Pay Schedules Explained: How and When Employees Are Paid

Overview

A Pay Schedule defines when employees are paid and how payroll is structured over time.

In Metarelic People, pay schedules are foundational. Every payroll run, statutory calculation, and payslip is governed by a pay schedule.

This guide explains:

  • What a pay schedule is (and is not)

  • How different schedules work

  • Why pay amounts may differ per payslip

  • How Metarelic People ensures annual accuracy and compliance

📌 If you are looking for how much an employee earns, see
Rates of Pay & Compensation in Metarelic People.

1. What Is a Pay Schedule?

A Pay Schedule defines the time structure of payroll.

It controls:

  • How often payroll runs

  • Which dates each payroll covers

  • When employees are paid

  • How annual pay is divided

  • When statutory deductions are applied

A pay schedule does not define:

  • Salary amount

  • Hourly rate

  • Contract value

  • Allowances

Think of the pay schedule as the calendar and rhythm of payroll.

2. Core Components of a Pay Schedule

Every pay schedule in Metarelic People includes the following components:

2.1 Payroll Frequency

How often does payroll run?

Frequency

Meaning

Payrolls per Year

Weekly

Every 7 days

52

Bi-Weekly

Every 14 days

26

Semi-Monthly

Twice per month

24

Monthly

Once per month

12

2.2 Pay Period

The date range covered by a payroll.

Examples:

  • Weekly: Monday → Sunday

  • Semi-Monthly: 1st–15th, 16th–end of month

  • Monthly: 1st–last day of month

Only earnings, leave, and adjustments within the pay period are included in that payroll.

2.3 Pay Date

The actual date employees receive payment.

The pay date may be:

  • The same as the pay period end

  • A fixed date (e.g. 25th of each month)

  • Offset by a processing buffer (e.g. 3–5 days after period end)

Metarelic People intentionally separates:

  • Pay Period End

  • Pay Date

This supports approvals, banking timelines, and compliance.

2.4 Annualization Factor

The annualization factor ensures total yearly pay remains correct, regardless of frequency.

Schedule

Annual Factor

Weekly

52

Bi-Weekly

26

Semi-Monthly

24

Monthly

12

This factor is used for:

  • Salary distribution

  • Tax calculations

  • NIS / pension limits

  • End-of-year reporting

2.5 Rounding & Precision Rules

Some schedules do not divide evenly.

Metarelic People:

  • Calculates using high precision

  • Rounds only at payslip level

  • Ensures annual totals always reconcile

3. Supported Pay Schedules (Detailed)

3.1 Weekly Pay Schedule

Best for: hourly, shift-based, casual workers

Characteristics

  • 52 payrolls per year

  • Short pay periods

  • Highly responsive to attendance changes

Considerations

  • Higher administrative workload

  • More payslips per employee

3.2 Bi-Weekly Pay Schedule

Best for: operational teams, mixed workforces

Critical clarification

Bi-weekly does not mean twice per month.

Characteristics

  • Paid every 14 days

  • 26 payrolls per year

  • Two months each year will have three payrolls

Employees may notice:

  • Some months have higher total pay

  • Other months have lower totals

This is normal and correct — the annual total remains unchanged.

3.3 Semi-Monthly Pay Schedule

Best for: salaried staff, finance-driven organisations

Characteristics

  • Fixed periods: 1st–15th, 16th–end

  • Always two payrolls per month

  • 24 payrolls per year

Benefits

  • Predictable cash flow

  • Consistent pay dates

  • Easier reconciliation

3.4 Monthly Pay Schedule

Best for: senior staff, professionals, consultants

Characteristics

  • One payroll per month

  • Longest pay period

  • Simplest structure

Considerations

  • Less responsive to mid-month changes

  • Requires strong cash-flow planning

4. Why Payslip Amounts May Differ

A common misconception:

“If someone earns $3,000 per month, they should receive $3,000 on every payslip.”

This is not always true.

The rate of pay defines how much someone earns.
The pay schedule defines how that amount is distributed.

Example:

  • Monthly rate: $3,000

  • Pay schedule: Bi-Weekly

Annualized:

  • $3,000 × 12 = $36,000

  • $36,000 ÷ 26 ≈ $1,384.62 per payroll

Some months:

  • 2 pays ≈ $2,769.24

  • 3 pays ≈ $4,153.86

The annual total is always correct.

5. Proration and Partial Periods

Pay schedules control how partial periods are calculated when:

  • An employee starts mid-period

  • An employee leaves mid-period

  • A rate or schedule change

Example:

  • Monthly schedule

  • $3,000 monthly rate

  • Employee starts on day 16 of a 30-day month

Calculation:

  • $3,000 ÷ 30 × 15 = $1,500

6. Pay Schedules and Statutory Compliance

Pay schedules directly affect:

  • Tax timing

  • NIS / social security contributions

  • Contribution caps

  • Reporting periods

Metarelic People ensures:

  • Contributions are calculated per payroll period

  • Annual limits are respected

  • Reports align with statutory calendars

7. Key Takeaway

Pay Schedules define when and how payroll runs.
They do not define how much employees earn.