Pay Frequency Laws: How Often Must Your Employer Pay You?
There is no federal pay-frequency law. See how often your employer must pay you by state, which states require weekly pay, and what to do if a check is late.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Labor laws change and vary by state; always check your state labor department’s current guidance or consult a qualified attorney.
Quick Answer: How Often Must You Be Paid?
There is no federal law that sets how often you get paid. The Fair Labor Standards Act controls how much you earn (minimum wage and overtime) and requires that wages be paid, but it leaves how often entirely to the states.
Your state sets the floor. Most states require at least semi-monthly (twice a month) or biweekly (every two weeks) pay. A handful require weekly pay, usually for manual workers, and three states (Alabama, Florida, and South Carolina) have no pay-frequency rule at all.
An employer can always pay you more often than the law requires. What it can’t do is pay you less often than your state’s minimum.
Key Takeaways
- No federal pay-frequency law exists. The FLSA covers wage amounts, not pay intervals. State law is the only floor.
- Most states require at least semi-monthly or biweekly pay. Twice a month is the most common minimum.
- A few states default to weekly pay. Rhode Island and Vermont require weekly pay; New York and New Hampshire require it for manual workers.
- Three states have no rule. Alabama, Florida, and South Carolina leave pay frequency to the employer, subject to your contract.
- Late pay carries real penalties. States impose waiting-time penalties and percentage penalties, and you can file a free wage claim.
- Your own records are your evidence. A contemporaneous log of hours and expected pay is what proves a late-pay claim.
Is There a Federal Law on How Often You Get Paid?
No. This surprises a lot of workers, so it is worth being clear: the federal government does not tell your employer how often to cut your check.
The Fair Labor Standards Act is the main federal wage law. It sets the federal minimum wage, requires overtime at 1.5 times your regular rate after 40 hours, and requires that wages be paid. But the FLSA does not name a pay interval. The U.S. Department of Labor’s State Payday Requirements page states plainly that the timing of wage payments is governed by state law.
So pay frequency is a state question, which means the answer changes the moment you cross a state line.
The four common pay schedules
Almost every employer in the United States uses one of four schedules:
- Weekly: 52 paychecks a year. Common for manual labor and the construction trades.
- Biweekly: 26 paychecks a year, every other week. The most common schedule for hourly workers nationwide.
- Semi-monthly: 24 paychecks a year, usually on fixed dates such as the 15th and the last day of the month.
- Monthly: 12 paychecks a year. The least common, and illegal in most states for hourly nonexempt workers.
Biweekly and semi-monthly sound similar, but they are not the same. Biweekly pays you every 14 days, so two months a year have three paychecks. Semi-monthly pays on set calendar dates, so every check covers a slightly different number of days. The distinction matters when you are budgeting, and it matters for whether a schedule meets your state’s minimum.
Pay Frequency Laws by State (Quick-Reference Table)
Here is the minimum required pay frequency in every state and the District of Columbia. “Minimum” means the longest gap your employer is legally allowed. They can always pay more often.
Rules below cover private-sector nonexempt employees. Many states have separate, often shorter, deadlines for a final paycheck after you leave a job, and some apply different rules to specific industries. Always confirm against your own state labor department before relying on this table.
| State | Minimum pay frequency |
|---|---|
| Alabama | No state requirement |
| Alaska | Semi-monthly (monthly by agreement) |
| Arizona | Semi-monthly |
| Arkansas | Semi-monthly |
| California | Semi-monthly |
| Colorado | Monthly |
| Connecticut | Weekly |
| Delaware | Monthly |
| District of Columbia | Semi-monthly |
| Florida | No state requirement |
| Georgia | Semi-monthly |
| Hawaii | Semi-monthly |
| Idaho | Monthly |
| Illinois | Semi-monthly |
| Indiana | Biweekly (semi-monthly on request) |
| Iowa | Biweekly |
| Kansas | Monthly |
| Kentucky | Semi-monthly |
| Louisiana | Biweekly or semi-monthly (certain employers) |
| Maine | Biweekly |
| Maryland | Biweekly or semi-monthly |
| Massachusetts | Weekly or biweekly (hourly workers) |
| Michigan | Schedule depends on payday selected; some classes weekly |
| Minnesota | Monthly (at least every 31 days) |
| Mississippi | No general requirement (biweekly/semi-monthly for some employers) |
| Missouri | Semi-monthly |
| Montana | Within 10 business days of pay period close |
| Nebraska | Employer-designated regular paydays |
| Nevada | Semi-monthly |
| New Hampshire | Weekly (biweekly with state permission) |
| New Jersey | Semi-monthly |
| New Mexico | Semi-monthly |
| New York | Weekly for manual workers; semi-monthly for others |
| North Carolina | Employer-designated regular paydays |
| North Dakota | Monthly |
| Ohio | Semi-monthly |
| Oklahoma | Semi-monthly |
| Oregon | Monthly (at least every 35 days) |
| Pennsylvania | Employer-designated regular paydays |
| Rhode Island | Weekly |
| South Carolina | No state requirement |
| South Dakota | Monthly |
| Tennessee | Semi-monthly |
| Texas | Semi-monthly (monthly for exempt employees) |
| Utah | Semi-monthly |
| Vermont | Weekly (biweekly/semi-monthly with notice) |
| Virginia | Biweekly or semi-monthly |
| Washington | Monthly |
| West Virginia | Biweekly |
| Wisconsin | Monthly (at least every 31 days) |
| Wyoming | Semi-monthly |
A few patterns jump out. “Monthly” states like Colorado, Idaho, and Washington allow once-a-month pay, but most pair it with a deadline that keeps checks regular. “Employer-designated payday” states like North Carolina and Pennsylvania let the employer pick the schedule, but the employer must stick to it and pay on time. The weekly-pay states are the most worker-protective of the group.
States That Require Weekly Pay
A small group of states put the shortest gap into law. Weekly pay means you are never waiting more than seven days for money you have already earned.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island requires most employees be paid weekly. An employer that wants a longer schedule has to petition the Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training for permission to pay at least twice a month, a process available since 2014. Weekly is the default, and it stays the default unless the state signs off.
Vermont
Vermont also defaults to weekly pay, and payday must fall within six days of the end of the pay period. An employer can move to a biweekly or semi-monthly schedule, but only after giving employees written notice first. The state’s wage and hour rules spell out the notice requirement.
New York and the manual-worker rule
New York is the state most workers misunderstand. New York does not require weekly pay for everyone. It requires weekly pay for manual workers, paid within seven calendar days of the end of the workweek. Clerical and other workers can be paid at least semi-monthly. The New York Department of Labor explains the split on its Frequency of Pay page.
”Manual worker” is broadly defined. It covers a person who spends more than a quarter of their working time doing physical labor, which sweeps in a lot of warehouse, retail stockroom, and food-service jobs that workers might not think of as “manual.”
Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire
Connecticut requires weekly pay unless the employer obtains approval for a longer interval. Massachusetts requires hourly employees be paid weekly or biweekly. New Hampshire defaults to weekly pay and allows biweekly only with permission from the state labor department.
Why these rules exist
The weekly mandate was written on purpose, to protect lower-wage manual workers from cash-flow gaps. A worker living paycheck to paycheck cannot float a landlord or a utility company for three weeks while an employer holds earned wages. Weekly pay laws shorten that gap by design.
States With No Pay Frequency Law
Three states (Alabama, Florida, and South Carolina) have no statute setting how often private employers must pay. South Carolina is often left off older lists, so do not assume a post written a few years ago is current.
”No rule” still leaves you with protection. If you work in one of these states, several other safeguards apply.
- The FLSA still applies. You are still owed at least the federal minimum wage and overtime, and your employer must still actually pay you for the work you did.
- Your employment agreement controls. Whatever schedule you were promised when hired, in an offer letter, a handbook, or a posted policy, becomes the standard your employer is expected to follow.
- Final-pay and wage-claim rules still exist. These states still have wage-payment and wage-collection laws that let you recover unpaid wages, even if they do not dictate the interval.
In practice, employers in these states almost always run a normal biweekly or semi-monthly cycle, because that is what workers expect and what payroll software is built for. If your schedule keeps slipping, though, the absence of a frequency statute means your written agreement is your strongest tool.
What to Do If Your Paycheck Is Late or on the Wrong Schedule
A late paycheck is more than an inconvenience. In most states it is a wage violation with a price tag attached. Here is how to handle it.
Step 1: Ask in writing
Email your manager or payroll and ask, plainly, when you will be paid. Keep it factual. A written request does two things: it often gets the check cut quickly, and it creates a dated record if the problem continues.
Step 2: Know the penalties your state imposes
Many states make late pay expensive for the employer:
- California charges a waiting-time penalty on a late final paycheck: the employee’s daily wage for each day the wages are unpaid, up to 30 days. California’s DLSE payday FAQ covers the rule.
- Montana allows a penalty of up to 110% of the unpaid wages.
- New Hampshire authorizes a daily penalty of 10% of the unpaid wages for up to 10 days when wages are willfully withheld.
- New York allows liquidated damages on pay-frequency claims. As of a labor-law amendment effective May 9, 2025, a first violation is capped at 100% of the lost interest on the delayed wages, while repeat violations keep the heavier 100%-of-wages exposure.
Step 3: File a wage claim
If your employer will not fix it, file a wage claim with your state labor department or department of labor. The process is free, you do not need an attorney, and the agency investigates on your behalf. Search for your state’s name plus “wage claim” to find the form.
Step 4: Watch the statute of limitations
You do not have forever. State wage-claim deadlines commonly run two to three years, and the federal FLSA window is two years (three for willful violations). The clock starts when the wages were due, so do not sit on a late-pay problem.
One more thing: an employer cannot legally retaliate against you for raising a pay complaint or filing a claim. If your hours get cut or you are disciplined right after you complain, that retaliation is its own separate violation.
How to Protect Yourself: Keep Your Own Pay Records
Every late-pay claim and every pay-frequency dispute comes down to the same question: can you prove what you worked and when you should have been paid? If your only record is the employer’s payroll system, you are arguing from a weak position.
Log your hours as you work them
A contemporaneous record (hours logged the day you work them, not reconstructed from memory months later) carries far more weight with a labor department than an after-the-fact estimate. Note your start and end times, your breaks, and the date.
Track expected pay against actual pay
Write down what each pay period should produce: regular hours, overtime hours, and the expected gross. When the check arrives, compare it line by line. A pattern of short or late checks is much easier to show when you have the numbers next to the dates.
Keep every pay stub
Save your stubs as PDFs in a folder by year. Stubs show your employer’s stated schedule, which is exactly the evidence you need if that schedule starts slipping or violates your state’s minimum.
This is where a dedicated tool pays off. Timeclock44 lets you log hours and earnings as you go and export a clean timecard, so if a paycheck is late or short you already have the record a wage claim needs. You can also run the numbers with the free calculators, including the overtime calculator, to confirm what each pay period should have produced before you ever talk to payroll.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a federal law on how often employers must pay you?
No. The Fair Labor Standards Act does not set pay frequency. It governs how much you must be paid (minimum wage and overtime) and that wages must be paid, but it leaves the interval to the states. State law sets the minimum frequency, and Alabama, Florida, and South Carolina have no rule at all, so the federal default applies there.
How often is an employer legally required to pay employees?
It depends on the state. The four common schedules are weekly, biweekly, semi-monthly, and monthly. Most states require at least semi-monthly or biweekly pay. A few states default to weekly for some or all workers, and a small number of states have no requirement at all.
Which states require weekly pay?
Rhode Island and Vermont default to weekly pay. New York and New Hampshire require weekly pay for manual workers. Several other states require it for specific job classes. The weekly mandate usually applies to manual-labor roles rather than clerical or salaried positions.
Can my employer pay me monthly?
Only if your state allows it. Most states require at least semi-monthly pay, so a true monthly schedule would violate the law. A few states allow monthly pay for exempt salaried employees. Texas, for example, lets exempt employees be paid monthly while everyone else must be paid at least twice a month.
Can an employer pay you more often than the law requires?
Yes. State rules set the minimum frequency, not a maximum. An employer can always pay more often than the law requires, such as paying weekly when the state only requires semi-monthly pay. The law sets a floor to protect workers from long gaps between checks.
What can I do if my paycheck is late?
Start by contacting your employer in writing and asking when you will be paid. If that does not resolve it, file a wage claim with your state labor department, which is free and does not require a lawyer. Many states impose penalties for late pay, such as California’s waiting-time penalty of up to 30 days’ wages on a late final paycheck.
What is the penalty for paying employees late?
It varies by state. Penalties range from daily-wage waiting-time penalties to percentage penalties on the unpaid amount. California can charge a late final paycheck at the employee’s daily wage for up to 30 days. Montana allows a penalty of up to 110% of unpaid wages, and New Hampshire authorizes 10% of unpaid wages per day for up to 10 days when wages are willfully withheld.
Can my employer change my pay frequency?
Generally yes, with advance notice, as long as the new schedule still meets the state minimum. An employer cannot change pay frequency retroactively or use a schedule change to delay wages you have already earned. Some states, such as Vermont, require written notice to employees before moving from weekly to a longer pay period.
Related Reading
- Regular Rate of Pay: What Counts When Calculating Overtime. Why your regular rate is rarely your hourly wage, and how to audit your stub to the cent.
- More guides on timecards, overtime, and payroll time math. Plain-English explainers for hourly workers.
- Free work-hours and pay calculators. Run your hours, overtime, and expected pay before you talk to payroll.
References
- U.S. Department of Labor: State Payday Requirements. Official DOL summary confirming pay frequency is governed by state law, with a state-by-state table.
- California DLSE: Paydays, Pay Periods, and Final Wages FAQ. California’s pay-frequency rules and the waiting-time penalty for late final wages.
- New York State Department of Labor: Frequency of Pay. The manual-worker weekly-pay rule and the semi-monthly rule for other employees.
- Vermont Department of Labor: Wage and Hour Laws and Rules. Vermont’s weekly-pay default and the written-notice requirement for longer schedules.
- FindLaw: Your Right to a Timely Paycheck. Plain-language overview of payday laws, late-pay remedies, and wage-claim procedures.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a federal law on how often employers must pay you?
No. The Fair Labor Standards Act does not set pay frequency. It governs how much you must be paid (minimum wage and overtime) and that wages must be paid, but it leaves the interval to the states. State law sets the minimum frequency, and Alabama, Florida, and South Carolina have no rule at all, so the federal default applies there.
How often is an employer legally required to pay employees?
It depends on the state. The four common schedules are weekly, biweekly, semi-monthly, and monthly. Most states require at least semi-monthly or biweekly pay. A few states default to weekly for some or all workers, and a small number of states have no requirement at all.
Which states require weekly pay?
Rhode Island and Vermont default to weekly pay. New York and New Hampshire require weekly pay for manual workers. Several other states require it for specific job classes. The weekly mandate usually applies to manual-labor roles rather than clerical or salaried positions.
Can my employer pay me monthly?
Only if your state allows it. Most states require at least semi-monthly pay, so a true monthly schedule would violate the law. A few states allow monthly pay for exempt salaried employees. Texas, for example, lets exempt employees be paid monthly while everyone else must be paid at least twice a month.
Can an employer pay you more often than the law requires?
Yes. State rules set the minimum frequency, not a maximum. An employer can always pay more often than the law requires, such as paying weekly when the state only requires semi-monthly pay. The law sets a floor to protect workers from long gaps between checks.
What can I do if my paycheck is late?
Start by contacting your employer in writing and asking when you will be paid. If that does not resolve it, file a wage claim with your state labor department, which is free and does not require a lawyer. Many states impose penalties for late pay, such as California's waiting-time penalty of up to 30 days' wages on a late final paycheck.
What is the penalty for paying employees late?
It varies by state. Penalties range from daily-wage waiting-time penalties to percentage penalties on the unpaid amount. California can charge a late final paycheck at the employee's daily wage for up to 30 days. Montana allows a penalty of up to 110% of unpaid wages, and New Hampshire authorizes 10% of unpaid wages per day for up to 10 days when wages are willfully withheld.
Can my employer change my pay frequency?
Generally yes, with advance notice, as long as the new schedule still meets the state minimum. An employer cannot change pay frequency retroactively or use a schedule change to delay wages you have already earned. Some states, such as Vermont, require written notice to employees before moving from weekly to a longer pay period.