What Should a Manufacturing Time Clock Track?
A manufacturing time clock should make shift hours easier to review before payroll.
Track the shift record
A manufacturing or warehouse time clock should track:
- Clock-in and clock-out times.
- Breaks, if your process tracks them.
- Missed punches.
- Manual edits and edit reasons.
- Department, line, shop, warehouse, job, or location detail when useful.
- Overtime or near-overtime weeks.
- Manager approval.
- Payroll export or summary status.
Keep operations systems separate
Production planning, inventory, warehouse management, safety training, equipment maintenance, scheduling, payroll processing, HR, and accounting are separate systems.
The time clock should answer the payroll question: who worked, what changed, who approved it, and what payroll received.
For more detail, read time clock app for manufacturing and warehouse teams.
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.