Employee attendance policies are company documents, often part of your handbook, that clearly define attendance requirements at your company. These should include definitions, indicate how employees may be disciplined for violations of the policy, and an employee acknowledgement.
For an example of how to draft yours, download our free attendance policy template and customize it based on your business’s needs.
FILE TO DOWNLOAD OR INTEGRATE
Attendance Policy Template
Download as PDF Download as Word Doc Download as Google DocWhen creating employee attendance policies, it’s important to define the terms at the beginning of each section. This will help ensure everyone agrees to it and that there’s no ambiguity about what these terms mean. Ambiguity leads to confusion, which can leave employees frustrated and unsure of when they violate a policy. To make sure you have an effective, fair, and legally compliant attendance policy, here are the most important sections to include.
An absence is the failure of an employee to report to work at the scheduled time. There are two types of absences:
Once you define the types of absences in your policy, you then need to outline how an employee might violate the policy and what consequences may follow. Some attendance policy examples for excessive absences may include:
In this section, start by defining the term of what is tardiness at your company. We suggest adding a period and pinning down when an employee will be classified as tardy. Your policy might look something like this:
Tardiness occurs when an employee is late for the beginning of their shift, or late after returning from a break in their shift, of more than five minutes. In each instance, the employee must notify their manager that they will be late by the start time of their shift. Notifying a manager does not excuse the tardiness.
As with the absences, you must dictate the consequences for violations of this rule. A tardiness attendance policy example may include:
Violations of this policy in excess of five times per month will result in disciplinary action, up to and including termination.
It’s important to hold your team accountable when they’re not on time. Your business requires your employees to be where you need them when you need them there. If they’re tardy, work may be delayed, customers neglected, and other employees forced to pick up the slack.
The opposite of tardiness is an early departure. A policy example for early departures may include:
Any employee who leaves a shift early for the day—or takes a break of more than five minutes before the scheduled end of their shift or beginning of their break—must notify their manager, but the absence will be unexcused.
We suggest setting consequences for violations of this to be similar to that of your tardiness policy, as they’re quite closely related.
This section ensures employees understand they need to stay for the entirety of their shift. Without this clear expectation, your employees might feel more freedom to come and go as they please, leaving your business in chaos.
It is essential that your policy provides a clear process of how and when disciplinary action may occur. Having a structured disciplinary procedure for attendance helps keep your company out of legal trouble by applying the same process to all employees—meaning that there will be no special treatment involved.
A disciplinary process might include the following:
You will want to include a job abandonment section to cover your company if an employee fails to report to work for an extended period. As in the other sections, it’s crucial to indicate how long that period may be to consider it an abandonment of work, as well as what procedure will follow.
It may look something like this:
Job abandonment is when an employee fails to report to work for three or more consecutive working days without notifying their supervisor. Upon these conditions being met, the employee will be considered to have voluntarily terminated the employment relationship.
This section allows your company to get an employee off the books if they haven’t shown up to work in some time. Of course, you want to call the employee’s emergency contact list to see if they’re all right, and you should do that as soon as they don’t show up to work. But with this section, you’re now well within your rights to separate from the employee in a way that may make them ineligible for unemployment benefits.
According to the BLS, job abandonment and quit rates month over month are at a rate of 2.3% across all industries in the United States.
While often overlooked, employee acknowledgments are key pieces of any company policy. If you implement a policy that has an impact on an employee, you should have them sign the policy as an acknowledgment that they have reviewed the policy and agree to be bound by its terms.
If your company ever needs to hold the employee accountable under the terms of the policy, you have their signature on the policy in their personnel file that gives you authority to do so. Having employees sign a policy or employee handbook is not required by law—but it’s good business practice.
Creating a structured and clear attendance policy is part of employee management. By setting proper expectations for attendance, arriving on time, and the disciplinary measures for failing to meet those requirements, you can properly instill discipline and a healthy respect for your company in your employees.
You know the big pieces of your employee attendance policy—but now you want to ensure it’s fair. The best way to approach this is to customize it to your specific business needs and culture.
Here are some tips to consider to ensure that your policy is fair for everyone:
Ensuring compliance with the law can be difficult without structured procedures. When it comes to time tracking, make sure you have a proper process for tracking your employees hours in place.
By implementing flexible scheduling options, fostering a positive workplace culture, and setting clear expectations, you can improve employee attendance rates significantly. These strategies not only benefit individual employees but also contribute positively toward overall productivity levels within the business.
Check out our guide to managing employee attendance issues for more practical strategies and effective techniques that will help you create a more reliable workforce and boost productivity.
Did You Know? According to a Work in America survey, over half of employees (57%) experience negative impacts due to workplace stress. This stress could lead to an overall decline in attendance. By focusing on providing a fair and conducive environment for work, you can minimize attendance issues significantly.
You expect employees to show up on time. When they don’t, that creates problems for the business and other employees. Emergencies happen, and companies should be flexible—but within reason. Having a clear attendance policy will help you hold employees accountable for their actions while treating everyone fairly and avoiding costly employee lawsuits and government fines.
Find Jennifer On LinkedIn
Jennifer Soper has 25+ years of writing and content design experience, working with small businesses and Fortune 100 companies. For over a decade, Jennifer worked as an HR generalist, providing expertise in accounting, payroll, and HR by implementing payroll and benefits best practices and creating onboarding and employee-relations documentation.