Payroll Mistakes Add Up: Pizza Company Pays $409K to 32 Workers
A Little Caesars franchisee will pay $409,457 for federal wage and hour violations, the Department of Labor (DOL) recently announced.
The case shows how payroll mistakes turn into expensive liabilities when overtime calculations and recordkeeping controls fall short.
Payroll Mistakes Trigger Six-Figure Settlement
According to an investigation by the DOL’s Wage and Hour Division, franchise operator MG Fast Food Inc. violated minimum wage and overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Federal investigators found that 32 workers at a Little Caesars in Redwood City, CA, were not properly paid. Specifically, the employer:
- Paid straight time to employees who worked more than 40 hours in a workweek instead of overtime premiums, and
- Failed to compensate some employees for all hours worked, resulting in minimum wage violations.
Further, the investigation also determined the employer failed to keep accurate payroll records in violation of FLSA recordkeeping procedures. Discrepancies between timesheet totals and payroll records affected overtime calculations, according to DOL.
Under the settlement agreement, the company will pay $409,457 in back wages to 32 affected workers – an average of nearly $12,800 per employee.
“All workers must be paid for every hour they work, including overtime premiums when they work more than 40 hours in a workweek,” said Wage and Hour Division Acting District Director Michael Eastwood in San Jose, California.
This is not the first enforcement action involving the brand.
In 2022, the DOL investigated seven Little Caesars locations in Tennessee. Investigators found minimum wage and overtime violations as well as violations of child labor law. The agency recovered $1,625 in back wages for 21 workers and assessed a $161,050 civil penalty for the child labor violations.
In January 2025, the DOL cited a Little Caesars franchisee in Farmington Hills, MI, for violating child labor provisions of the FLSA. Investigators found that a minor under 16 operated a pizza oven and dough mixer, and that three 15-year-olds worked past 7 p.m. on school nights. The agency assessed $26,341 in civil penalties.
Wage and Hour Takeaways for Finance Teams
From a finance perspective, the settlement highlights how payroll mistakes and control failures can escalate into regulatory and financial exposure. When timekeeping data doesn’t reconcile with payroll records, overtime calculations can be distorted, triggering investigations and compounding liability across multiple employees.
- Calculate overtime at 1.5x over 40 hours. Straight-time errors like these often spark DOL wage probes.
- Reconcile payroll with time records. Mismatches distort overtime totals and create separate FLSA violations.
- Maintain accurate records. Inaccurate time/payroll data racks up extra liability beyond wage shortfalls.
- Mitigate routine errors before they scale. Small payroll mistakes across 32 workers snowballed to $409K here – a payout devastating for razor-thin restaurant margins.
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