Oregon's final paycheck law is unambiguous and strictly enforced: when employment ends, the clock starts immediately. Under ORS 652.140, an employer who involuntarily terminates an employee must provide the final paycheck by the end of the next business day — one of the tightest deadlines in the country. Employees who resign face slightly longer timelines, but employers who miss them face a statutory penalty of up to 30 days of wages. This guide covers every scenario, every deduction rule, and exactly what happens when an Oregon employer gets the final paycheck wrong.
Final Paycheck Timing Rules Under ORS 652.140
Oregon law establishes different deadlines depending on how the employment relationship ended. There is no single "Oregon final paycheck due date" — it depends on who ended the relationship and with how much notice.
| Termination scenario | Final paycheck due |
|---|---|
| Employer fires, lays off, or reduces hours to zero | End of the next business day |
| Employee resigns with 48+ hours written notice | Employee's last day of work |
| Employee resigns with less than 48 hours notice (or no notice) | Within 5 business days OR the next regular payday, whichever comes first |
| Employee is on a fixed-term contract that expires | End of the next business day |
"Business day" means any day other than Saturday, Sunday, or a state or federal holiday. If an employee is fired on Friday at 5 PM, the final paycheck is due by the close of business the following Monday (or Tuesday if Monday is a holiday).

Oregon's rule for involuntary terminations is notably stricter than most states. New Jersey final paycheck law requires payment by the next regular payday — which could be one or two weeks away. Oregon gives employers one business day. The difference matters for workers who depend on those wages immediately.
What Must Be Included in the Final Paycheck
A final paycheck in Oregon must include all wages earned and unpaid up through the final day of employment. This is broader than it sounds:
Earned Wages
All regular pay, overtime, and piece-rate wages earned through the last day of work must be included. An employer cannot defer any portion of earned wages to the next pay cycle after termination — everything earned is due on the final paycheck timeline.
Commissions and Bonuses
If a commission or bonus was earned before termination — meaning the employee completed all conditions required to be entitled to it — it must be included in the final paycheck. A salesperson who closed a deal before being fired is entitled to the commission even if it would not normally be paid until after the termination date.
If the commission or bonus was not yet earned (e.g., depends on future performance, customer payment, or contingencies not yet met), the employer may dispute its inclusion. But employers cannot create post-termination "conditions" that did not exist in the original compensation agreement to avoid paying earned commissions.
Accrued Vacation Pay
Oregon does not require employers to provide paid vacation, but if an employer's policy grants vacation as earned compensation — and treats unused vacation as wages — then accrued, unused vacation pay must be included in the final paycheck. This is determined by the employer's written policy. If the policy says "accrued vacation is forfeited upon resignation," that forfeiture may be enforceable only if it was clearly disclosed to the employee before they accrued the vacation. BOLI has found that ambiguous "use it or lose it" policies frequently do not meet the disclosure standard.
Deductions: What Oregon Employers Can and Cannot Withhold
Oregon's deduction rules (ORS 652.610) strictly limit what an employer may subtract from a final paycheck:
Permitted Deductions
- Required by law: federal and state income tax withholding, Social Security (FICA), Medicare, court-ordered garnishments
- Authorized in writing: any deduction the employee explicitly agreed to in a written authorization — such as health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, or repayment of a payroll advance. The authorization must be voluntary and for the employee's benefit or convenience.
- Benefit plan deductions: standard payroll deductions for insurance, 401(k), or other benefits the employee elected.
Prohibited Deductions
Oregon law prohibits employers from deducting the following from a final paycheck without specific, documented written consent:
- Unreturned equipment or property: An employer cannot withhold wages to cover a missing laptop, uniform, or tool — even if the employee clearly has the item. The employer's remedy is to file a separate civil claim for the property's value.
- Cash register shortages or inventory shrinkage: Deducting for till shortages, customer drive-offs, or inventory loss is prohibited unless the employer can prove the employee was responsible through gross negligence or theft — and even then, a written authorization is required.
- Training costs: In most cases, deducting training costs from wages (even with a prior written agreement) is scrutinized by BOLI. Training required to perform the job is generally not recoverable.
A scenario that arises frequently in Oregon: a warehouse employee is terminated and owes $500 in equipment costs. The employer's attempt to deduct that $500 from the final paycheck without a prior written authorization is a wage violation. The employer must pay the full final check and pursue the equipment cost separately.
The Waiting-Time Penalty: Oregon's Enforcement Mechanism
When an employer willfully fails to pay a final paycheck on time, ORS 652.150 imposes an automatic penalty — sometimes called the "waiting-time penalty" or "penalty wages":
The penalty: 8 hours of wages per day for each day the final paycheck is late, calculated at the employee's regular rate of pay, for up to 30 days.
The math at Oregon's standard minimum wage ($14.70/hour):
- 8 hours × $14.70 = $117.60 penalty per day
- 30 days × $117.60 = $3,528 maximum penalty (on top of unpaid wages)
For a higher-paid employee earning $30/hour, the maximum penalty is 30 × 8 × $30 = $7,200 — a significant deterrent.
What Does "Willful" Mean?
The waiting-time penalty requires that the employer willfully withheld the wages. Oregon courts have interpreted this broadly: willfulness means the employer was aware wages were owed and failed to pay, not that the employer acted in bad faith or with malicious intent. An honest dispute about whether a particular commission was earned may negate willfulness; a mere failure to cut the check in time generally does not.
Key exceptions where willfulness may not apply:
- The employer had a good-faith, documented dispute about whether the wages were owed
- A genuine bona fide dispute existed about the amount of wages owed (only the undisputed portion needs to be paid by the deadline; the disputed portion can be resolved later)
À retenir: Even if an employer disputes part of a final paycheck (e.g., whether commissions were earned), they must pay the undisputed portion by the applicable deadline. Withholding the entire paycheck while disputing a portion triggers waiting-time penalties on the undisputed amount.

Three Final Pay Scenarios: Step-by-Step
Scenario A — Employee fired on Thursday afternoon
Sophie works at a Portland retail store earning $18/hour. Her employer terminates her on Thursday at 2 PM. Her final paycheck must be ready by the close of business on Friday (the next business day). If the employer's payroll processing is weekly and runs on Tuesdays, that does not matter — Oregon's final paycheck law overrides the regular payroll schedule for terminations. The employer must produce a special check or direct deposit for Sophie by Friday.
Scenario B — Employee resigns with two weeks' notice
Marcus gives his Eugene employer a written two-week notice on Monday. His last day is the following Friday. Because he gave more than 48 hours of written notice, his final paycheck is due on his last day of work — Friday. The employer cannot defer it to the following Tuesday payday.
Scenario C — Employee walks off the job
Dana, a line cook in Portland, walks out mid-shift on Wednesday without notice. Because she gave fewer than 48 hours' notice, her employer has until 5 business days from Wednesday (the following Wednesday) OR the next regular payday — whichever comes first. If the next payday is Monday, the paycheck is due Monday. The shorter deadline controls.
"In my experience, the most expensive mistake Oregon employers make is treating final pay like any other payroll cycle. The timelines are hard rules, not suggestions — and the penalties add up faster than most employers expect." — Employment attorney, Portland, OR (2025)
How to File an Oregon Final Paycheck Complaint
Workers who did not receive their final paycheck on time — or who received a check with improper deductions — can file a wage claim with Oregon BOLI at oregon.gov/boli. The process is free and can be completed online. BOLI investigates the claim, contacts the employer, and issues a wage claim order if the employer is found to have violated ORS 652.140.
The statute of limitations for final paycheck claims is 2 years from the date the wages were due. Workers should retain documentation of their last day of work, their pay rate, and any communication about their termination or resignation.
Oregon workers in many industries — including neighboring Idaho labor law jurisdictions — do not have equivalent protections. Oregon's combination of tight deadlines and meaningful penalties makes BOLI wage claims an effective enforcement tool for workers who would otherwise lack the resources to pursue a private lawsuit.
Legal disclaimer: This article provides general information about Oregon's final paycheck law for educational purposes. It does not constitute legal advice. Oregon statutes are subject to legislative amendments and administrative updates. Consult a licensed Oregon employment attorney or contact BOLI for advice specific to your situation.
Practical note on partial payments: A partial final check does not stop the penalty clock. If an employer pays part of the owed wages but withholds the rest while "processing payroll," the waiting-time penalty continues to accrue on the unpaid balance. Sending partial payment is not a defense to the penalty.
Employer insolvency: If a business closes and the employer cannot pay, Oregon workers may file a BOLI claim and, if the employer is dissolved or bankrupt, may qualify for the Oregon wage security fund — a state program that provides limited wage recovery when employers are unable to pay.






