Since 2019, every employer in Ireland must record the working hours of all employees. The Workplace Relations Commission is actively enforcing this — with fines of up to €2,500 per offence.
Check if you're compliant — free checklist ↓ Takes 60 seconds. No email required.Under the Organisation of Working Time Act 1997 and a 2019 ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union, every Irish employer must keep detailed records of employee working hours. This applies to all employees — full time, part time, and casual workers.
Your records must include:
These records must be kept for at least three years and must be available for inspection by a WRC inspector at any time. Inspectors do not need to give advance notice.
An inspector can visit your premises unannounced and request your time records on the spot. If you can't produce them, you are in breach.
Employers found in breach can receive a fixed penalty notice. Fines can reach up to €2,500 per offence — per employee, per violation.
Serious or repeat breaches can result in prosecution through the courts. This is on your company record and is publicly searchable.
Tap YES or NO for each item.
Paper timesheets and WhatsApp messages don't hold up under a WRC inspection. You need a proper digital record that timestamps every clock-in and clock-out automatically.
We recommend clockin — a time tracking app used by thousands of businesses across Europe, built specifically for teams with field and deskless workers. Your employees clock in and out on their phone, you see the records in real time, and everything is stored securely and ready for inspection.