What a payroll audit trail means, why it matters to payroll records, and how it supports review and accountability.
A payroll audit trail is the record of what changed in payroll, when it changed, and how the change moved through the payroll process.
From a payroll perspective, the audit trail matters because payroll should not rely only on final numbers. The employer also needs a defensible record of how those numbers were created, reviewed, adjusted, and approved.
Payroll audit trail matters because it affects:
It is one of the most important control concepts in payroll because a clean end result is not enough if no one can explain how payroll got there.
The audit trail appears across the entire payroll process rather than at only one step. In practice, payroll may rely on the trail to show:
That makes the audit trail a cross-cutting payroll-control concept rather than a single report.
Payroll identifies a missed earnings item, creates an adjustment, reviews it, and issues a correction payment.
The payroll audit trail shows the original issue, the adjustment, the approval, and the correction path. That trail helps payroll explain exactly how the final result was reached.
Payroll audit trail is often confused with: