If you run payroll on a biweekly or weekly schedule, 2026 may require a little extra planning.
Due to how the calendar falls, some employers will experience an additional payroll in 2026—meaning 27 pay periods instead of 26 for biweekly schedules, and 53 instead of 52 for weekly schedules.
This isn’t a policy change or system issue. It’s simply how payroll cycles (which operate on fixed 7- or 14-day intervals) occasionally align with the calendar. This happens roughly every 11–12 years.
Payroll doesn’t follow calendar months—it follows consistent weekly or biweekly cycles. In 2026, the alignment of pay dates creates an extra payroll for certain employers.
Because January 1, 2027 falls on a Friday, payrolls that would normally be processed on that day may instead be processed on Thursday, December 31, 2026. That shift pulls what would traditionally be the first payroll of 2027 into the 2026 calendar year—creating an additional pay date.
Not all employers will see an extra payroll in 2026. The impact depends on two key factors:
Impacted schedules include:
Your payroll calendar matters.
If your payroll calendar lines up with a January 2 start date, the early processing of the final payroll on December 31 creates the extra pay period.
The biggest implication of a 27th (or 53rd) payroll is financial planning.
In 2026, affected employers will:
This can influence:
For salaried employees, you may also need to determine whether to:
These are strategic decisions—not just payroll mechanics.
Proactive planning makes this manageable. We recommend:
A simple calendar shift can create ripple effects—but with the right planning, it’s entirely manageable. If you’re unsure whether your payroll is impacted, contact your Ahola dedicated Client Partner to review your payroll schedule with you.