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Last updated: May 2026
Opening a restaurant is one of the most demanding operational challenges there is. Payroll often gets set up in a rush, between equipment orders and staff hires, without a clear checklist to follow. That’s where the expensive mistakes happen.
A missed state tax registration, a misclassified employee, a tipped wage structure configured incorrectly from day one. Any of these creates a liability that compounds with every pay run until someone catches it, usually during an audit or a complaint. New restaurant payroll setup done right protects your business from the start and saves you from unraveling errors later under pressure.
This guide walks through every step, in the right order, so your payroll foundation is solid before you process your first check.
Step 1: Get Your Federal and State Tax Registrations in Order
Before you can legally run payroll, you need the right tax accounts in place. Don’t skip ahead to choosing a payroll system until these are done.
Federal Employer Identification Number (EIN). If you don’t already have one, apply through the IRS EIN Online Application. It’s free and takes about 10 minutes. You’ll use this for all federal payroll tax filings. This is also required to open a business bank account, so it’s usually one of the first steps operators take.
State income tax withholding account. Most states require you to register for a state withholding account before you process your first payroll. Registration is typically done through the state department of revenue or taxation. Processing varies by state from same-day online approval to several weeks.
State unemployment insurance (SUI) account. Register with your state’s labor or workforce agency. SUI registration can take two to eight weeks in some states. Don’t wait until the week before your first payroll. Start this as soon as you know you’ll be hiring.
Local tax registrations. Some cities and counties have their own payroll taxes. Philadelphia, New York City, and Portland (Oregon) are well-known examples. Confirm whether your city or county requires a separate local registration before your first pay run.
Step 2: Choose Your Pay Schedule
Most restaurants run weekly or biweekly payroll. Weekly is common for hourly staff because it aligns with the week-to-week nature of tipped income. Biweekly reduces the number of payroll runs per year (26 vs. 52) and lowers administrative burden.
Check your state’s pay frequency requirements before you decide. Some states mandate minimum pay frequencies. California, for example, requires that most employees be paid at least twice per month. Other states have their own rules. Whatever you choose, it needs to meet state requirements and you need to notify employees in writing before their first paycheck. The Department of Labor’s state payday requirements page lists the rules by state.
Once you set a pay schedule, stick to it. Changing pay schedules mid-operation creates confusion, potential wage claim exposure, and compliance headaches that aren’t worth the administrative convenience.
Step 3: Classify Your Employees Correctly
Employee classification is one of the highest-stakes decisions in restaurant payroll setup. Getting it wrong costs more to fix than it costs to get right from the start.
Employees vs. independent contractors. In restaurants, virtually all kitchen staff, servers, bartenders, hosts, and managers are employees. The IRS and Department of Labor apply a multi-factor test for contractor classification, and very few restaurant roles meet it. Misclassifying employees as contractors eliminates your employer tax obligations on paper, but creates massive back-tax liability and penalties when audited.
Exempt vs. non-exempt. Most restaurant hourly workers are non-exempt and entitled to overtime under the FLSA. Salaried managers may qualify as exempt, but only if their primary duty is management and their salary meets the federal or state threshold (whichever is higher). A kitchen manager making $35,000 per year is almost certainly non-exempt and entitled to overtime in most states. Classify carefully and review annually as thresholds change.
Step 4: Set Up Your Tipped Wage Structure
Restaurants have a unique payroll complexity that most other industries don’t: tipped employees. Getting this configuration right from day one saves significant corrections later.
Under federal law, you can pay tipped employees a cash wage as low as $2.13 per hour as long as tips bring their total hourly pay to at least the federal minimum wage of $7.25. If tips don’t cover the gap, you’re required to make up the difference. That’s the tip credit in its simplest form.
But many states have eliminated the tip credit or set a higher cash wage floor. California, Oregon, Washington, and others require the full state minimum wage in cash, before tips. Confirm your state’s rules before your first tipped payroll run. Set the wrong cash wage and you’re in violation from your very first pay period.
If you’re pooling tips, make sure your tip pool structure complies with the FLSA’s tip pooling rules. Back-of-house employees may be included in tip pools under certain conditions, but only if the employer doesn’t take a tip credit. The rules changed in 2018 and again with subsequent guidance. Review current Department of Labor tip guidance before finalizing your tip pool policy.
Step 5: Configure Time and Attendance Tracking
Your time and attendance system feeds your payroll. If time records are inaccurate, payroll is inaccurate. For a new restaurant, getting this right from the first shift matters more than most operators realize.
Choose a system that handles the specific complexity of restaurant time tracking: multiple job codes (a server who also works a prep shift earns at different rates), tip reporting integrated with time records, and overtime calculations that account for all hours across job codes in the same workweek.
A PIN-based clock is a starting point. A biometric or photo-capture clock is better, because it eliminates buddy punching from the start before it becomes a habit your team has built around. Netchex time and attendance is built for restaurants, with tip tracking, multi-rate support, and schedule integration that flows directly into payroll without manual data entry.
Step 6: Choose a Payroll Platform Built for Restaurants
Generic payroll software handles basic wage calculations. Restaurant payroll requires more: tip credits, FICA Tip Credit calculations, multi-rate employees, tip pooling distributions, and the specific reporting required for large food and beverage establishments. A platform that wasn’t built for food service will require workarounds for every one of these features.
What to look for in a restaurant payroll platform:
- Native tip credit and FICA Tip Credit support. The system should calculate tipped wages and automatically track the employer FICA credit without requiring manual calculation.
- Multi-rate pay. Support for employees working in different roles at different pay rates within the same workweek, with correct overtime calculation across all rates.
- POS integration. The payroll platform should accept tip data directly from your point-of-sale system, not require manual entry of credit card tip totals each pay period.
- Tax filing included. Your platform should handle federal and state payroll tax deposits and filings on your behalf. Manual tax filing is a major source of errors and penalties for new restaurant owners.
- Responsive, accessible support. Your first few payroll runs will have questions. A platform that puts you in a ticket queue doesn’t serve restaurant operators. Look for US-based support that picks up the phone.
Step 7: Set Up Benefits, Deductions, and New Hire Reporting
Even if you’re not offering benefits on day one, you need processes in place to handle deductions when you do. Garnishments, child support orders, and health insurance premiums all need to be processed correctly in payroll. Set up the framework for deduction management before you need it, not after you’ve received your first garnishment notice.
New hire reporting is a federal and state requirement. You must report every new employee to your state’s new hire registry within a specific timeframe (typically 20 days of hire). This feeds into child support enforcement systems at the state level. Failure to report carries penalties. Most payroll platforms automate this step when a new employee record is created.
Common New Restaurant Payroll Mistakes
Starting payroll before state registrations are complete. Running payroll without an active SUI account number creates posting problems that can take months to resolve. Get the registrations done first.
Using the wrong pay date for the first payroll. Some states have specific rules about the maximum period between when work is performed and when wages are paid. Research your state’s rules before setting your first pay date.
Not documenting tip income from day one. Cash tip reporting by employees should start with the first shift, not after you’ve figured everything else out. Set the expectation early and it becomes habit.
Treating the owner’s draw as payroll. If you’re a sole proprietor or single-member LLC, you’re not an employee of your own restaurant. You don’t run payroll for yourself. The rules are different for S-corps and other structures. Confirm your structure with your accountant before setting up payroll.
How Netchex Makes New Restaurant Payroll Setup Easier
Netchex was built for restaurants. That means the features that make restaurant payroll complicated, like tip credits, FICA calculations, multi-rate employees, and POS integrations, are built into the core platform, not added on as workarounds.
When you implement Netchex, your dedicated account team walks through the full setup checklist with you. Tax registrations, pay schedule configuration, tipped wage setup, time and attendance integration. You don’t have to figure out what you missed. There’s a process designed to catch it before your first payroll run.
Implementation is free, project-managed, and takes about six weeks. For a new restaurant operator running payroll for the first time, that guided setup makes the difference between a clean start and months of corrections. See how Netchex sets up new restaurant payroll.
Frequently Asked Questions
The technical payroll setup in most platforms takes a few hours to a few days. The limiting factor is usually state tax registration timelines. State unemployment insurance registration can take two to eight weeks in some states. Plan to start the registration process at least 60 days before your projected first payroll run to avoid delays.
If each location is a separate legal entity, it needs its own EIN. If all locations operate under a single legal entity, one EIN covers them all. However, each state where you employ workers requires its own state tax registrations regardless of how many EINs you have. Consult your accountant or attorney on the right entity structure before opening additional locations.
The FLSA tip credit allows employers to pay tipped employees a cash wage as low as $2.13 per hour at the federal level, with tips expected to bring total pay to at least $7.25 per hour. If a tipped employee’s tips in any workweek don’t bridge the gap to minimum wage, the employer must make up the difference. Many states have higher cash wage requirements or have eliminated the tip credit entirely. Always verify the rules in your specific state before running tipped payroll.
Federal law requires new hire reporting within 20 days of hire. Most states match this requirement, though some have shorter windows. Most payroll platforms automate new hire reporting when an employee record is created, so this requirement is handled without additional manual steps if your system is configured correctly.
General payroll platforms can handle basic wage calculations, but restaurant-specific features like tip credit management, FICA Tip Credit calculations, multi-rate overtime, and POS integration typically require workarounds or manual handling. A platform built specifically for restaurant payroll eliminates those workarounds and reduces the risk of errors in the configurations that matter most for food service compliance.
As an employer, you’re responsible for: matching the employee’s FICA contributions (7.65% of taxable wages), federal unemployment tax (FUTA, typically 0.6% after state credit on the first $7,000 per employee), state unemployment insurance at your assigned SUI rate, and any applicable state or local payroll taxes. You also withhold and remit federal and state income tax from employee wages. Your payroll platform should handle deposits and filings for all of these automatically.
Ready to Set Up Restaurant Payroll the Right Way From Day One?
See how Netchex guides new restaurant operators through the full payroll setup, from tax registration to first pay run, with dedicated support at every step.
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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