WAC 296-126-025
Deductions from final wages. (1) An
employer may deduct any portion of an employee's final wages
and may reduce the employee's final gross wages below the
state minimum wage that is in effect at the time the work is
performed, if the deduction is for any of the following:
(a) Required by state or federal law; or
(b) For medical, surgical, or hospital care or service.
No deductions may be made for these services if covered under
RCW 51.48.050; or
Example. During the final pay period, the business paid
a worker's medical costs for an injury not related to the
employee's job duties and deducted the amount from final wages
to repay those costs to the employer.
(c) To satisfy a court order, judgment, wage attachment,
trustee process, bankruptcy proceeding, or payroll deduction
notice for child support payments.
(2) The following deductions must be specifically agreed
upon orally or in writing by the employee or employer and may
reduce the employee's final gross wages below the state
minimum wage that is in effect at the time the work is
performed, if the deduction is for any of the following:
(a) For pension, medical, dental, or other benefit plans
when such agreements have been specifically agreed upon orally
or in writing in advance by the employee and employer.
Example 1. Insurance premium: An employee and employer
may have entered into an oral or written agreement in advance
for deductions for monthly medical premiums.
Example 2. Retirement plan: The employee chose a 401K
pension plan and agreed orally or in writing to a payroll
deduction for the specified amount to participate in that
plan.
(b) For a payment to a creditor or third party if the
employee authorizes it orally or in writing in advance to pay
a sum for the benefit of the employee. The creditor or third
party can be the employer of the employee.
Example 1. Assignment to third party: An employee may
request orally or in writing for the employer to withhold four
hundred dollars from the final paycheck for an automobile loan
to be paid directly to the employee's financial institution by
the employer.
Example 2. Employee loan: The employer loaned the
employee three hundred dollars and charged reasonable
interest. A written agreement with the terms of repaying the
loan at fifty dollars per pay period through payroll
deductions was made in writing and in advance between the
employer and employee. The agreement also contained a
provision that if the employee left the employer's employment
for any reason, any balance due on the loan could be withheld
from the final paycheck. Note: Employers are advised to
check with the United States Department of Labor, Wage and
Hour Division and the Internal Revenue Service regarding
application of federal laws on charging interest.
(3) An employer can deduct wages from an employee's final
paycheck for the reasons in (a), (b), (c), and (d) of this
subsection, but only when these incidents have occurred in the
final pay period. An employer may not deduct wages from the
final paycheck for incidents that occurred in previous pay
periods under (a) through (d) of this subsection. None of the
deductions contained in this subsection may reduce the
employee's final gross wages below the state minimum wage that
is in effect at the time the work is performed.
(a) For acceptance of a bad check or credit card, if it
can be shown that the employee accepted the check or credit
card in violation of procedures previously made known to the
employee by the employer; or
(b) For any cash shortage from a cash register, drawer or
portable depository provided for that purpose, if it can be
shown that the employee has sole access to the cash and has
participated in the cash accounting at the beginning of the
employee's shift and again at the end of said shift; or
(c) For any cash shortage, walkout (failure of customer
to pay), breakage, or loss of equipment, if it can be shown
that the shortage, walkout, breakage or loss was caused by a
dishonest or willful act of the employee; or
(d) Deductions taken due to alleged employee theft are
permissible only if it can be shown that the employee's intent
was to deprive and that the employer filed a police report.
(4) It is the employer's responsibility to prove the
existence of any agreement. Therefore, the department
recommends that all agreements, policies, and procedures be in
writing and signed by the affected employees.
(5) The employer must identify and record all wage
deductions openly and clearly in employee payroll records.
Helpful information:
The following are examples of situations when deductions
are allowed from the employee's final paycheck:
Example 1. Employee purchase of employer's goods or
services: An employee worked for a tire store. The employee
purchased tires from the store and entered into a written
agreement with the employer to deduct an agreed amount each
pay period until the debt was paid in full, and the agreement
further specified that any remaining balance due at the time
of termination could be withheld from the final paycheck.
This type of deduction may reduce the employee's wage below
the state minimum wage.
Example 2. Advance or draw on wages. An employee may
obtain an advance or draw on wages. The employer may deduct
the advance or draw from the employee's final paycheck. The
employer must record the advance or draw in the employee's
payroll records. This type of deduction may reduce the
employee's wage below the state minimum wage.
Example 3. Cost of uniforms: An employee and employer
may agree orally or in writing that the employer may deduct
the cost of uniforms provided by the employer if the uniforms
are not returned by the employee at the time of termination.
This type of deduction cannot reduce the employee's wage below
the state minimum wage.
Example 4. Cash shortages: In a grocery store, the
employees and employer agreed orally or in writing that the
employer could deduct wages for cash shortages that occurred
in the final pay period if the employees had sole access to
their cash registers during their shifts and participated in
the employer's cash accounting procedures before and after
their shifts.
[Statutory Authority: Chapters 49.12, 49.46, 49.48, 49.52 RCW, and RCW 43.22.270. 05-24-019, § 296-126-025, filed
11/29/05, effective 1/1/06; Order 74-9, § 296-126-025, filed
3/13/74, effective 4/15/74.]