What If an Employee Forgets to Clock Out?
If an employee forgets to clock out, correct the time card, document why it changed, and approve the final hours before payroll.
Fix the time, not the story
An employee forgetting to clock out is normal. The risky part is entering a clean-looking time with no explanation.
Before payroll, confirm when the employee actually stopped working. Use the employee's report, the schedule, nearby punches, manager notes, or other shift records to support the correction.
Then keep four details:
- What time was added or changed?
- Who made the correction?
- Why was it changed?
- Who approved the final time?
Do not turn a missed punch into unpaid time
If the employee worked, the time record should be corrected so payroll can pay the hours worked.
You can still coach the employee, document repeated missed punches, or enforce your attendance policy. Just keep that separate from the wage record. A missed clock-out may be a policy problem, but it does not make the shift disappear.
Check the payroll impact
Before approving the correction, look at the whole record:
- Does the corrected shift create overtime?
- Was a meal break missed, short, or late?
- Does the correction change the pay period total?
- Is the reason clear enough that someone else could understand it later?
The goal is simple: payroll should not rely on a number nobody can explain.
Keep reading
- Quick-read1 min
When Do You Owe Overtime?
When employers owe overtime, which states add daily or 7th-day rules, and why salaried misclassification creates the biggest exposure.
- Quick-read1 min
Why Overtime Isn't Just the Base Rate
Why overtime isn't just 1.5× base pay, the 'discretionary' bonus trap, and the math that compounds into back-pay liability.
- Quick-read1 min
Do Salaried Employees Get Overtime?
Why paying a salary doesn't make an employee exempt from overtime, what counts as 'exempt' under federal law, and the tracking that keeps you defensible.
About this guide
Clockspot has been making time-tracking software for small businesses since 2007. Every quick-read article we publish is fact-checked. Each claim is verified against the underlying laws and court cases, with a dated report published alongside the piece so any reader can audit it.