bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : With no pay stub, could employer be screwing us over? Recently, my wife has been working for a local day care; she's hourly and gets paid biweekly. Since she started a few months ago, she has been paid by direct deposit a - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

With no pay stub, could employer be screwing us over?
Recently, my wife has been working for a local day care; she's hourly and gets paid biweekly. Since she started a few months ago, she has been paid by direct deposit a few times but has received no pay stubs. I realize that pay stubs are not required in the U.S., but what assurance do we have that they are paying her the correct hourly wage, paying her overtime, acknowledging all of her hours, or that they are performing the IRS withholdings correctly?

Should she be keeping track of the hours herself? In that case, it's going to be hard to calculate the correct take-home pay. Can we request some form of documentation from her employer? I assume they're still required to send us a W2 next January, but the W2 doesn't have enough information to show that they did everything correctly for the entire previous year.

I would worry less if this was an established chain of day cares, but AFAIK this local day care has only one location, and I don't have any reason to trust them (or not to trust them, I guess, but still).

What are our options here?


Load Full (2)

Login to follow hoots

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

I think this issue warrants a more canonical answer. If you are an hourly employee working in the U.S., and if for some reason you do not receive a pay stub with your first paycheck, I recommend the following steps:

Check whether your state requires that employers provide a pay stub. (Note that not all states have this requirement, and note that the federal government also does not require it.)
Approach your supervisor and request a pay stub. It's possible they forgot or a mistake was made, so don't be hostile.
If your supervisor says "no" you will do one of the following, depending on the results from step 1:

If your state requires a pay stub, mention that to your supervisor. He or she should then provide you the pay stub.
If your state does not require a pay stub, you must keep track of the hours yourself. It would then be a good idea to take @jmg229 's advice and calculate what your paycheck should be based on the hours you worked, your tax bracket, and other info.

For us personally, our state does require a pay stub, so my wife should be able to get a pay stub if she asks for it. ("Approach your supervisor" in step #2 is the hard part, as some introverts may notice.)

This answer is a combination of helpful suggestions from @jmg229 , @Chuu , @KentAnderson , and @JohnFx . I'm not sure if Stack Exchange likes "summary answers" like this, so please comment if I should not mark this as the answer.

Update: My wife finally asked. Turns out she had a mailbox with all of her pay stubs in it. :)


10% popularity   0 Reactions

I would start by tracking hours. Then try a paycheck calculator like www.paycheckcity.com. If you know your withholdings (don't forget if they pull for anything like health/dental benefits), your hourly rate, and your hours, you should be able to find the proper tax withholdings and take-home.

I would also recommend tracking hours and trying to align with the W-2 in January, as you said, even though that does not really solve the immediate concerns.


Back to top Use Dark theme