Feb 10, 2025
Let's start by reviewing what federal law requires you to retain:
If you use payroll management software, you will probably find that it has built-in standard recordkeeping reports.
Additional retention rules
The Fair Labor Standards Act has its own list of information and documents that must be kept. For each employee, these are:
Any timekeeping method is acceptable under the FLSA as long as it's complete and accurate. All records must be open for inspection by FLSA representatives.
Length of records retention
The federal government requires that payroll records (including dates of wages, dates of employment, and dates and amounts of tax deposits) be kept for four years in case there is an IRS audit. However, state and local jurisdictions may require you to retain the records for longer. Other government agencies have their own requirements, which are outlined below.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission requires that you keep personnel and employment records (including applications, promotions, demotions and terminations) for one year. The EEOC and the Department of Labor both require that timecards, work and time schedules, and wage rate tables be kept for at least two years.
The FLSA mandates that records relative to gender, occupation, workweek, hourly pay rate and bargaining agreements be kept at least three years.
Section 107 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act requires employers to save documents related to retirement savings plans for at least six years.
Payroll records may be destroyed once they are not required to be retained; this provides a measure of protection for employee confidentiality.
Careful and flexible storage
For paper records, you need fireproof safe storage. If you store records digitally in the cloud or via external hard drives, it is essential that you have a backup system should the first system be hacked, corrupted or otherwise compromised. If you automate records using payroll software, you must be able to download payroll-related reports at any time. Whatever your storage method, your payroll tax records need to be readily available for the IRS.
Maintaining payroll records is required, and it benefits your company. The data can help create better budgets and manage labor expenses. Employees benefit by having readily available the information they need to verify employment — for example, when they want to rent an apartment or apply for a loan. Any company, even one with just one employee, must maintain complete payroll records for compliance.
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