• @toynbee
    link
    238 months ago

    Also, in the US, employers have to pay departing employees for any unused PTO. If the PTO is “unlimited,” there’s (perhaps counterintuitively) nothing to reimburse.

    • Gristle
      link
      English
      48 months ago

      Wow, I hadn’t even considered this. Here I was jealous.

      • @Passerby6497
        link
        English
        48 months ago

        Honestly, having had both paid out PTO and unlimited, I’ll take unlimited. It sounds like you’re getting fucked by not getting your PTO paid out, but you also aren’t incentivized to hold onto your PTO on the off chance you get paid out if you leave. I’ve found my mental health to be better now that I’m actively taking my leave instead of rationing it since I can just take it without wondering if I’m going to have to take an unpaid day late in the year.

        • @Malfeasant
          link
          28 months ago

          If your employer is halfway decent, sure. Unfortunately some (like mine) will start denying pto requests once you hit 2 weeks. So then you say “fine, I’ll take it unpaid” and they say “that’s not an option.” The fuck it is…

      • @toynbee
        link
        28 months ago

        You and I have been in very similar positions.

    • @RBWells
      link
      18 months ago

      That’s only true in California. Accrued PTO does not have to be paid out, nor rolled into the next year. Some employers will pay it out but it’s not a law. Except in California.