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School districts and private schools employ some of the most varied workforces of any organization: full-time teachers on salary, substitutes paid by the day, coaches and activity directors paid stipends, part-time aides paid hourly, and support staff on a range of schedules. Managing HR and payroll across all of these employee types — each with different pay structures, benefit eligibility rules, and compliance obligations — creates a complexity that most commercial HR software isn’t designed to handle.
Here are the HR and payroll pain points that school HR teams deal with most consistently — and what solving them actually requires.
Last updated: June 2026
1. Managing Multiple Pay Structures in One System
Most school districts run three or four distinct pay structures simultaneously: salaried teachers paid on a semi-monthly or bi-weekly basis, daily-rate substitutes paid per day worked, hourly support staff, and stipend-based coaches and advisors. In many districts, these populations are tracked in separate systems — the teacher payroll in one platform, subs in a sub-finder system, and stipends in a spreadsheet.
When payroll runs, someone has to manually reconcile data from all three sources. That reconciliation creates delays, introduces errors, and makes it impossible to get a real-time view of total labor costs across the district. A single payroll platform that can handle all pay structure types — salary, daily rate, hourly, and stipend — eliminates the reconciliation burden and the errors that come with it.
2. ACA Compliance for Variable-Hour Employees
ACA compliance is a recurring challenge for schools because so much of the workforce is variable-hour. Substitutes, part-time aides, coaches, and tutors all have hours that fluctuate significantly week to week. Determining whether any of these employees has averaged 30 or more hours during an ACA measurement period — and therefore must be offered health coverage — requires accurate hour tracking across the full measurement period, not just a snapshot at any given week.
Most school HR teams aren’t monitoring ACA measurement period accumulation in real time. The problem surfaces at year-end when 1095-C forms are generated and it becomes clear that some variable-hour employees who should have been offered coverage weren’t. By then, the IRS penalty exposure has already accumulated. Automated ACA tracking that flags employees approaching the 30-hour threshold during the measurement period — while there’s still time to act — is the solution most districts don’t have in place.
3. Substitute Teacher Administration
Substitute management is a full-time administrative job in larger districts. Maintaining an accurate availability pool, filling absences quickly, tracking days worked for payroll, managing I-9 compliance for a constantly rotating roster, and monitoring ACA hours accumulation for frequent subs all land on the same desk. When these processes are manual, they’re slow, error-prone, and consume HR capacity that should be focused on other work.
Digital sub management — where availability is tracked in a system that connects to payroll, I-9s are completed electronically, and hours flow directly into ACA tracking — dramatically reduces the per-substitute administrative burden. The challenge is that most sub-finder platforms don’t connect to the district’s payroll system, leaving the reconciliation gap intact.
4. Benefits Administration Across Employee Categories
Benefits eligibility in schools is complicated by the fact that different employee categories have different eligibility rules — often set by collective bargaining agreements, board policy, and ACA requirements simultaneously. Full-time teachers may be eligible for the district’s full benefits package from day one. Part-time aides may be eligible for limited benefits after a waiting period. Substitutes may be eligible for nothing until they cross an ACA threshold. Managing these distinctions manually — particularly during open enrollment — creates significant administrative burden and frequent enrollment errors.
Automated benefits administration that enforces eligibility rules based on employee classification, triggers enrollment invitations at the right time for each employee type, and prevents ineligible employees from enrolling reduces the administrative load on HR and the error rate on benefits elections. For districts managing hundreds of employees across multiple benefit plans, this automation is the difference between a manageable open enrollment and a three-week crisis.
5. Credential and Certification Tracking
Teachers, aides, counselors, and other instructional staff must maintain valid state certifications and credentials to work in the classroom. Expired certifications create compliance risk at the state level and, in many states, liability for the district if an uncertified employee is allowed to teach. Tracking expiration dates for dozens or hundreds of certified employees across multiple license types — teaching certification, CPR/first aid, food handler permits for cafeteria staff — is an ongoing HR function that most districts manage manually.
An HR system that stores credential records, tracks expiration dates, and sends automated renewal reminders to employees and supervisors before certifications lapse eliminates the manual monitoring burden and reduces the risk of a compliance gap. This is a feature that most generic HR platforms handle poorly for education-specific credential types.
6. Lean HR Teams Managing Large, Complex Workforces
School HR teams are almost universally understaffed relative to the complexity of the workforce they manage. A district with 500 employees — across teachers, substitutes, aides, coaches, and support staff — may have two or three HR staff members handling onboarding, benefits, compliance, payroll questions, and employee relations simultaneously. When processes are manual, something always falls through: an I-9 expires unnoticed, a sub’s ACA hours aren’t tracked, a coach’s stipend is processed late.
The only sustainable solution is automation of the high-volume, repetitive processes: digital onboarding with I-9, automated benefits enrollment triggers, payroll that processes without manual data entry, ACA monitoring that runs in the background. Netchex provides school districts and private schools with connected HR and payroll tools that handle these functions in one system — so lean HR teams can manage complex workforces without sacrificing accuracy or compliance. Learn more at Netchex HR for Education.
Frequently Asked Questions
School districts typically run multiple pay structures simultaneously — salaried teachers, daily-rate substitutes, hourly support staff, and stipend-based coaches. Different employee categories have different benefit eligibility rules, ACA tracking requirements, and collective bargaining agreement terms. Most commercial payroll systems aren’t designed to handle all of these in a single platform, which forces districts into manual reconciliation across multiple systems.
Schools should track every day worked by every substitute, apply the IRS days-worked equivalency (eight hours per day of service) to calculate ACA hours, and monitor cumulative hours against the 30-hour per week average threshold during the applicable measurement period. Automated ACA tracking that flags substitutes approaching the threshold in real time — rather than at year-end when 1095-C forms are generated — allows HR to make coverage decisions before penalty exposure has already accumulated.
At minimum, schools need to track state teaching certifications, instructional aide permits where required, and any role-specific certifications (CPR/first aid, food handler permits, bus driver licenses). Each credential type has a different expiration schedule and renewal process. An HR system that stores these records, tracks expiration dates by credential type, and sends automated renewal reminders before expiration dates is the most reliable way to prevent a compliance gap.
The key is automating the high-volume, repetitive processes: digital onboarding and I-9 collection, automated benefits enrollment triggers based on eligibility rules, payroll processing without manual data re-entry, and ACA monitoring that runs continuously in the background. When these processes are automated, a small HR team can manage hundreds of employees across multiple categories without sacrificing accuracy or compliance.
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See how Netchex handles multi-pay-structure payroll, ACA tracking, substitute administration, benefits eligibility, and credential management for school districts and private schools.
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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