Payroll
Payroll is one of a series of
accounting transactions dealing with the process of paying
employees for services rendered, after processing of the various requirements for
withholding of money from the employee for payment of withholding
payroll taxes,
insurance premiums,
employee benefits,
garnishments, and other deductions.
Payroll involves the calculation of amounts due the employee, such as hourly
wages, a
salary consisting of a certain amount per calendar period, or pay to salespersons on
commission, as well as reimbursement for employee-paid expenses such as travel (calculated either based on actual amount paid by the employee or utilizing a
per diem rate).
In addition to these payments, there are often computed amounts of paid
vacation time and accrued
sick leave which have been used or are available for use. These are simply carried as bookkeeping entries as available or used and accumulate until the employee actually uses them. If an employee accrues vacation, annual holiday pay or sick leave, these amounts are then added to the amount due the employee to be paid.
All of these monies credited to the employee are usually referred to as
gross pay.
From these amounts that are credited to the employee, various debits are taken as
withholding, the most significant being
income tax, then other taxes such as
social security and
Medicare (in the
United States; other countries have similar programs for the collection of government-mandated retirement benefit supplement systems). There may also be additional deductions for supplemental
health insurance,
union dues,
pension plan contributions,
garnishment for nonpayment of debts, repayment of prior salary, vacation or sick leave overpayments made in error, undercollection of insurance, and other deductions.
The amount left after deductions from gross pay is generally the amount given in the employee's pay envelope, either as cash or a check. This amount is known as
net pay. If the employee has their net pay deposited to their
bank account (through a process known as
direct deposit) then the employee may simply receive a
pay stub indicating this.
In addition to amounts collected from the employee, frequently the
employer is required to also pay additional monies of their own such as government taxes such as employer matching contribution to Social Security, and employer-paid systems such as
unemployment insurance; employer matching for pension plans such as
401(k); employer portion (or all) of employee
health insurance, and additional expenses.
Organizations which have very few employees may perform payroll by hand. Business organizations which have become too large to perform such tasks by hand (or small ones that prefer not to do them by hand) will generally use an accounts software, or an integrated module from a
Human Resource Management System on a
computer to perform this task, or may pay a
service bureau to perform the process of payroll calculation and writing of payroll
checks.
Due to government mandated (and often severe) penalties for improper or inadequate collection of payroll taxes and paying of wages, almost all
employers (other than very tiny ones having perhaps one or very few employees) either use a payroll
computer program or a service bureau.
Other types of accounting
transactions include
accounts payable,
accounts receivable, and
trial balance.
A
paycheck is traditionally a
paper document issued by an
employer to
pay an
employee for services rendered. While most common being used in the
United States, recently the physical paycheck has been increasingly replaced by electronic
direct deposit.
In most countries with a developed
wire transfer system, e.g. in
Europe, using a physical cheque for paying wages and salaries is most uncommon for the past several
decades. However, vocabulary referring to the
figurative "paycheck" does exist in some languages, e.g.
German (
Gehaltsscheck), partially due to the influence of US popular media.
Payroll savings program
A
payroll savings program is a method of automatically deducting money from one's paycheck and depositing it into a
savings account. Since these funds are made less available there is a reduced chance that they will be spent.