What Is Gross Payroll — and How Is It Different from Net Pay?

Elijah

New member
My accounting manager keeps referencing gross payroll in our budget reports, but I want to make sure I fully understand what it includes. Does gross payroll cover only base salaries, or does it also include overtime, bonuses, and employer-side taxes like FICA? I want to understand the complete picture of what goes into gross payroll before preparing our quarterly labor cost report. Is there a standard formula or definition used across industries?
 
Gross payroll refers to the sum of money paid to employees in an organization without any deductions- this refers to salaries, wages, bonuses and overtime. Net pay on the other hand refers to the actual amount employees earn after deductions made such as taxes, insurance, and retirement contribution are deducted.
 
Gross payroll is the total amount an employer pays before any deductions. This includes salaries, hourly wages, bonuses, and overtime. Net pay, or "take-home pay," is the remaining amount after subtracting mandatory taxes (like Social Security and income tax) and voluntary deductions (like health insurance or retirement contributions).
 
Gross payroll is the total salary an employee earns before any deductions like taxes, insurance, or provident fund. Net pay is the actual amount received after all deductions are subtracted from gross payroll, representing take-home salary credited to the employee’s account.
 
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