Payroll Remittance

What payroll remittance means, how it fits into employer payroll duties, and why it follows the payroll run rather than replacing it.

Payroll Remittance

Payroll remittance is the employer’s act of sending out payroll-related amounts owed after a payroll run creates those obligations.

In payroll, remittance is the follow-up step that turns recorded payroll obligations into actual outgoing payments to the proper destination. It is not the same thing as calculating payroll, and it is not the same thing as paying employees their net pay.

Why Payroll Remittance Matters

Payroll remittance matters because it affects:

  • whether payroll obligations are cleared on time
  • employer payroll compliance and recordkeeping
  • the distinction between payroll calculation and payroll follow-through
  • payroll cash movement after employees have already been paid

It is one of the clearest examples of how payroll continues after the paycheck is issued. A finished payroll run can still leave important remittance work to complete.

Where It Appears In Payroll Workflow

Payroll remittance happens after payroll has created the relevant liabilities. In practice, payroll teams may:

  • review the payroll register and related liability records
  • identify the amounts that must be remitted
  • send the required payments through the employer’s remittance process
  • record that the payroll obligations have been satisfied

That means payroll remittance sits after payroll calculation but before the payroll cycle is fully closed from the employer’s side.

Simple Example

After employees receive their payroll payments, the employer still has payroll-related amounts that must be sent out through the required remittance process.

When payroll completes those outgoing payments and records them, that is payroll remittance. The work happens because the payroll run created obligations beyond the employee pay itself.

Common Confusion

Payroll remittance is often confused with:

  • Payroll liability, which is the amount owed before it is remitted
  • Employer payroll tax, which is one kind of obligation that may require remittance
  • Direct deposit, which sends money to employees rather than satisfying the employer’s follow-up payroll obligations
  • Payroll reconciliation, which checks the records rather than sending the money out

Knowledge Check

  1. Does payroll remittance happen after the payroll run creates obligations? Yes. It is a follow-up step after payroll calculation.
  2. Is payroll remittance the same as paying employees their net pay? No. It covers the employer’s outgoing payroll obligations beyond employee pay.
  3. Why does payroll remittance matter? It is how the employer clears payroll amounts that were created during the run.