I am hearing that the severance does not pay out unused PTO. If true and if others can confirm, then use PTO as you accrue them.
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Not only do they not pay out but my manager refused my PTO request when I was training the outsourcing company in India knowing my last day. 3 months end of 2025 of training them and couldn’t take any accrued PTO and refused to pay it out. Now they want me back…
@a2 Thank you for the information
@OP It depends on which state you’re in. Some states legally requires them to pay off PTO time. So check your state laws as well too.
As someone who was let go and was taking off significant time for July 4 and afterwards, it's the cherry on top of a sh-t cake.
That is correct. I have been prodding people to take their time off for a reason. Do not wait until year end.
@OP it depends on your state and if required by law. In Florida, no.
in the US, there are laws that cover what an employer must do in a just a few states. They can obviously do more, but this is the legal floor. If you live in one of these states, make sure they are following this.
California: PTO is earned wages; must be paid out immediately upon separation.
Colorado: Vacation pay is considered earned wages.
Illinois: Earned vacation time must be paid.
Louisiana: Unused vacation time must be paid out upon termination.
Maine: Applies to employers with more than 10 employees.
Massachusetts: Earned vacation is treated as wages.
Montana: Accrued PTO must be paid out unless explicit policy states otherwise.
Nebraska: PTO is earned wages and "use-it-or-lose-it" policies are illegal.
North Dakota: Payout of earned vacation is required.
Rhode Island: Mandatory payout for employees with at least one year of service.
Wyoming: Requires payout upon separation, depending on company policy.
That is correct. FIS does not pay out unused accrued PTO upon separation unless you are in one of the few states that require it to be paid out (like California).