What a missed punch means, why it matters before payroll, and how one missing clock event can turn into a pay problem.
A missed punch is a timekeeping problem where an expected clock-in or clock-out entry is missing from the time record.
From a payroll perspective, it matters because missing punch data can make the employee’s worked hours unclear. Payroll may not know what should be paid until the issue is corrected or clarified.
Missed punch matters because it affects:
It is one of the most common input-side payroll problems because a small missing time event can have a direct effect on earnings. A missed punch can also hide overtime, meal-break treatment, or attendance problems if no one reviews it before payroll.
Missed punch appears during time review before payroll is finalized. In practice, payroll or the manager may:
That makes missed punch a time-entry problem that can become a payroll problem if not handled quickly. Payroll may not be the team that fixes the punch directly, but payroll feels the impact if the time record stays incomplete.
An employee clocks in for the day but forgets to clock out before leaving.
The missing clock-out creates a missed punch. Payroll cannot rely on the hours until the time record is corrected and approved, so the issue has to be resolved before the run is finalized. If the correction arrives after cutoff, payroll may need to pay the missing time later as an adjustment.
Missed punch is often confused with: