorization is FICA taxes: Social Security and Medicare taxes. The employee portion can be deducted from employee pay without specific consent since these deductions are required by federal law. This allowance applies to the new additional Medicare tax, which is withheld from higher-income employees once they reach a specific pay level.
If an Employer Wants To Cut Employee Pay
Employers need to know that employees have the right to contact the state employment department or state labor board if their pay is cut without consent (except as stated above). As an employer, you don’t want the state labor department coming into your business in response to employee complaints. They will do a complete audit and may find other employment law violations. They also may decide to contact federal agencies if they find federal violations.
Federal income taxSocial SecurityMedicareState income tax (if applicable)Local income tax (if applicable)