What Should a Restaurant Break Record Include?
A useful restaurant break record shows what happened, what changed, why it changed, and who approved the final time card.
A restaurant break record should include:
- Employee.
- Shift date.
- Break start and end, when your process tracks break times.
- Whether the break was missed, short, interrupted, or corrected later.
- The reason for any correction.
- Manager approval before payroll.
The point is not to create extra paperwork. The point is to keep the break record attached to the shift while everyone still remembers what happened.
If breaks are a recurring payroll cleanup issue, use the restaurant break review checklist template. For the longer workflow, read restaurant break records before payroll.
State and local rules still matter. The time record helps you review the break; it does not replace the break rule.
Keep reading
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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.