You are considered paid as of the date they hand you the check or as of the postmark date on the envelope, if they mailed your last check.
If your wages are not paid within 24 hours after you demand them, and the timeline to pay has passed (see above - How Soon Must They Pay Me?), state law lets you collect a penalty of one day’s pay for every day the employer is late in paying you. Up to 15 days total.
To figure the amount of the penalty, first find out your average daily earnings. To do this, divide your pay by the number of work days in the pay period. Then count how many days the employer was late with your money (up to 15 days). Multiply those two numbers for the total penalty the employer owes you.
Here is one example of how the penalty might be figured out:
Toni was fired from her job on June 10th. Because she was fired, the employer was supposed to mail her check within 24 hours of her demand for payment. She worked 5 days per week and was paid every 2 weeks. Her usual paycheck was $875.00. She made her demand for wages on June 12th. Her employer mailed the check on June 20th.
- To figure out the penalty, you need to know Toni’s average daily pay. First you need to figure out how many days are in Toni’s pay period.
5 work days x 2 weeks in the pay period = 10 days per pay period
- Next, you figure out Toni’s average daily pay by dividing her paycheck amount by the number of days in her pay period:
$875.00 ÷ 10 = $87.50. So, Toni’s average daily pay is $87.50.
- Then figure out how many days it took her employer to pay her.
June 20 (pay date) – June 13 (demand due date) = 7 days
- The penalty is:
$87.50 (average daily pay) x 7 (number of days late) = $612.50