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How to Correct a Payroll Error: Overpayments, Underpayments, and Off-Cycle Runs

How to Correct a Payroll Error: Overpayments, Underpayments, and Off-Cycle Runs

Flori Meeks Hatchett
Published
Updated
May 11, 2026
December 12, 2024
Cashier ringing up groceries for happy family_Image by drobotdean on Freepik
Table of contents

The four payroll correction types and what each means for your business.

You caught a payroll error. Corrections are a standard part of running payroll. Each correction has a defined path.

Payroll corrections fall into four types: overpayment, underpayment, rate change, and off-cycle run. When you catch the error decides whether you correct it in the same pay period or after you've filed taxes.

What follows covers each adjustment type, the difference between same-period and prior-period corrections, and what each means for your tax filings.

SurePayroll By Paychex automates the tax calculations that corrections depend on: withholding, deposits, and quarterly filings.

The Four Types of Payroll Adjustments

Identify the adjustment type, then follow the correction path.

Data table with column headers
What happened Adjustment type
You paid an employee more than they were owed. Overpayment
You paid less than you owed. Underpayment
A salary or hourly rate changed mid-period. Rate change
A payroll run outside your normal schedule for a bonus, termination pay, or a correction that cannot wait. Off-cycle run

Most corrections can wait for your next scheduled payroll run. When a correction can’t wait, you can run an off-cycle payroll, which pays your employee within days.

An off-cycle payroll run follows the same payroll processing rules as any other run, including standard direct deposit lead times.

Same-Period vs. Prior-Period Corrections

Your next decision turns on one question: Has the payroll run already processed?

Data table with column headers
Did the payroll run process? Correction path
No Same-period. Fix it in the current run.
Yes Prior-period. Correct the pay and adjust payroll tax filing.

When you catch the payroll mistake before the run closes, the correction is straightforward.

You recalculate payroll taxes on the corrected amount, withholding posts to the current pay period at the right rate, and it doesn't impact your quarterly 941 filing. No amendment or additional filing. No need to notify the employee.

Catch it after the run closes, and you have more steps to complete. You notify your employee, correct their pay, and update your tax liabilities to match the correction.

You also correct the payroll record, so you recalculate withholding, FICA (Social Security and Medicare tax), and any state or local tax on the corrected gross.

How to Handle Overpayment

Recovery is a standard operational step with three practical options: deduct from the next paycheck, set up a payment plan, or accept a lump-sum repayment.

A single-paycheck deduction is fast but creates cash flow pressure for your employee. A payment plan keeps take-home pay stable. A lump sum is the most direct option when your employee agrees.

Federal law sets the baseline: An overpayment recovery cannot push your employee's pay below the federal minimum wage. State laws often require written consent and cap how much you can recover per pay period. Check the recovery rules in your state.

If the overpayment involves an exempt employee, handle the recovery carefully. An improper deduction can jeopardize the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) exemption itself.

Before you complete the adjustment, talk with your employee. When you provide a clear explanation of the error, the amount, and the recovery approach, you keep the process transparent and reduce the chance of a dispute.

Your final step is to keep a record of the overpayment, the recovery method, and your employee's acknowledgment. Consistent record-keeping helps protect you if your employee questions the deduction later or if a regulator reviews your payroll.

Example: Catching an Overpayment in the Same Tax Year

A three-person professional services firm in Austin overpays a nonexempt employee by $480 on a biweekly run. The owner entered 52 hours when the correct total was 40 at a $30 regular rate, which pushed both gross pay and overtime pay higher than they should have been.

The owner catches it two days after payday, emails the employee, confirms a $480 adjustment on the next run with written acknowledgment, and processes the deduction in-house.

Same tax year, no W-2 impact, no filings to amend.

How to Handle Underpayment

If you made an underpayment, you can correct it in the next scheduled run or make an off-cycle payment now.

Two factors shape your response. First, size. An $800 missed overtime payment affects your employee more than a $40 miscount on time tracking.

Second, timing. Your employee would rather see the correction land in two days through an off-cycle payment than wait two weeks for the next scheduled run. Run an off-cycle payment when the underpayment is significant or the wait would erode employee trust.

You treat the corrected paycheck the same way you would any standard run for tax purposes.

You apply withholding to the corrected amount in whichever run you use. You correct the payroll record, so you recalculate withholding, FICA, and any state or local tax on the corrected gross.

Tip: Use the free payroll calculators from SurePayroll to model correction amounts before you process them so you can estimate what the net pay adjustment will be.

See the free calculators

Notify your employee before the correction runs, not after. Confirm the amount and explain the timing.

Hourly teams carry one additional consideration. An overtime underpayment correction has to reflect the correct overtime rate for nonexempt employees under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), not only the missing hours. Correct the rate, not just the time.

Example: Running an Off-Cycle Payment for Missed Overtime

A four-person firm in Denver misses eight hours of overtime pay for a nonexempt employee, totaling $360 in back pay at a $30 regular rate and $45 overtime rate. The next scheduled run is 10 days away. The owner processes a payment two days after payday, notifies the employee that morning, and adds the correction to the payroll records.

Mid-Period Rate Changes and Off-Cycle Runs

You have more control over how and when you correct pay through a mid-period rate change or an off-cycle payroll run.

Mid-Period Rate Change

A mid-period rate change occurs when a new pay rate, often a raise, takes effect before the current pay period closes. When that happens, the payroll calculation splits: gross at the old rate for the portion of the pay period before the change, gross at the new rate for the portion after, taxes calculated on the combined total.

That math is doable manually, but prone to miscalculations. The most common mistake is applying the wrong rate to overtime hours that fall in the same workweek as the rate change. When a mixed-rate workweek occurs, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires employers to calculate overtime against a weighted average of the two rates, not just the new rate.

An automated payroll service can help handle the split. You enter the new rate and its effective date, and the payroll system calculates consistently across the pay period.

Off-Cycle Runs

Use an off-cycle payroll run for a bonus, termination pay, or a correction that can't wait for the next scheduled run.

Off-cycle runs carry the same direct deposit lead time as any scheduled run. Manual payroll timing depends on your bank and payment method.

Through an automated payroll management service, standard direct deposit lead time is often two business days. Same-day and next-day options may be available depending on your provider or plan.

Some payroll providers charge a per-run fee that turns every off-cycle run into an added cost. SurePayroll By Paychex supports unlimited payroll runs with no additional fees, so you can run payroll when you need to without paying more.

What Payroll Corrections Mean for Your Tax Filings

Most corrections have a tax compliance implication. Filing deadlines vary by form and quarter, so you act quickly when you catch an error.

If you catch an error after you processed your payroll run and you already filed your Form 941, you file a 941-X amendment for the affected quarter, document the correction, and keep the dated record in your files. The sequence is to correct the pay, adjust the tax filing, document the change.

If the correction affects a W-2 you already issued, file a W-2c for the affected employee and submit a W-3c to the IRS.

Missed deadlines trigger financial penalties. The IRS penalty schedule starts at 2% for tax deposits one to five days late and scales to 15% for amounts unpaid more than 10 days after first IRS notice.

Wage-and-hour enforcement is separate. The Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division recovered more than $259 million in back wages for nearly 177,000 employees in fiscal year 2025.

“SurePayroll takes care of the growing variety of state and federal forms and withholdings on both the employer and employee sides. The avoided stress alone justifies the fee.”

— Martin, Trustpilot review

Running Payroll Corrections with Confidence

You know the adjustment type, the timing, and what it means for your tax filings, so you can run payroll corrections and keep your records organized.

Manual corrections work when the math is simple. When a correction crosses periods, touches multiple tax forms, or involves a mid-period rate change, automation prevents the original mistake from becoming a filing mistake.

SurePayroll calculates tax adjustments automatically, withholding, FICA, and quarterly deposits update without rebuilding the math. Run payroll in minutes, from any device. Taxes filed. Direct deposit sent. Done.

Get started today.

Flori Meeks Hatchett
About Flori Meeks Hatchett

Flori Meeks Hatchett is a small business owner and B2B writer/editor with more than 15 years of experience crafting thought-leadership and marketing content. She works with clients across finance, education, HR, energy, retail, hospitality, and nonprofit sectors. Known for her ability to distill complex ideas into accessible narratives, Flori creates blogs, case studies, and strategic content that helps brands build trust and authority with their audiences.

This content is for educational purposes only, is not intended to provide specific legal advice, and should not be used as a substitute for the legal advice of a qualified attorney or other professional. The information may not reflect the most current legal developments, may be changed without notice and is not guaranteed to be complete, correct, or up to date

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a payroll correction and an off-cycle payroll run?

A payroll correction is the adjustment itself, whether in response to an overpayment, underpayment, or rate change. An off-cycle payroll, a payroll run outside your normal schedule, is one way to execute that correction. You can also correct inside the next scheduled run if timing allows.

What's the deadline for filing a 941-X?

The IRS allows you to file a 941-X within three years of the original return filing date. That window gives you time to catch errors across multiple quarters, but it does not extend the deadlines for the corrected tax deposits.

If a 941-X results in additional tax due, interest and penalties accrue from the original due date, so file as soon as you catch the error.

What if an employee has already left the company when I discover an overpayment?

A former employee overpayment cannot come out of a future paycheck, so you coordinate recovery directly. Send a written request that documents the payroll mistake, the amount, and the proposed repayment timeline.

From there, you can offer a repayment agreement or pursue a collections path allowed under your state's wage recovery laws. Keep a dated record of every communication for your files.

Does running an off-cycle payroll affect my tax filings?

No. An off-cycle run follows the same tax rules as a scheduled run. Tax withholding, Social Security, state tax, and local tax apply the same way across both, whether you're handling the calculations yourself or outsourcing them to a payroll service. Your quarterly Form 941 captures every run in the quarter, scheduled or off-cycle.

How do I handle a payroll correction for a contractor?

An independent contractor correction runs outside your payroll cycle. Issue a corrected payment, update your records, and if the tax year has closed, file a corrected 1099-NEC. If the underlying issue is misclassification rather than a payment error, consult a tax professional or CPA.

When should I involve my accountant in a payroll correction?

Most small businesses can handle a same-period overpayment recovery without an accountant. Involve your CPA when the correction crosses a tax year, involves multiple employees, raises questions about misclassifying a worker, or affects a W-2 already issued. Each of these payroll issues moves the correction into territory where a specialist's eye is worth the call.

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