My Pay Rights

Final paycheck deadline calculator

When your employer must pay your final wages after you leave — by US state and whether you quit or were let go.

On your last day

When your final paycheck is due (California, let go / fired)

State
California
How you left
Let go / fired
Final pay due
On your last day
  • In California, your final paycheck after you are let go is due: on your last day.
  • Deadlines can depend on a written demand or the type of employer — confirm the detail with your state labor office.

When your final paycheck is legally due

There is no single federal deadline for a final paycheck in the United States. Instead each state sets its own rule, and two factors decide it: which state you worked in, and whether you quit or were let go. This tool pairs those two inputs to show the deadline that applies to you, rather than a vague "it depends".

The strictest states require payment the moment employment ends. California and Massachusetts, for instance, require a fired employee's full final wages on their last day. Many states are more relaxed and allow until the next regular payday, and a handful have no specific statute at all — in which case your employer's normal pay schedule governs. Several states also impose waiting-time penalties: extra pay for every day the final wages are late, which gives the deadline real teeth.

Note that whether your final pay must include unused vacation is a separate question, decided by your state's PTO payout rules rather than its paycheck-timing law. If your deadline passes without payment, your state labor office is the place to file a wage claim. Download the PDF summary to keep a dated record of the rule that applied when you left.

Frequently asked questions

When does my employer have to give me my final paycheck?

It depends on your state and how you left. Some states require payment immediately on termination — California, for example, requires final wages on your last day if you are fired. Others allow until the next regular payday. Select your state above to see the rule.

Is the deadline different if I quit versus being fired?

Often, yes. Many states set a faster deadline when an employer ends the job than when an employee resigns. In California a fired employee must be paid immediately, while someone who quits without notice is paid within 72 hours.

What if my state has no specific law?

A few states (such as Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Mississippi) have no specific final-paycheck statute. In those states, final wages generally follow your employer's normal pay schedule — usually the next regular payday. This tool covers all 50 states and DC.

Does my final paycheck include unused PTO?

That is a separate question governed by your state's PTO payout rules. Some states treat earned vacation as wages that must be paid out, while others leave it to employer policy. Check a PTO payout calculator for your state.

What can I do if my final paycheck is late?

You can file a wage claim with your state labor office. Some states impose 'waiting-time penalties' — additional pay for each day the final wages are late — which can add up quickly for a missed deadline.

Can my employer withhold my final paycheck?

Generally no. You must be paid for all hours worked, even if you have not returned equipment or a uniform. Deductions are tightly restricted, so withholding an entire final paycheck is usually unlawful.

Source: U.S. DOL — State Labor Offices