Explaining the Process of Rounding Employee Hours
Rounding employee hours on timesheets, a legal practice under the Fair Labor Standards Act when done fairly, involves adjusting clock-in and clock-out times—commonly to the nearest 15-minute interval using the "7-minute rule" that rounds down if within the first 7 minutes and rounds up if within the last 7 minutes of the interval—to ensure employees are properly compensated without favoring the employer.
Rounding the hours worked on your employees’ timesheets is a common practice and one that’s completely legal under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) – to a point. Implementing this practice can simplify your payroll process, but you need to make sure any rounding is to the benefit of your employees.
What is Rounding?
Time clock rounding is the rounding up or down of the hours an employee works. A common example is rounding an employee’s hours to 8 a.m. when the actual clock-in time is 7:58 a.m., and rounding to 5 p.m. if they clock out at 4:57 p.m. Many employers adjust the clock in and out times without realizing time clock rounding is a formal concept with legal ramifications.
According to the Department of Labor (DOL), timesheet rounding is an acceptable practice if it’s within certain criteria. An employer’s timesheet rounding can never be construed as favoring the employer over the employee. Rounding cannot result, over a period of time, in a failure to compensate employees for the time they worked.
Time Sheet Rounding Rules
There are three options when rounding an employee’s time:
- Rounding to the nearest 15-minute interval
- Rounding to the nearest 1/10th of an hour (every 6 minutes)
- Rounding to the nearest 5-minute interval
The most common option is to round to the nearest 15-minute interval, as paying for a quarter of an hour is often the easiest option for payroll systems. If you go this route, be aware that there are restrictions on when you can round up versus when you can round down (known as the 7-minute rule).
Under the 7-minute rule:
- Round down to the nearest quarter hour if an employee is within the first 7 minutes of the interval
- Round up to the nearest quarter hour if an employee is within the last 7 minutes of the interval
For example, if an employee punches in at 8:08, their time could be rounded to 8:15. If an employee punches in at 8:07, their time should be marked as 8:00.
Reference for rounding:
- 0 – 7 minutes after the hour: round to :00 (of the current hour)
- 8 – 22 minutes: round to :15
- 23 – 37 minutes: round to :30
- 38 – 52 minutes: round to :45
- 53 – 59 minutes: round to :00 (of the next hour)
Rounding Benefits
The main reason employers might practice time clock rounding is to simplify the payroll process. Without it, payroll must figure exact minutes, converting them to decimals.
Consider this example:
- If you pay an employee $15 per hour and they work seven hours and 58 minutes, then you will need to pay them $15 x 7 + $15 x (58/60) = $119.50. If you just round the time worked up to eight hours, you can simply calculate $15 x 8 = $120, and the 50-cent difference is minimal.
What rounding cannot do is save you money. While the DOL allows for some rounding, it can’t be used to cut costs. Time sheet rounding is allowed “where there are uncertain and indefinite periods of time involved, a few seconds or minutes in duration, and where the failure to count such time is justified by industrial realities.” This means it’s meant to allow for some measure of inconsistency with time tracking methods. The FLSA will most often rule in favor of the employee—this rule is not meant to allow businesses to take paid time away from employees.
Employers shouldn’t turn to time record rounding simply to cut costs. If you’re saving significant amounts of money with this practice, you’re almost definitely doing it illegally – and therefore opening yourself up to FLSA lawsuits.
Rounding Best Practices
- 1.Take regular looks at your rounding process. Rounding can easily lead to wage theft if you’re not careful. Regularly review your rounding practices once per pay cycle to catch any cases of excessive wage withholding.
- 2.Always round to benefit your employees. Never round to diminish your employees’ wages, even if it will make calculating payroll easier. Slightly overpaying employees is always better than underpaying.
- 3.Don’t allow employees to abuse the rounding system. If an employee sees that working six or seven minutes could be counted as 15, they could start abusing the system. If you start to see this being done, ask the employee to clock out at their exact amount of required work hours.
- 4.Don’t let rounding lead to overtime. Rounding up for your employees’ benefit could inadvertently propel them to earn overtime wages. Be sure to watch how close your employees get to working over 40 hours per week because of rounding, as you’ll have to pay them overtime according to state and federal laws. You can’t use rounding to avoid paying employees who did work more than 40 hours in a week.
- 5.Make a clear rounding policy. Explain your time clock rounding to your employees. Transparency is key when it comes to implementing policies that affect your employees’ paychecks. State which FLSA-compliant rounding system you’ll use and explain how employees can file wage grievances.
Want to do away with inconsistent time tracking? ExakTime by Arcoro's cloud-based time tracking system collects 100% accurate time and attendance data so you don’t even have to think about rounding for the sake of ease. This data syncs with your payroll platform—no rounding required!
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