The Texas Payday Law (Texas Labor Code Chapter 61) governs when and how Texas employers must pay employees.
It sets minimum pay frequency requirements, establishes strict deadlines for final paychecks when employment ends, restricts what employers may deduct from wages, and gives employees the right to file wage claims with the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC). Violations can result in administrative penalties, back-wage orders, and criminal referrals in serious cases.
Key Takeaways
- Non-exempt employees must be paid at least twice per month (semi-monthly). Exempt employees must be paid at least once per month.
- Final paychecks for discharged employees are due within six calendar days. For voluntary resignations without advance notice, the deadline is the next regular payday.
- Employers may not make unauthorized deductions. Written authorization is required for most non-mandatory deductions.
- Employees have 180 days from the alleged violation to file a wage claim with the TWC.
- Penalties can reach $1,000 per violation in administrative proceedings, plus full back-wage liability.
- The Texas Payday Law does not set a minimum wage โ that is governed separately by the FLSA and Texas Labor Code Chapter 62.
- Employers must notify employees of their pay rate and designated pay dates at the time of hire.
Get Updates on New Texas Business Guides
The Texas Payday Law applies to nearly every Texas employer regardless of size, and creates real enforcement exposure for businesses that miss pay deadlines, make improper deductions, or fail to issue final paychecks on time. This guide explains every major requirement in plain language, with a compliance checklist and links to official sources.
- Texas Payday Law Overview
- Who Is Covered?
- Pay Frequency Requirements
- Pay Statements & Notice Requirements
- Final Paycheck Rules
- Wage Deductions: Permitted & Prohibited
- Commissions, Bonuses & Variable Pay
- Exempt vs. Non-Exempt Pay Rules
- Tip Credits & Tipped Employees
- TWC Wage Claim Process
- Penalties for Violations
- Employer Defenses
- Common Employer Mistakes
- Compliance Checklist
- Primary Government Sources
- Frequently Asked Questions
Texas Payday Law Overview
The Texas Payday Law is codified at Texas Labor Code, Chapter 61 and is administered and enforced by the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC). Its primary objectives are to ensure employees receive earned wages on time, establish minimum pay frequency standards, restrict unauthorized deductions, and provide an accessible wage claim process.
The Texas Payday Law operates alongside โ but does not replace โ federal requirements under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Both frameworks apply simultaneously to most Texas employers. Complying with one does not automatically satisfy the other.
The Texas Payday Law applies to essentially all Texas employers with employees โ regardless of company size, industry, or entity type.
Who Is Covered?
Employers Covered
The Texas Payday Law applies to any person, firm, or corporation that employs one or more individuals in Texas, with limited exceptions. Most private-sector Texas employers are covered.
Employees Covered
The law covers full-time, part-time, temporary, seasonal, salaried, hourly, and commissioned employees who perform services for wages in Texas.
Who Is Generally Not Covered
- Independent contractors โ do not have access to the TWC wage claim process for unpaid contract fees. A worker who successfully disputes their contractor classification may gain Payday Law protections retroactively.
- Certain domestic service workers โ limited coverage; verify current TWC guidance.
Pay Frequency Requirements
| Employee Type | Minimum Frequency | Statute |
|---|---|---|
| Non-exempt (hourly, most salaried) | At least twice per month (semi-monthly) | Tex. Labor Code ยง 61.011(a) |
| Exempt (executive, administrative, professional under FLSA) | At least once per month | Tex. Labor Code ยง 61.011(b) |
| Farm and ranch laborers | At least once per month | Tex. Labor Code ยง 61.011(c) |
Designating Pay Days
Under Texas Labor Code ยง 61.012, employers are required to designate pay days in advance and observe them consistently. If no paydays are designated, Texas law defaults to the 1st and 15th of each month for non-exempt employees, and the 1st for exempt employees. Changing designated paydays requires advance notice to employees.
Designated paydays must be established in advance, communicated to employees, and consistently observed every pay cycle.
Pay Statements and Notice Requirements
Notice of Wages at Hire
Texas Labor Code ยง 61.012 requires employers to notify employees of their pay rate and designated pay days at the time of hire. Written notice is strongly advisable as it creates a compliance record and reduces disputes. Advance notice is also required before any change to pay rate or pay days takes effect.
Itemized Pay Statements
Texas law does not expressly require itemized pay stubs on every pay date in the way some other states do. However, providing itemized pay statements showing gross wages, each deduction, net pay, pay period dates, and hours worked (for hourly employees) is a strong best practice that significantly reduces wage disputes.
Payroll Records Retention
Texas employers are generally required to maintain payroll records sufficient to demonstrate compliance. The FLSA independently requires retention of certain payroll records for at least three years. Most compliance professionals recommend retaining Texas payroll records for a minimum of four years to satisfy both state and federal requirements โ verify current agency guidance at twc.texas.gov.
Final Paycheck Rules
Final paycheck deadlines are among the most frequently violated provisions of the Texas Payday Law. The deadline depends on how employment ended.
What Must Be Included in the Final Paycheck
- Regular wages for all hours worked in the final pay period
- Overtime wages owed under the FLSA (if applicable)
- Earned commissions that are due and calculable under the employer's plan
- Earned bonuses that are due under the employer's policy or agreement
- Accrued, unused vacation pay โ only if the employer's written policy or agreement provides for payout upon separation
Accrued Vacation and PTO
Texas law does not independently require payout of accrued vacation upon separation. Whether it is owed depends entirely on the employer's own written policy or agreement. If the policy provides for payout, it becomes a Payday Law wage obligation. If the policy has a valid "use it or lose it" provision, no payout is required. Ambiguous or silent policies commonly work against the employer in TWC proceedings.
The six-day deadline for discharged employees begins on the date of discharge โ not the next payroll cycle. This is one of the most frequently missed requirements in Texas payroll compliance.
Wage Deductions: Permitted and Prohibited
Deductions Required by Law
- Federal income tax withholding
- Social Security and Medicare (FICA) withholding
- Court-ordered wage garnishments (child support, student loans, consumer debts within legal limits)
- IRS tax levies
Deductions Authorized in Writing by the Employee
Under Texas Labor Code ยง 61.018, employers may make additional deductions if the employee provides written authorization. Common examples include health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, HSA/FSA contributions, union dues, charitable contributions, and repayment of employer loans with proper documentation.
Deductions That Require Careful Attention
- Cash register shortages: Permissible only with prior written authorization, no sub-minimum wage result, and a demonstrable nexus to the employee.
- Property damage: Same requirements โ prior written authorization, no minimum wage violation.
- Uniform costs: Permissible with written authorization if the deduction does not reduce wages below minimum wage.
- Advances and loans: Repayment deductions require written authorization specifying the amount and repayment schedule.
Prohibited Deductions
- Any deduction that reduces wages below federal minimum wage for hours worked in a workweek
- Deductions made without required written employee authorization
- Deductions primarily benefiting the employer without proper authorization
- Unauthorized disciplinary fines or penalties
When in doubt about a deduction: get written authorization first, confirm the deduction does not push wages below minimum wage, and retain the documentation.
Commissions, Bonuses, and Variable Pay
The Texas Payday Law treats commissions and bonuses as wages once they are earned โ as defined by the employer's own written plan, not by the employer's unilateral decision after the fact.
Commissions
A commission becomes a wage when it is earned under the terms of the commission plan (e.g., when a sale closes, a contract is signed, or payment is received). Once earned, the commission must be paid on the next regularly scheduled payday. Departing employees are entitled to commissions earned before separation, even if payment falls after the separation date. Commissions not yet earned at separation are generally not owed under the Payday Law.
Bonuses
- Discretionary bonuses โ where the employer has full discretion to grant or withhold with no prior promise โ are generally not Payday Law wage obligations until actually awarded.
- Non-discretionary bonuses โ tied to specific metrics or criteria the employee satisfied โ generally become wage obligations once those criteria are met.
- Ambiguous bonus plans that are neither clearly discretionary nor non-discretionary commonly resolve against the employer in TWC proceedings.
Exempt vs. Non-Exempt Employee Pay Rules
Non-Exempt Employees
Must be paid at least twice per month under the Texas Payday Law. Also entitled to overtime at 1.5x their regular rate for hours over 40 in a workweek under the FLSA.
Exempt Employees Under the FLSA
Must be paid at least once per month under the Texas Payday Law. Critically, the FLSA's salary basis test requires that exempt employees receive their full salary in any week they perform any work โ with very limited exceptions. Deductions from an exempt employee's salary that are not FLSA-permitted may eliminate the exemption and create retroactive overtime liability for that entire job classification.
Tip Credits and Tipped Employees
Texas follows federal FLSA rules on the tip credit. Employers may pay tipped employees a cash wage of $2.13 per hour (federal tipped minimum wage) provided:
- The employee's tips bring total hourly pay to at least the federal minimum wage (verify current rate at dol.gov)
- The employer notifies employees of the tip credit before applying it
- Tips are retained by the employee (subject to valid tip pooling rules)
If tips do not make up the shortfall to minimum wage in any workweek, the employer must pay the difference directly. Texas Labor Code Chapter 62 generally tracks the federal minimum wage โ verify current Texas minimum wage at twc.texas.gov.
TWC Wage Claim Process
The Texas Payday Law gives employees a specific administrative remedy: the TWC wage claim. This is a state-level process independent of any federal DOL complaint or private lawsuit.
Who Can File
Any current or former employee who believes they were not paid wages owed under the Texas Payday Law may file a claim with the TWC. The 180-day filing window begins on the date wages were due โ not the date the employee learned of the underpayment. Claims filed after 180 days are generally barred.
Claim Filed and Assigned
The TWC assigns the claim to a wage claim examiner. Both the employee and employer receive written notice of the claim.
Employer Response
The employer submits payroll records, signed authorizations, and any other documentation supporting its position. Employers who do not respond may have a default order issued against them for the full claimed amount.
Preliminary Wage Determination Order (PWDO)
The TWC examiner issues a PWDO stating whether wages are owed, in what amount, and any administrative penalty assessed.
Appeal Rights
Either party may appeal the PWDO within 21 days. Appeals are heard by a TWC hearing officer, then the TWC commissioners. Final TWC orders may be appealed to state district court.
Collection
If a final order is issued and the employer fails to pay, the TWC may collect through liens, levies, and legal action against employer property.
Penalties for Violations
Administrative Penalty โ Up to $1,000 Per Violation
The TWC may assess an administrative penalty of up to $1,000 per violation in addition to ordering payment of unpaid wages. Each late or missed payment may constitute a separate violation. A single payroll cycle with multiple employees underpaid may generate multiple separate penalties.
Back Wages Plus Interest
The TWC orders payment of the full amount of unpaid wages found to be owed, plus interest accruing from the date wages were due. The employer bears this liability regardless of business changes since the violation.
Attorney Fees and Court Costs
In court proceedings to enforce TWC wage orders or in private civil suits, employees may recover attorney fees in addition to wages owed. This significantly increases the effective cost of non-compliance, particularly when multiple employees are involved.
Criminal Referral for Willful or Repeated Violations
Under Texas Labor Code ยง 61.019, willful or repeated violations may be referred for criminal prosecution โ a misdemeanor with potential fines and, for subsequent convictions, possible imprisonment. Criminal referrals are more common in cases involving intentional withholding of wages or deliberate disregard of TWC orders.
TWC Liens and Collection Actions
When an employer fails to comply with a final TWC wage payment order, the TWC may file a lien against employer real and personal property and seek judicial enforcement. TWC collection authority extends to successor entities in certain circumstances.
Back wages, penalties up to $1,000 per violation, attorney fees in civil proceedings, and criminal exposure for willful violations make compliance significantly less costly than non-compliance.
Employer Defenses and the Dispute Process
Employers who receive a TWC wage claim have meaningful opportunities to defend their position. Common defenses include:
- Wages were paid in full and on time โ supported by payroll records, direct deposit confirmations, or cancelled checks
- Deductions were properly authorized โ supported by signed authorization forms predating the deduction
- Claimed wages were not yet earned โ for commissions or bonuses where the triggering event under the plan had not occurred
- The worker was an independent contractor โ classification disputes are resolved within the claim proceeding
- The claim is time-barred โ if the alleged violation occurred more than 180 days before filing
- The claimed amount is incorrect โ supported by detailed payroll calculations and time records
In TWC wage claim proceedings, the employer's primary tool is documentation. Employers with complete, accurate, and contemporaneous payroll records are in a significantly stronger position than those reconstructing records after the fact. In the absence of clear employer documentation, the TWC commonly resolves ambiguities in the employee's favor.
Common Employer Mistakes
Missing the Six-Calendar-Day Final Paycheck Deadline
Paying a discharged employee on the next regular payday โ rather than within six calendar days โ violates the Payday Law even if the full amount is paid. The clock starts on the day of discharge, not the payroll cycle. This is one of the most common and easily avoided violations.
Withholding Final Pay Until Company Property Is Returned
The Texas Payday Law does not permit conditioning wage payment on return of company property. Wages must be paid by the applicable deadline. Pursuing return of property through separate means is the appropriate path.
Making Deductions Without Prior Written Authorization
Deducting for uniform costs, cash shortages, property damage, or loan repayment without a prior signed written authorization commonly results in TWC wage claims. Authorization obtained after the loss does not satisfy the requirement.
Treating Earned Commissions as Discretionary
Once a commission is earned under the terms of a commission plan, it is a wage obligation. Withholding earned commissions from departing employees โ or retroactively modifying the plan โ commonly results in TWC wage claims and civil litigation.
Having No Written Vacation or PTO Payout Policy
Without a clear written policy, the TWC commonly treats accrued vacation as a payable wage obligation upon separation. Written policies must be communicated to employees and consistently applied.
Failing to Respond to a TWC Wage Claim Notice
Employers who do not respond to a wage claim notice โ or respond late โ may have a default order issued against them for the full claimed amount plus penalties, regardless of the merits.
Confusing the Payday Law With Minimum Wage or Overtime Rules
The Texas Payday Law governs pay timing, frequency, deductions, and final paychecks โ not minimum wage or overtime. Paying the correct amount does not satisfy the Payday Law if it is paid late or contains unauthorized deductions.
Compliance Checklist
Use this as a general self-audit framework alongside current TWC guidance.
Pay Frequency and Designation
- Designated paydays established and documented for exempt and non-exempt employees
- Non-exempt employees paid at least twice per month; exempt at least once per month
- Designated paydays consistently observed each cycle
- Employees notified in writing of pay rate and paydays at hire
- Changes to pay rate or paydays communicated before taking effect
Final Paychecks
- Procedure in place to issue final paychecks within six calendar days for discharged employees
- Procedure in place to identify resignation notice length and applicable deadline
- Final paycheck includes all earned wages, calculable commissions, and earned bonuses
- Written vacation/PTO policy clearly states whether accrued balance is paid upon separation
- Final paychecks are not withheld pending return of company property
Wage Deductions
- All non-mandatory deductions documented with prior written employee authorization
- No deductions that reduce pay below federal minimum wage for hours worked
- Deduction authorization forms obtained before the deduction is taken
- Advance repayment deductions authorized in writing with specified schedule
Commissions and Variable Pay
- Written commission plan in place defining when a commission is earned
- Commission plan addresses treatment of earned but unpaid commissions upon separation
- Bonuses clearly classified as discretionary or non-discretionary in written policy
Recordkeeping
- Payroll records maintained for at least four years
- Time records for non-exempt employees retained and accurate
- All signed deduction authorizations retained in employee files
- Written pay policies communicated to employees and retained
- Process in place to respond promptly to any TWC wage claim notice
Primary Government Sources
- Texas Workforce Commission โ Texas Payday Law twc.texas.gov/businesses/texas-payday-law
- TWC โ Wage Claims twc.texas.gov/jobseekers/wage-claims
- Texas Labor Code, Chapter 61 statutes.capitol.texas.gov โ Labor Code Ch. 61
- Texas Labor Code, Chapter 62 (Minimum Wage) statutes.capitol.texas.gov โ Labor Code Ch. 62
- U.S. DOL โ FLSA Overview dol.gov/agencies/whd/flsa
- U.S. DOL โ Tip Credit and Tipped Employees dol.gov/agencies/whd/flsa/tips
- IRS Publication 15 โ Employer Tax Guide irs.gov/publications/p15
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Texas Payday Law?
The Texas Payday Law (Texas Labor Code Chapter 61) is administered by the TWC and governs when and how Texas employers must pay employees. It sets minimum pay frequency requirements, deadlines for final paychecks, restrictions on wage deductions, and the procedures through which employees may file wage claims with the TWC.
How often must Texas employers pay employees?
Non-exempt employees must be paid at least twice per month. Exempt employees and farm/ranch laborers must be paid at least once per month. Employers may pay more frequently. Designated paydays must be set in advance and consistently observed.
When is a final paycheck due in Texas?
For discharged employees: within six calendar days of discharge. For employees who resign without 72 hours advance notice: on the next regular payday. For employees who give at least 72 hours advance notice: within six calendar days of the last day of work.
Can a Texas employer hold a final paycheck until an employee returns company property?
No. The Texas Payday Law does not permit conditioning wage payment on return of company property. Wages must be paid by the applicable deadline. Separate remedies exist for recovering company property.
Can a Texas employer deduct from an employee paycheck for property damage?
Potentially yes โ but only with a prior written authorization executed before the damage occurred, and only if the deduction does not bring wages below the federal minimum wage. Retroactive authorization obtained after the loss generally does not satisfy the requirement.
What is the deadline to file a wage claim in Texas?
Employees have 180 days from the date the alleged violation occurred. This is strict โ claims filed after 180 days are generally barred. The window starts on the date wages were due, not when the employee discovered the underpayment.
Does Texas require payout of unused vacation when an employee leaves?
Not automatically. Whether accrued vacation must be paid upon separation depends entirely on the employer's written policy or agreement. If the policy provides for payout, it becomes a Payday Law wage obligation. A clear, written, consistently applied vacation policy is essential.
Does the Texas Payday Law cover independent contractors?
Generally no. Independent contractors do not have access to the TWC wage claim process. However, a worker who successfully disputes their contractor classification and is found to be an employee gains Payday Law protections retroactively.
What are the penalties for violating the Texas Payday Law?
Potential consequences include administrative fines up to $1,000 per violation, a TWC order to pay all back wages with interest, attorney fees if the matter proceeds to court, and possible criminal referral under Texas Labor Code ยง 61.019 for willful or repeated violations. The TWC also has authority to file liens and collect against employer assets.
What is the difference between the Texas Payday Law and the FLSA?
The Texas Payday Law governs pay timing, frequency, deductions, final paycheck deadlines, and the TWC wage claim process. The FLSA is a separate federal law governing minimum wage, overtime, and child labor. Both apply simultaneously to most Texas employers โ complying with one does not satisfy the other.