Rates of Pay & Compensation in Metarelic People
How Employee Earnings Are Defined and Calculated
A Rate of Pay defines how much an employee earns under their employment agreement.
This guide explains:
What a rate of pay is
Common rate types
How rates interact with pay schedules
Why payslip amounts may differ from contract figures
π If you are looking for when employees are paid, see
Pay Schedules in Metarelic People (Guide 1).
1. What Is a Rate of Pay?
A Rate of Pay is the contractual earning amount agreed between employer and employee.
Examples:
$3,000 per month
$36,000 per year
$750 per week
$18 per hour
The rate of pay answers:
βHow much does this employee earn?β
It does not determine:
Payroll frequency
Pay dates
How often payment occurs
2. Common Types of Rates of Pay
2.1 Monthly Rate
Most common for salaried employees.
Example:
$3,000 per month
Annual equivalent: $36,000
2.2 Annual Rate
Often used in contracts and senior roles.
Example:
$36,000 per year
Converted internally for payroll distribution
2.3 Weekly Rate
Common for operational and manual roles.
Example:
$750 per week
Annual equivalent: $39,000
2.4 Hourly Rate
Used where pay depends on hours worked.
Example:
$18 per hour
Pay varies per payroll based on attendance
3. Rate of Pay vs Payslip Amount (Critical Concept)
The rate of pay is not the payslip amount.
Payslip amounts depend on:
Rate of pay
Pay schedule
Pay period length
Proration (if applicable)
Example:
Rate: $3,000 per month
Schedule: Semi-Monthly
Payslip:
$1,500 per payroll
Two payrolls per month
Total remains $3,000
4. Annualization: How Metarelic People Ensures Accuracy
Metarelic People always works from annualized earnings to ensure fairness and compliance.
Example:
$3,000 per month β $36,000 annually
Distributed across the assigned pay schedule
This ensures:
Correct tax calculations
Accurate NIS contributions
Clean year-end reporting
5. Allowances, Adjustments, and Components
In addition to base pay, compensation may include:
Allowances
Bonuses
Overtime
One-off adjustments
Each component may:
Be recurring or one-time
Be taxable or non-taxable
Follow different proration rules
These are added on top of the base rate of pay.
6. Rate Changes and Effective Dates
When a rate changes:
The new rate applies from its effective date
Payrolls before the date remain unchanged
Payrolls after the date use the new rate
Metarelic People automatically:
Handles partial periods
Prevents double payment
Maintains audit history
7. Common Misunderstandings
8. Key Takeaway
Rates of Pay define how much an employee earns.
Pay Schedules define how that amount is paid over time.