PTO payout laws are not uniform across the U.S.; what your employer’s handbook says may not mean anything, or it may mean everything, depending on which state you work in.
This blog covers the core legal framework around PTO payout and breaks down the conditions that trigger or block a payout.
Below is the core legal framework: what triggers a payout, what blocks one, and how each state handles unused PTO at separation.
What are PTO Payout Laws?
PTO payout laws are state-level regulations that determine whether an employer must compensate employees for unused paid time off when their employment ends, voluntarily or otherwise.
Unlike federal wage laws, there is no nationwide rule requiring PTO payout.
This means the obligation depends entirely on the state where the employee works, as well as any written agreements or policies the employer has established.
In states with stronger worker protections, unused PTO is often treated as earned wages, and withholding it can expose employers to wage claims.
Do Companies Have to Pay Out PTO?

It depends on the state and the employer’s written policy. There is no federal law requiring PTO payout at separation.
Some states classify accrued PTO as earned wages, meaning employers must pay it out regardless of how employment ended and cannot forfeit it through policy.
Where no state mandate exists, the employer’s written handbook or contract is the controlling document; a written promise is enforceable; a verbal one rarely is.
Even in pro-employee states, payout can be lawfully denied if the employee gave no notice and the handbook addresses it; a valid use-it-or-lose-it policy eliminated the balance.
An accrual cap was in place; the employee was terminated for cause, and the policy accounts for it; or the PTO was front-loaded rather than accrued.
PTO Payout Laws by State

PTO payout rules vary significantly from one state to the next. The chart below gives you a quick-reference view of where each state stands, whether payout is required by law, conditional on employer policy, or entirely at the employer’s discretion.
| State | PTO Payout Required? | Use-It-or-Lose-It Allowed? | Key Rule |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | No | Yes | No state law requires PTO payout. Employer policy controls. |
| Alaska | No | Yes | Payout not required unless company PTO policy states otherwise. |
| Arizona | No | Yes | No mandate. Unused PTO is lost unless the policy states otherwise. |
| Arkansas | No | Yes | Employers are not required to pay out unused PTO. |
| California | Yes | No | Accrued PTO is earned wages. Payout required at separation. UILU policies prohibited. |
| Colorado | Yes | No | Accrued vacation is earned wages. Payout required. UILU policies prohibited; accrual caps allowed. |
| Connecticut | No | Yes | No payout is required unless the employer’s policy specifies it. |
| Delaware | No | Yes | No state mandate. Employer policy governs. |
| Florida | No | Yes | No state law addresses PTO payout. Employer policy controls. |
| Georgia | No | Yes | No law mandates payout. Use-it-or-lose-it is permitted if communicated. |
| Hawaii | No | Yes | No payout is required unless the policy specifies it. If the policy includes a payout, it must be made on the final day. |
| Idaho | No | Yes | No state PTO law. Employer policy governs. |
| Illinois | Yes | Yes | Earned PTO must be paid out at termination. UILU is permitted if clearly stated in the policy. |
| Indiana | Conditional | Yes | No automatic state mandate. If the employer policy is silent, accrued PTO must be paid. Policy can restrict payout if written explicitly. |
| Iowa | Conditional | Yes | Earned vacation is treated as wages. Payout is required unless a prior agreement between the employer and the employee states otherwise. |
| Kansas | No | Yes | No mandate. Employer policy is controlling. |
| Kentucky | No | Yes | No state requirement. Employer policy governs. |
| Louisiana | Yes | Yes | Employers must pay out accrued PTO at separation. UILU is permitted if clearly defined in policy. |
| Maine | Conditional | Yes | Employers with more than 10 employees must pay out unused PTO at separation. |
| Maryland | Conditional | Yes | Payout required unless the employer provided a written forfeiture policy at the time of hire. |
| Massachusetts | Yes | Yes | Accrued vacation is wages. Payout required at termination. UILU is permitted with adequate advance notice to employees. |
| Michigan | No | Yes | No requirement. Employer policy controls. |
| Minnesota | Conditional | Yes | Payout is required only if the company policy specifies it. Without a forfeiture clause, accrued PTO is presumed payable. |
| Mississippi | No | Yes | No obligation. Employer policy governs. |
| Missouri | No | Yes | No mandate. Employer policy controls. |
| Montana | Yes | No | After a probationary period, unused PTO must be paid out. UILU policies prohibited. |
| Nebraska | Conditional | No | Unused PTO must be paid out unless the policy explicitly states otherwise. UILU prohibited; accrual caps permitted. |
| Nevada | No | Yes | No payout obligation unless the policy specifies it. |
| New Hampshire | Conditional | Yes | State law defaults to payout, but a written employer policy can override this requirement. |
| New Jersey | No | Yes | No legal obligation unless company policy states payout. |
| New Mexico | Yes | Yes | Accrued PTO must be paid out upon termination. UILU is permitted if clearly stated in policy. |
| New York | Conditional | Yes | State defaults to payout, but employer policy can override. UILU is permitted if clearly communicated. |
| North Carolina | No | Yes | No automatic mandate, but if an employer’s policy is silent on forfeiture, accrued vacation must be paid at termination. |
| North Dakota | Yes | Yes | Unused PTO must be paid out. UILU is permitted if clearly communicated to employees. |
| Ohio | No | Yes | Payout required if the employer’s policy promises it. Without an explicit forfeiture clause, accrued PTO may be owed. |
| Oklahoma | No | Yes | No state obligation. Employer policy governs. |
| Oregon | No | Yes | No general mandate. Payout depends on employer policy. |
| Pennsylvania | No | Yes | No state requirement. Employer policy or contract controls. |
| Rhode Island | No | Yes | Payout of accrued vacation is required for employees who have completed at least one year of employment. |
| South Carolina | No | Yes | No law mandates payout. Employers must follow their own stated policy. |
| South Dakota | No | Yes | No requirement. Employer policy governs. |
| Tennessee | No | Yes | No mandate. Employer policy is controlling. |
| Texas | No | Yes | No state PTO law. UILU and forfeiture policies permitted if documented. |
| Utah | No | Yes | No requirement. Employer policy governs. |
| Vermont | No | Yes | No mandate unless employer policy specifies payout. |
| Virginia | No | Yes | No obligation. Employer policy controls. |
| Washington | No | Yes | No state mandate. Employer policy governs, though the promised payout is enforceable as wages. |
| West Virginia | No | Yes | Payout required unless the employer has a written policy stating otherwise, acknowledged by the employee. |
| Wisconsin | No | Yes | No universal mandate. Without a written forfeiture policy, accrued PTO is presumed payable. |
| Wyoming | No | Yes | No statutory mandate, but forfeiture requires a written policy acknowledged by the employee. Without it, payout is owed. |
UILU = Use-It-or-Lose-It
Note: State laws change. Always verify current requirements with your state’s Department of Labor or a qualified employment attorney before making decisions based on this information.
Can Employers Have a Use-It-or-Lose-It PTO Policy?
In most U.S. states, use-it-or-lose-it PTO policies are legal, as long as they are clearly communicated to employees in writing before the forfeiture occurs.
Four states outright prohibit them: California, Colorado, Montana, and Nebraska. In these states, accrued PTO is treated as earned compensation and cannot expire, regardless of the employer’s policy.
In all other states, employers can set deadlines, typically year-end or an anniversary date, after which unused PTO is forfeited.
The policy must be documented, disclosed in advance, and give employees a reasonable window to use their time.
A use-it-or-lose-it clause added after PTO has already accrued will not hold up legally in most jurisdictions.
In Conclusion
PTO payout rights depend on where you work, how your employer has written their policy, and, in some cases, how long you have been employed.
Federal law offers no protection here. State law and your employer’s written policy are the only two things that matter.
If you are an employee, get the policy in writing. If you are an employer, make sure your policy says exactly what you intend, because silence often defaults to payout owed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does PTO Payout Get Taxed?
Yes, PTO payout is treated as supplemental wages by the IRS and is subject to federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare withholdings.
Can an Employer Change Its PTO Payout Policy After You Have Already Accrued Time?
No, policy changes can only affect future accrual; they cannot retroactively eliminate PTO already earned.
Does PTO Payout Affect Unemployment Benefits?
In some states, a PTO payout received at separation can temporarily delay or reduce unemployment benefit eligibility depending on how the state treats lump-sum payments.
