Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Can I turn PTO into cash?

Maybe, but that doesn’t mean you should skip vacations

- By Shalene Gupta

When Matt Cadwell joined the human resources department at digital sign company Stratacach­e in 2017, he realized there was a problem. Thanks to a generous leave policy, employees had racked up hours of paid time off (PTO) they hadn’t used. When they left, Stratacach­e had to write large checks.

So Cadwell turned to PTO Exchange, a platform that allows employees to trade their unused PTO for cash, donate it or use it for travel or educationa­l expenses. The most popular program is the cash-out option, he says, particular­ly around the holiday season or right before summer when people want to pad out their travel and gift budget. Cadwell says the only challenge he ran into was communicat­ion.

“When an employee thinks you’re touching their vacation time, people can get wild,” he says. “It’s important to make it clear that it is optional, and you don’t have to use it if you don’t want to.”

American workers care deeply about their PTO. According to a 2020 report from Gartner, it’s the benefit they value most after base pay. In addition, workers are 70% more sensitive to a change in PTO than in salary.

At the same time, many aren’t using all their PTO: Last year, Americans left an average of 5.6 vacation days on the table. What happens to the unused PTO depends on the state you live in. About half the states in the U.S. have laws requiring employers to pay out banked-up

PTO when an employee leaves, but some allow employers to forgo the payout if the employee has left after less than a year with the company.

Rob Whalen, cofounder and CEO of PTO Exchange, says he started the company after he and a group of colleagues received large cash payments for their unused vacation days after leaving Cisco. “We were talking about all the things we could have done with the money, such as put it in our 401(k)s or take a family vacation,” he said. “That was the light bulb moment.”

Whalen says PTO Exchange works with companies to create a communicat­ion strategy around the options for employees, and to create policies that ensure employees don’t cash out their entire PTO — for example, by only offering cash-outs to employees who’ve already used two weeks of PTO. He points out that when employees are being compensate­d, they should think of their total compensati­on as both salary and PTO. Any time an employee loses their PTO, they are losing part of their compensati­on because their employer has gained more productivi­ty from them.

The idea of exchanging PTO for money is relatively new, says Rich Fuerstenbe­rg, a senior partner at Mercer. He notes that giving employees a choice to cash out PTO creates tax implicatio­ns for the employee, and the tax legislatio­n is murky.

As such, the idea didn’t get much traction pre-pandemic. However, during lockdowns, when travel options shut down, employees started accruing PTO.

“It’s not mainstream, but it’s gotten employers interested and wanting to learn more,” he says.

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