Direct deposit is an electronic payment method that sends an employee’s wages straight into their bank account instead of issuing a paper check. It runs through the Automated Clearing House (ACH) network. For most U.S. workers, it is the standard way to receive pay because the money arrives automatically on the pay date.
Direct deposit replaces the paper check with an electronic transfer. On each pay date, the employee’s net pay lands in their account without anyone needing to visit a bank or cash a check. It has become the default for payroll because it is faster, cheaper, and more secure than printing and mailing checks, and it removes the risk of a check being lost or stolen.
Most payroll systems default to direct deposit, and many employers strongly encourage it because it cuts their processing costs. Employees still receive a pay stub, either on paper or through an online portal, that shows their gross pay, deductions, and net pay even though no physical check changes hands.
Setting up and running direct deposit involves a clear sequence:
Because ACH transfers take a day or two to clear, employers submit payroll ahead of the pay date rather than on it. This timing is especially important for a biweekly schedule, where missing the ACH cutoff can delay everyone’s pay. Payroll teams build their processing calendar around bank holidays and weekends for the same reason, since the ACH network does not run on those days.
For employers, direct deposit reduces the cost and labor of printing, signing, and distributing checks, and it lowers the risk of fraud tied to paper checks. For employees, it means reliable, on-time pay and the convenience of not having to deposit anything manually. Many systems also allow employees to split their deposit across accounts, sending part to savings and the rest to checking automatically.
There are a few considerations. Not every worker has a bank account, so employers cannot always assume direct deposit will work for everyone. Several states limit an employer’s ability to make it mandatory, requiring either employee consent or an alternative such as a paper check or a prepaid pay card. A compliant policy offers a fallback rather than forcing electronic payment on staff who cannot or will not use it.
Maria starts a new job and fills out a direct deposit form with her checking account and routing number. Her employer runs payroll every other Wednesday and submits the ACH file the Monday before, allowing two business days for it to clear. On payday, her $1,850 in net pay appears in her account automatically.
Maria also decides to split her deposit. She directs $200 of each paycheck into a savings account and the remaining $1,650 into checking. She no longer has to deposit a check or move money manually, and she can see the breakdown on her online pay stub each cycle.
The employer sends payroll data through the ACH network, which transfers each employee’s net pay electronically from the company account into the employee’s bank account on the pay date.
It depends on the state. Some states allow employers to require it; others require employee consent or an alternative payment option like a paper check or pay card.
ACH transfers usually settle in one to two business days, so employers submit payroll a couple of days before the pay date for funds to arrive on time.
Often yes. Many payroll systems let employees split a deposit, sending a set amount or percentage to savings and the rest to checking.
Employees provide their bank’s routing number and their account number, along with the account type. This is often supplied on a voided check or an authorization form.