What a pay stub is, what it shows, and how it helps payroll readers trace earnings, deductions, and net pay for one period.
A pay stub is the employee-facing payroll record that shows how pay for one payroll period was calculated.
It usually lists earnings, deductions, withholding, and the final net-pay amount. Some employers call it an earnings statement or payslip, but the practical job is the same: explain how payroll got from time, salary, or adjustments to the amount actually paid.
A pay stub matters because it gives employees and payroll staff a line-by-line explanation of the payroll result. It helps answer questions like:
Without a clear pay stub, gross pay and net pay are easy to confuse. It is also much harder to spot problems in hours, rates, deductions, withholding, or adjustments if the payroll result is shown without a supporting breakdown.
The pay stub is usually created near the end of the payroll process, after earnings and reductions have already been calculated and before or at the same time payment is released. It commonly includes sections such as:
The exact layout varies by payroll system, but those are the common building blocks. Payroll teams often review the pay stub alongside the payroll register to confirm that employee-level detail matches the run totals and that unusual items are labeled correctly.
An employee opens a pay stub and sees:
$2,000$150$2,150$340$160$1,650The pay stub shows not only what was paid, but how payroll got there. If the employee expected a larger deposit, the stub is usually the first place to check whether the difference came from overtime, a one-time deduction, tax withholding, or a year-to-date change.
A pay stub is not the same thing as: