What sick pay means in payroll, how it appears in the payroll process, and how it differs from ordinary regular pay.
Sick pay is payroll compensation paid for qualifying illness-related absence under the employer’s payroll setup or the applicable payroll rules.
From a payroll perspective, the important point is that the employee is receiving pay connected to an illness-related absence rather than ordinary hours worked. Payroll therefore needs to identify the correct amount, timing, and pay-stub treatment for that absence.
Sick pay matters because it affects:
It also matters because it is easy to confuse sick pay with PTO, disability-related payments, or ordinary regular pay. Payroll should make the line-item treatment clear.
Sick pay appears after the leave-related absence has been approved or identified for payroll. In practice, payroll may:
This keeps the paycheck easier to understand when the employee’s period included a mix of worked hours and paid absence.
An employee misses two workdays because of illness during a biweekly payroll period.
The pay stub may show:
$1,760$176The separate line helps explain why the employee still received pay for time not worked in the ordinary way.
Sick pay is often confused with: