Time Clock Rounding Rules in Massachusetts
Massachusetts (MA) · Time clock rounding · Last reviewed June 2026
Rounding allowed
Yes, if neutral
Common method
Nearest 15 min
Meal-period rounding
Use caution
Is rounding allowed?
Federal law lets employers round employee punch times — most commonly to the nearest quarter-hour — as long as the rounding is neutral and doesn't systematically favor the employer over time. The familiar "7-minute rule" rounds to the nearest 15 minutes: 1–7 minutes round down, 8–14 round up.
Massachusetts employers may round, but it has to be applied consistently, and you still need to keep the actual recorded times.
Where rounding gets risky
Rounding that always lands in the employer's favor — or that's used on meal periods to mask short or late breaks — is where lawsuits happen. The safe path in Massachusetts is to record exact times and round transparently, or not round at all.
The simplest approach
Modern time clocks capture punches to the exact minute, making rounding optional and fully auditable. If you do round, always keep the raw punch times alongside the rounded totals.
Official sources
More Massachusetts guides
Time clock rounding in other states
Massachusetts time clock rounding: frequently asked questions
Is time clock rounding legal in Massachusetts?
Yes — federal law permits neutral rounding (often to the nearest quarter-hour) as long as it doesn't consistently favor the employer, and Massachusetts follows that framework. Exact recorded times must still be kept.
Can my employer round my time down in Massachusetts?
Rounding has to be neutral. Always rounding down in the employer's favor isn't allowed and is a common basis for wage claims.
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