Unlawful Deduction of wages
Has my employer made unlawful deductions to my wages?
If your employer owes you money for one of the following reasons they are classified as unlawful deductions of wages:
- you have not been paid notice pay
- you have not been paid overtime that you are entitled to
- you have not been paid a contractual bonus
- you have not been paid redundancy pay
- you have been overpaid and your employer makes unreasonable deductions from your wages to correct an overpayment rather than taking smaller amounts over a period of time
- you work in retail and you have been docked pay because of cash shortages in the till or missing stock
When can an employer deduct money from wages?
There are only three circumstances in which an employer can deduct money from wages.
- It is required by law (for example, income tax, national insurance contributions);
- The deductions are authorised in your contract;
- You have provided written consent that the deductions may be made.
This can also be the case when the purpose of the deduction is reimbursement of:
- An overpayment of wages
- An overpayment in respect of expenses incurred by the worker in carrying out his employment
Unless your employment contract stipulates otherwise your employer is entitled to take money off your pay in the following circumstances.
- If you are late work for work
- If you take a day off work that your employer has not authorised. For example, if you have not properly booked a day’s leave
- If you are off sick and are not entitled to sick pay (except statutory pay) in your contract
- If you take time off work to care for a child who is unwell and cannot go to school or nursery
- If you are unable to get into work because the roads are blocked by snow.
- If you are unable to attend work because you have to attend to an emergency at home. For example, a flood.