The numbers are staggering: The IRS penalizes approximately one-third of all employers each year for payroll errors — totaling roughly $7 billion in penalties. Most of these mistakes are completely avoidable.
Running payroll seems straightforward: calculate hours, withhold taxes, cut checks. But the details matter enormously, and small errors can snowball into five- and six-figure penalties. Here are the five most expensive payroll mistakes we see — and how to make sure they never happen to your business.
Mistake #1: Misclassifying Employees as Independent Contractors
This is the single most expensive payroll mistake a business can make. When you classify a worker as a 1099 independent contractor instead of a W-2 employee, you avoid paying employer payroll taxes, providing benefits, and covering workers' compensation. That's exactly why the IRS watches for it so aggressively.
What it costs you
- 1.5% of all wages paid to the misclassified worker
- 40% of the employee's share of FICA that should have been withheld
- 100% of the employer's share of FICA that should have been paid
- Back payments for overtime, benefits, and workers' comp
- State penalties that vary but can be equally severe
Real example: A Florida construction company classified 15 drywall installers as 1099 contractors. After an audit, they owed $287,000 in back taxes, penalties, and interest — plus $142,000 in workers' compensation premiums. Total cost: $429,000.
How to avoid it
Use the IRS 20-factor test (or the simplified ABC test used by many states). The key question: do you control how the work is done, or just what work is done? If you set the worker's hours, provide their tools, and they work exclusively for you — that's an employee, not a contractor. When in doubt, classify as an employee. The penalties for under-classification are far worse than the cost of proper employment.
Mistake #2: Missing Payroll Tax Deadlines
The IRS doesn't care if you forgot, if your accountant dropped the ball, or if your software glitched. Late payroll tax deposits and filings trigger automatic penalties that compound quickly.
The penalty schedule
| How Late | Penalty Rate |
|---|---|
| 1–5 days | 2% |
| 6–15 days | 5% |
| 16+ days | 10% |
| 10+ days after IRS notice | 15% |
And that's just the deposit penalty. Late filing of Form 941 adds another 5% per month of unpaid tax, up to 25%. Plus interest compounds daily.
How to avoid it
Use a payroll system that automatically calculates and deposits taxes on schedule. Modern platforms like iSolved process tax payments the same day as payroll, eliminating the risk of missed deadlines. If you're manually tracking deadlines with a calendar, you're one sick day away from a penalty.
Mistake #3: Incorrect Overtime Calculations
Overtime errors are more common than most business owners realize. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires overtime pay at 1.5x the regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek. But "regular rate" isn't always what you think it is.
Common overtime calculation errors
- Excluding non-discretionary bonuses from the regular rate (required by FLSA)
- Averaging hours across two weeks for biweekly pay periods (illegal — each week stands alone)
- Misapplying salary exemptions — the 2026 salary threshold is $58,656/year ($1,128/week)
- Forgetting state-specific rules — California requires daily overtime after 8 hours
- Not paying for "off the clock" work — answering emails, setup time, etc.
⚠️ 2026 update: The new OBBBA (One Big Beautiful Bill Act) adds complexity to overtime calculations. The overtime tax deduction is for employees — but employers must still calculate and pay overtime at 1.5x. The deduction affects withholding, not the obligation to pay. Read our OBBBA guide.
How to avoid it
Use a time & attendance system integrated with your payroll. The software should automatically flag overtime, include required earnings in the regular rate calculation, and apply state-specific rules. Manual timesheets + manual payroll = guaranteed errors.
Mistake #4: Not Keeping Proper Records
The FLSA requires employers to keep payroll records for at least 3 years. But in practice, you should keep them for at least 7 years because the IRS can audit up to 6 years back in cases of substantial underreporting.
What you must keep
- Employee name, address, SSN, date of birth
- Hours worked each day and each week
- Regular rate of pay and basis (hourly, salary, piece rate)
- Total overtime pay per week
- All deductions and additions to wages
- Total wages paid each pay period
- Pay period dates and payment dates
- W-4 and I-9 forms
If the IRS or Department of Labor audits you and you can't produce records, the burden of proof shifts to you. Employees' claims are taken at face value when employers can't provide documentation. That's how a single overtime claim becomes a six-figure settlement.
How to avoid it
Use a cloud-based payroll system that automatically stores all records digitally. Modern platforms retain records indefinitely and make them instantly searchable. If your records are in a filing cabinet or a shoebox, you're at risk.
Mistake #5: DIY Multi-State Payroll
If you have remote employees, traveling workers, or offices in multiple states, payroll complexity multiplies exponentially. Each state has its own:
- Income tax rates and withholding tables
- Unemployment tax rates and wage bases
- Workers' compensation requirements
- Wage and hour laws (minimum wage, overtime rules, meal breaks)
- New hire reporting deadlines
- Pay frequency requirements
Georgia has a flat 5.39% income tax. Florida has no income tax at all. Indiana has a flat rate plus county taxes. If you're processing multi-state payroll manually or with a basic platform, errors are nearly inevitable.
How to avoid it
Use a payroll platform that handles multi-state compliance automatically. The system should apply the correct tax tables for each employee's work state (not just home state), file returns in every required jurisdiction, and update rates automatically when they change.
The Bottom Line
Payroll errors are expensive, and they're almost always avoidable. The pattern across all five mistakes is the same: manual processes create risk; automation eliminates it.
If you're currently handling payroll with spreadsheets, a basic service, or — worst of all — doing it yourself in QuickBooks, you're not saving money. You're accumulating risk that compounds with every pay period.
FAQ
What is the penalty for misclassifying an employee as a 1099 contractor?
The IRS can assess 1.5% of wages paid, 40% of the employee's FICA share, 100% of the employer's FICA share, plus interest and potential fraud penalties. Total penalties can exceed $50,000 per misclassified worker in severe cases.
What happens if you file payroll taxes late?
Late deposit penalties range from 2% (1-5 days late) to 15% (10+ days after IRS notice). Late filing of Form 941 adds 5% per month of unpaid tax, up to 25%. Interest compounds daily on top of these penalties.
How much do payroll errors cost small businesses?
The IRS estimates that one-third of employers make payroll errors each year. The average small business payroll error costs $845–$5,000 to correct, before penalties and interest.
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BlueWave HR + iSolved People Cloud handles payroll processing, tax filings, compliance tracking, and multi-state calculations automatically. No manual work, no missed deadlines, no surprises.
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