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Earned Wage Access (EWA) lets employees access wages they’ve already earned before the scheduled payday. It costs employers nothing to offer. And the retention impact, particularly in hourly, high-turnover industries, is measurable and significant.
What Earned Wage Access Actually Is
EWA is not a loan. Employees access wages they’ve already earned but haven’t been paid yet, typically up to 50% of accrued net wages per pay period. The advance is deducted from the employee’s next regular paycheck. There’s no interest, no credit check, no employer cost. The employee may pay a small transaction fee (often $1-$3 per transfer), or the employer can cover it as a benefit.
Why It Reduces Turnover
Financial stress is one of the most consistent drivers of absenteeism and turnover in hourly industries. An employee who can’t cover a car repair or utility bill between paychecks faces a real choice: deal with the financial emergency or show up to work. EWA eliminates that emergency for a $1-$3 fee, removing one of the most common triggers for both absence and job searching.
A 2024 survey of hourly workers found that employees with access to EWA were 36% less likely to report considering leaving their current employer within the next 3 months, compared to those without access.
The Zero-Cost Reality
EWA is one of the few benefits that’s genuinely zero-cost to implement for most employers. The EWA provider manages the funding and recovery. The employer’s payroll system integrates to provide real-time earned wages data. No cash outlay, no payroll complexity, no liability. Just a meaningful benefit that employees actually value.
Regulatory Considerations
EWA regulation is still evolving. Some states, including California, Missouri, Kansas, Nevada, and South Carolina, have enacted specific EWA licensing or registration requirements. The CFPB issued guidance in 2024 treating some EWA products as consumer credit, which affects fee disclosure requirements. Verify that your EWA provider is compliant in your operating states before launching a program.
Pairing EWA With Financial Wellness
EWA works best as part of a broader financial wellness program. Employers who pair it with financial planning resources, HSA access, and benefits education see compounding retention effects. The message to employees is clear: we want you financially stable, not just financially surviving.
Netchex and EWA
Netchex EWA allows employees to access earned wages directly from the Netchex employee self-service portal. Accrued wages are calculated in real time based on approved hours, and the deduction flows automatically to the next payroll. No manual reconciliation required.
Frequently Asked Questions
In most implementations, yes. The EWA provider funds the advance and recovers it from the employee’s next paycheck. The employer’s payroll system integrates to share earned wages data in real time, but there’s typically no cash outlay or liability for the employer. Some employers choose to cover the employee-side transaction fee (usually $1-$3 per transfer) as an added benefit, but that’s optional. Always confirm the cost model with your EWA provider before launching.
EWA doesn’t change your payroll cycle or processing. Employees still receive their regular paycheck on the normal schedule. The amount they accessed early is simply deducted from that paycheck as a net adjustment. When EWA is integrated with your payroll platform, the deduction is handled automatically with no manual entry required. The key is that your payroll system needs to calculate accrued wages in real time based on approved hours, which most modern HCM platforms can do.
Earned Wage Access is not a loan. Employees are accessing money they’ve already earned, not borrowing against future income. There’s no interest, no credit check, and no debt. A payday loan is a high-interest short-term loan that’s repaid on the next payday, often with fees that translate to triple-digit APRs. EWA costs employees a flat transaction fee of $1-$3 and carries none of the financial risk or predatory terms associated with payday lending. That distinction matters when communicating the benefit to employees.
EWA has the highest retention impact in industries with hourly, shift-based workforces where financial stress is common: restaurants, hotels, healthcare, manufacturing, retail, and building services. These are also the industries where employees are most likely to live paycheck to paycheck and face unexpected expenses between pay periods. For employers in high-turnover industries looking for a zero-cost benefit that resonates with frontline staff, EWA is one of the strongest options available.
Ready to Offer Benefits That Actually Reduce Turnover?
See how Netchex integrates with leading EWA providers so your employees can access earned wages through the same platform they use for scheduling, benefits, and pay stubs.
This guide reflects publicly available product information and independent reviewer data (G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Yelp, Better Business Bureau, Reddit, Software Advice, GetApp) as of 2026. Feature availability and pricing may vary by plan. Contact each provider for current details.
Disclaimer: Any product roadmap or future plans provided herein are for informational purposes only. They do not represent a commitment to deliver any material, code, feature, or functionality. Plans may change without notification. The development, release and timing of any features or functionality described remain at the sole discretion of Netchex, its affiliates, and partners. Netchex does not give legal, tax, or accounting advice. You are responsible for ensuring your use of Netchex product meets your individual business and compliance requirements.
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