What gross pay means in payroll, where it appears in the workflow, and how it differs from taxable wages and net pay.
Gross pay is the employee’s total earnings for the pay period before deductions, withholding, or other reductions are taken out.
It is the starting point for gross-to-net payroll math. Payroll first determines what the employee earned, then subtracts taxes, deductions, and other required amounts to arrive at net pay. Because of that, gross pay is often the first figure payroll staff review when something on a paycheck looks wrong.
Gross pay matters because it tells you what the employee earned before payroll reductions change the final payment amount. It also feeds several later payroll steps, including:
If someone confuses gross pay with net pay, they can misread the entire paycheck. A pay stub may show a healthy gross amount while the deposited amount is much lower because of withholding, benefits, retirement contributions, or garnishments.
Gross pay appears after payroll has finished collecting the earnings inputs for the period. Those inputs may include regular pay, overtime, commissions, bonuses, shift premiums, or retroactive pay. Once those items are totalled, payroll has the gross pay figure for that run.
In practice, gross pay shows up in several places:
Gross pay can include more than base compensation. A payroll run might contain regular wages, overtime pay, a one-time bonus, or a retro adjustment. That is why gross pay often changes from one pay period to the next even when the employee’s base rate stayed the same.
An hourly employee works 80 regular hours at $25 per hour, 4 overtime hours at $37.50 per hour, and receives a $100 shift-premium adjustment.
$2,000$150$100$2,250That $2,250 is the employee’s gross pay. Payroll still has to apply deductions and withholding after that, but gross pay does not change just because the employee’s net pay ends up lower.
Gross pay is often confused with nearby payroll terms:
$2,000 before taxes and deductions, is $2,000 gross pay or net pay? It is gross pay because payroll has not yet subtracted reductions from it.