Timekeeping Exception

What a timekeeping exception means, why it matters before payroll, and how unresolved time issues affect approval and pay accuracy.

Timekeeping Exception

A timekeeping exception is an unusual or unresolved issue in time records that needs review before payroll can rely on the reported hours.

From a payroll perspective, timekeeping exceptions matter because payroll accuracy starts with accurate time. If the time record contains a problem, payroll may calculate the wrong earnings even if everything else in the run is configured correctly.

Why Timekeeping Exception Matters

Timekeeping exception matters because it affects:

  • timesheet approval
  • payroll accuracy
  • whether hours can be included by payroll cutoff
  • the need for later payroll adjustments

It is especially important because a timekeeping issue can quietly turn into a paycheck issue if payroll does not catch it in time. Timekeeping exceptions are usually upstream problems, but they can still become pay, overtime, and compliance issues if they survive into payroll.

Where It Appears In Payroll Workflow

Timekeeping exception appears before payroll is finalized, usually during the time review stage. In practice, payroll or managers may flag:

  • missing punches or missing hours
  • unusual work patterns
  • incomplete approvals
  • time entries that do not fit expected rules

Once flagged, the exception must usually be resolved before the time record is fully approved for payroll. Some systems surface these issues automatically, while others rely on supervisor review and payroll follow-up.

Short Practical Example

An employee’s timecard is missing one clock-out event, leaving the daily hours unclear.

Payroll or the manager flags the issue as a timekeeping exception. Until it is resolved, the time record may not be ready for the current payroll run. The timekeeping exception is the broader problem category, while the missed punch is the specific issue inside it.

Common Confusion

Timekeeping exception is often confused with:

  • Payroll exception, which is the broader payroll-side condition that may be discovered later
  • Timesheet approval, which is the approval step that may be blocked by the exception
  • Payroll adjustment, which may be needed if the exception is resolved too late
  • Timecard, which is the record that contains the problem rather than the problem itself

Knowledge Check

  1. Does a timekeeping exception usually need review before payroll can rely on the time record? Yes. That is why the exception matters.
  2. Can a timekeeping exception lead to a late payroll correction? Yes. If it is resolved late, payroll may need an adjustment.
  3. Is a timekeeping exception the same as the timecard itself? No. It is the issue found inside or around the time record.