What a retention bonus means in payroll, when it appears, and how it differs from ordinary ongoing pay.
A retention bonus is extra payroll compensation paid in connection with keeping an employee through a specified period or event rather than as ordinary recurring pay.
From a payroll perspective, retention bonus matters because it is a non-routine earning type that payroll needs to keep distinct from normal wages or salary. The employee should be able to see that the extra amount came from a special retention-related payment.
Retention bonus matters because it affects:
It matters because special-pay lines can create unusual paycheck results and deserve clear payroll labeling.
Retention bonus appears after the employer approves the retention-related payment. In practice, payroll may:
That makes retention bonus a specific special-earnings category inside payroll.
An employer pays a bonus after an employee remains through a key business period.
Payroll processes that amount as a retention bonus rather than as ordinary regular pay, helping the employee and payroll reviewer understand why the paycheck total increased.
Retention bonus is often confused with: