When your employer must pay, what they must include, and what you can do if they're late.
Enter your last day and pay schedule — get the specific date your check is legally due.
→ Use the CalculatorIn Maryland, your final paycheck is due on your next regular payday after you leave — whether you were fired or resigned. This is the most common approach across the US, and it means the timing of your final check depends largely on where you fall in your employer's pay cycle.
Under Md. Code, Lab. & Empl. § 3-505, "next regular payday" means the payday that would have occurred if you had continued working. If you're paid every other Friday and your last day is a Monday, your check is due that Friday two weeks out — or the Friday right around the corner, depending on your cycle.
The law applies to all forms of separation — involuntary termination, layoffs, and voluntary resignation — so the deadline is the same regardless of how you left.
Maryland imposes significant consequences for employers who willfully withhold final wages: treble damages, meaning the court can award you up to three times the amount of unpaid wages. For example, if your employer owes you $2,000 and pays late or not at all, you could be entitled to $6,000 in total.
The treble damages provision under Md. Code, Lab. & Empl. § 3-505 is designed to deter employers from treating final paychecks as optional or negotiable. "Willful" nonpayment is the trigger — in practice, most deliberate delays or deductions qualify.
To pursue these damages, you can file a wage claim with the Maryland Department of Labor or bring a civil action in court. A private employment attorney can advise whether the treble damages provision applies to your specific situation.
Maryland does not have a blanket law requiring employers to pay out unused vacation or PTO when an employee separates. Whether you receive a payout depends on your employer's written policy and any employment contract you signed.
If your employer's policy says PTO or vacation will be paid out upon separation, they are generally bound by that promise — and failure to honor it could be a wage violation. But in the absence of such a policy, Maryland does not impose a payout obligation by law.
Review your employee handbook or offer letter carefully. If you believe you are owed PTO that was contractually promised, raise the issue when you file a wage claim.
If your employer hasn't paid your final wages on time, your primary resource is the Maryland Department of Labor. Filing a wage claim is free and does not require an attorney. The process generally works like this: you submit a written complaint, the agency contacts your employer, and a settlement conference or hearing is scheduled if the employer disputes the claim.
Most employers respond quickly once a formal wage claim is opened — because penalties and interest often keep accruing during the dispute, delaying resolution makes their situation worse. Come prepared with your last pay stub, your separation date, time records if available, and any written communication about your final paycheck.
Alternatively, you can file a lawsuit in small claims court (for amounts within the small claims limit) without an attorney, or hire a private employment attorney for larger claims. Many employment lawyers handle wage theft cases on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover wages for you.
Your next regular payday. Under Md. Code, Lab. & Empl. § 3-505, this applies to all involuntary separations — firings, layoffs, and employer-initiated terminations of any kind.
Your next regular payday under Md. Code, Lab. & Empl. § 3-505. If you gave advance notice, check whether that changes the deadline — some states require same-day payment when sufficient notice is given.
Maryland imposes 3x damages for willful nonpayment of final wages. If your employer deliberately withholds what they owe, the total amount recoverable can be much higher than just the unpaid wages. File a wage claim with the Maryland Department of Labor to pursue these damages.
Maryland does not require PTO payout by law. Whether you receive it depends on your employer's written policy. If a payout was promised in your employee handbook or contract and not delivered, you may have a claim — but the state does not mandate it by default.
Your employer must pay you on your next regular payday — the one that comes after your separation. If you were fired the day after payday, you may wait until the payday after that, depending on your pay cycle. This is the standard rule in Maryland.
File a wage claim with the Maryland Department of Labor — it's free and does not require an attorney. Gather your last pay stub, separation date, and any time records or emails about your final pay. Most employers resolve claims quickly once a formal complaint is filed, because penalties and interest keep accruing during delays.