Example. During the final pay period, the business paid a worker's medical costs for an injury not related to the employee's job duties and deducted the amount from final wages to repay those costs to the employer.
Example 1. Insurance premium: An employee and employer may have entered into an oral or written agreement in advance for deductions for monthly medical premiums.
Example 2. Retirement plan: The employee chose a 401K pension plan and agreed orally or in writing to a payroll deduction for the specified amount to participate in that plan.
Example 1. Assignment to third party: An employee may request orally or in writing for the employer to withhold four hundred dollars from the final paycheck for an automobile loan to be paid directly to the employee's financial institution by the employer.
Example 2. Employee loan: The employer loaned the employee three hundred dollars and charged reasonable interest. A written agreement with the terms of repaying the loan at fifty dollars per pay period through payroll deductions was made in writing and in advance between the employer and employee. The agreement also contained a provision that if the employee left the employer's employment for any reason, any balance due on the loan could be withheld from the final paycheck. Note: Employers are advised to check with the United States Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division and the Internal Revenue Service regarding application of federal laws on charging interest.
Helpful information:
The following are examples of situations when deductions are allowed from the employee's final paycheck:
Example 1. Employee purchase of employer's goods or services: An employee worked for a tire store. The employee purchased tires from the store and entered into a written agreement with the employer to deduct an agreed amount each pay period until the debt was paid in full, and the agreement further specified that any remaining balance due at the time of termination could be withheld from the final paycheck. This type of deduction may reduce the employee's wage below the state minimum wage.
Example 2. Advance or draw on wages. An employee may obtain an advance or draw on wages. The employer may deduct the advance or draw from the employee's final paycheck. The employer must record the advance or draw in the employee's payroll records. This type of deduction may reduce the employee's wage below the state minimum wage.
Example 3. Cost of uniforms: An employee and employer may agree orally or in writing that the employer may deduct the cost of uniforms provided by the employer if the uniforms are not returned by the employee at the time of termination. This type of deduction cannot reduce the employee's wage below the state minimum wage.
Example 4. Cash shortages: In a grocery store, the employees and employer agreed orally or in writing that the employer could deduct wages for cash shortages that occurred in the final pay period if the employees had sole access to their cash registers during their shifts and participated in the employer's cash accounting procedures before and after their shifts.
Wash. Admin. Code § 296-126-025
Statutory Authority: Chapters 49.12, 49.46, 49.48, 49.52 RCW, and RCW 43.22.270. 05-24-019, § 296-126-025, filed 11/29/05, effective 1/1/06; Order 74-9, § 296-126-025, filed 3/13/74, effective 4/15/74.