Payroll Allocation Methods for Traveling and Mobile Employees

Payroll allocation for traveling and mobile employees is one of the most technically demanding areas of multi-state employment compliance, requiring employers to apportion wages across jurisdictions based on where work is actually performed. Incorrect allocation creates exposure in state income tax withholding, unemployment insurance, and workers' compensation — often across multiple states simultaneously. The methods used to allocate payroll vary by state, employee type, and industry, and no single federal standard governs the approach. This page describes the major allocation methods, their operational mechanics, the regulatory drivers behind them, and the classification boundaries that determine which method applies.


Definition and scope

Payroll allocation refers to the process of dividing an employee's total compensation among the states in which that compensation was earned through physical work performance. For traveling and mobile employees — including field technicians, consultants, sales representatives, airline crew, construction workers, and executives who operate across state lines — allocation is not a single-event determination but an ongoing calculation tied to actual days or hours worked in each jurisdiction.

The scope of payroll allocation obligations extends to state income tax withholding (which determines how much tax an employer remits to each state on the employee's behalf), unemployment insurance for multi-state employees (which designates the single "liable state" for UI contributions), and workers' compensation in multi-state contexts (which must cover all jurisdictions where injury risk is present). All three regimes use allocation concepts, but each applies different rules, triggering thresholds, and filing mechanics.

The threshold question — when does multi-state allocation become mandatory — is itself jurisdiction-specific. Some states impose withholding obligations after a single day of work performed within their borders. Others apply a de minimis exception, commonly 14 days of physical presence, before requiring withholding. Illinois, for example, exempts nonresident employees who work in the state for 30 or fewer days in a calendar year under its statutory threshold (35 ILCS 5/711).


Core mechanics or structure

Three primary allocation methods govern the distribution of wages among states for traveling and mobile employees:

1. Days-Worked Method (Days-in-State)
The most widely used approach divides total compensation proportionally based on the number of days worked in each state relative to total days worked. The formula is: (days worked in State X ÷ total days worked) × total wages = wages allocable to State X. This method requires systematic tracking — typically through travel logs, expense reports, or electronic timekeeping — at the individual employee level.

2. Hours-Worked Method
Functionally identical to the days-worked method but calculated by hours rather than days. The hours method is often more precise for employees whose daily schedules are fractional or irregular across state lines. It is the preferred method for employees who regularly work partial days in multiple states.

3. Time-and-Duty Method
Some states require or permit allocation based on the nature and significance of duties performed, not merely physical presence. Under this approach, wages tied to specific activities — negotiating contracts, supervising operations, executing deliverables — are assigned to the state where those activities occurred, regardless of where the employee's primary office sits.

For determining work situs for employees, the days-worked method is the default standard adopted by the Multistate Tax Commission (MTC) in its model withholding rules. The MTC's model sourcing rules for mobile employees recommend that employer states adopt a days-of-presence standard with a 14-day de minimis threshold, though adoption among states is voluntary and inconsistent (MTC Model Mobile Workforce Withholding Act).


Causal relationships or drivers

The need for allocation methodology arises from the structural collision between two competing state-level claims: the state of residence asserts the right to tax all income of its residents, while the state of physical work performance asserts the right to tax income earned within its borders. Without a systematic allocation protocol, both states may assert full withholding jurisdiction over the same wages, creating double-withholding exposure for the employer and potential double taxation for the employee.

Reciprocity agreements between states resolve a subset of these conflicts by allowing employees to pay income tax only to their state of residence, regardless of where they work. As of 2023, 17 states plus the District of Columbia participate in at least one reciprocity agreement (National Conference of State Legislatures, State Tax Actions database), but these agreements do not apply to unemployment insurance or workers' compensation allocation.

The convenience of the employer rule introduces an additional layer of complexity: states including New York, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, and Delaware impose source-state withholding even on days worked remotely from another state, if the remote work was performed for the employee's convenience rather than a necessity of the employer's operations. This rule directly undermines standard days-worked allocation for remote workers employed by companies in these states.


Classification boundaries

Not all mobile employees are classified identically for allocation purposes. The regulatory framework recognizes distinct categories that determine which allocation rules apply:


Tradeoffs and tensions

The days-worked method, while administratively straightforward, produces friction in practice because it requires employers to maintain contemporaneous records of each employee's physical location on each workday. For employers with mobile sales forces of 50 or more employees working across 10 or more states, the data infrastructure required to support audit-defensible records is substantial.

The tension between uniformity and state sovereignty has stalled the federal Mobile Workforce Simplification Act — introduced in Congress across multiple sessions — which would establish a 30-day national de minimis threshold before withholding obligations attach. Without federal preemption, employers must simultaneously manage states that impose withholding after day one (e.g., Alabama) and states with explicit 30-day safe harbors.

Multi-state payroll tax reconciliation at year-end creates additional tension when allocation percentages shift retroactively — for example, when an employee's actual days-in-state differ from the employer's projected withholding elections made at the beginning of the year. Corrections require amended returns in multiple states, each with its own filing deadline.

The state payroll registration requirements triggered by withholding obligations add compliance cost that is disproportionate for employers with minimal employee presence in a given state. An employer who sends a single employee to work in Maine for 20 days may face account registration, quarterly filing, and annual reconciliation obligations in that state for the entire calendar year.


Common misconceptions

Misconception: The employee's home state always determines withholding.
Correction: Residency determines the resident-state obligation, but work-state physical presence independently triggers withholding in most states. Resident vs. nonresident employee taxation rules require separate analysis for each jurisdiction.

Misconception: Reciprocity agreements eliminate all multi-state payroll obligations.
Correction: Reciprocity covers income tax withholding only between participating states. Unemployment insurance and workers' compensation obligations are not affected by reciprocity and must be allocated independently.

Misconception: Remote work is functionally equivalent to working from the employer's state.
Correction: Remote work creates a distinct tax nexus in the state where the employee is physically located. Nexus and employer obligations are triggered by employee physical presence, and convenience-rule states treat this differently from physical absence.

Misconception: A de minimis threshold means no obligation exists below that threshold.
Correction: De minimis thresholds typically apply to withholding only, not to the employee's underlying income tax liability in that state. The employee may still owe tax; the employer simply may not be required to withhold it.


Checklist or steps (non-advisory)

The following sequence describes the operational steps in implementing a payroll allocation process for a mobile employee workforce. This is a structural description, not an advisory prescription.

  1. Identify all states where employees physically perform work — including occasional travel destinations, not just assigned work locations.
  2. Determine applicable thresholds for each state — classify each state as immediate-obligation (day-one withholding) or de minimis (14-day, 30-day, or other threshold).
  3. Establish the tracking mechanism — decide whether the allocation methodology will be days-worked, hours-worked, or time-and-duty, and configure timekeeping systems accordingly.
  4. Register for payroll tax accounts in states where withholding obligations are triggered, per state payroll registration requirements.
  5. Configure payroll system state allocations — enter allocation percentages per employee, by state, for each pay period.
  6. Reconcile allocation data against actual travel records quarterly — compare projected days-in-state to actual days logged; adjust withholding prospectively.
  7. File quarterly withholding returns in each active state; remit withheld amounts on the schedule required by that state.
  8. Prepare year-end W-2s with multi-state wage boxes — Box 15/16/17 entries must reflect actual allocated wages and taxes per state.
  9. Conduct annual review of threshold status — employees who exceeded a de minimis threshold in one year may need proactive withholding in the following year.

Reference table or matrix

Payroll Allocation Method Comparison

Method Basis of Allocation Best-Fit Employee Type Data Requirement MTC Model Alignment
Days-Worked Calendar days in each state Business travelers, field reps Daily location logs Yes
Hours-Worked Hours in each state Partial-day cross-state workers Hourly timekeeping Yes (variant)
Time-and-Duty Nature of duties by location Executives, project managers Task/duty documentation Partial
Statutory Situs (Federal) Federal preemption by industry Interstate transportation workers DOT/carrier records Not applicable

State Withholding Threshold Comparison (Selected States)

State De Minimis Threshold Convenience Rule Applies? Notes
Alabama None (day one) No Full withholding from first day
Illinois 30 days (35 ILCS 5/711) No Statutory exemption for ≤30 days
New York None (day one) Yes Convenience rule applies to remote days
Pennsylvania None (day one) Yes Convenience rule in effect
Oregon None (day one) No Full withholding from first day
Nebraska None (day one) Yes Convenience rule applicable
Minnesota None (day one) No Reciprocity with 4 adjacent states

The full multi-state employment compliance landscape — including payroll allocation, nexus, withholding registration, and year-end reconciliation — is described across the reference network at multistateemployer.com.

For the intersection of allocation mechanics with wage-hour law across jurisdictions, see multi-state wage and hour compliance.


References

📜 7 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

Explore This Site