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On the Leave tab, you enter the details required to calculate the amount of annual leave and personal leave (Australia), or sick leave (New Zealand), an employee has accrued.

If you're in Australia, you need to Choose whether the employee receives paid annual and personal leave for each of your employees.

For each employee entitled to leave, you need to:

Choose whether the employee receives paid annual and personal leave (Australia)

When you start using MYOB Essentials for leave management, or when you create a new employee record, select whether you pay them annual leave and personal leave, by selecting or deselecting the option on the Leave tab. of their employee record.

If you select this option (for example, if the employee is part-time or full-time), they will begin accruing leave the next time you include them in a pay run.

If you don’t select this option (for example, if the employee is a casual), you don’t need to enter leave entitlements and opening balances.

Enter opening leave balances (Australia)

New employees

When you add a new employee, their annual leave and personal leave opening balance will probably be zero. The employee will begin accruing leave after you have included them in a pay run.

Existing employees

If you’ve been manually tracking leave for an employee, enter their current leave balance. You should be keeping track of this for all existing employees, so simply copy over the amount of leave they are currently entitled to, into this field.

Enter opening leave balances (New Zealand)

New employees

When you add a new employee, their annual leave, alternative holiday and sick leave opening balance will probably be zero. The employee will begin accruing leave after you have included them in a pay run.

Existing employees

If you’ve been tracking leave for an employee in another system, enter their opening balances for both available and accruing leave. These balances will be reflected in their respective current balance fields.

With each payrun, the current balance will increase, while the opening balances will remain the same.

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After the payrun (which includes the employee’s anniversary date in Essentials) has occurred, the opening balance accruing is rolled into the current balance available, and the opening balance accruing field becomes uneditable.

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Note: If you delete the employee’s payrun which includes their anniversary date, the opening balance accruing field will become editable again until another payrun is done.

The opening balance available can be edited at any time, but remember that any change will be reflected in the employee’s current balance available.

Enter leave entitlements

Annual leave

There are two ways an employee can accrue annual leave (note that in New Zealand, employees must be permanent or part-time to accrue annual leave):

  • Weeks—Enter how many weeks of annual leave the employee gets per year. Since accrued leave is tracked in hours, the actual number of hours accrued will depend on how much they work. However, it will normally result in the same number of weeks’ holidays, at each employee’s normal hours.
    For example, say your employees are entitled to four weeks of annual leave each year. A full-time employee (working 40 hours per week) will accrue 160 hours per year (that is, four weeks, at 40 hours per week). A part-time employee who works 20 hours per week will accrue 80 hours each year (that is, four weeks at 20 hours per week). In both cases, this is equivalent to four weeks of leave at their normal hours.
  • Hours—Enter a fixed number of hours. The employee will accrue this number of hours each year, regardless of how much they work.
    For example, say all of your employees are entitled to 160 hours of annual leave per year. A full time employee will be able to take four weeks of annual leave (at their normal 40 hours per week). However, a part time employee who works 20 hours per week will be able to take eight weeks of leave at their normal hours.

Personal leave (Australia)

The personal leave entitlement that you enter on this screen is the number of hours of personal leave that the employee will accrue if they work full-time (that is, 38 hours per week). By default, this is set to 76 hours (equivalent to 10 days).

You don’t need to change this if the employee works more or less than 38 hours per week. In these cases, the amount of leave they accrue will be automatically scaled, depending on how many hours they work.

For example, an employee working 19 hours per week (that is, half of full-time hours) will accrue half of the entitlement shown. An employee working, say, 40 hours per week will accrue slightly more.

For more information about managing your employees’ leave in MYOB Essentials, see Managing your employees’ leave.

Sick leave (New Zealand)

The sick leave entitlement is the number of days of sick leave that the employee will accrue each year. By default, this is set to 10 days, regardless of how many hours the employee works each week. You can use the Maximum accrual is field to set the maximum number of sick leave days the employee can have accrued.

Holiday pay percentage (New Zealand)

For casual and contract workers, this percentage is added to their gross salary each pay period, instead of accruing annual leave. For example, if their gross pay one week is $1000, they will receive an additional $80 in holiday pay.

For permanent and part-time employees, this percentage is used to calculate payment of accrued holidays when leaving employment. The accrued holiday payment is the holiday pay percentage of the gross pay they’ve earned since their last anniversary date. For example, if they’ve earned $10,000 since their last anniversary date, and their holiday pay percentage is 8.00%, then their accrued holiday payment will be $800.

Note that the minimum legal rate for holiday pay is 8%. For more information, see the Department of Labour’s Holidays and Leave page.

Anniversary dates (New Zealand)

Anniversary dates are used to determine when an employee’s leave becomes available. An employee can have a different anniversary date for annual leave and personal leave (for example, if they started as a casual employee with no annual leave entitlement, and then became full time), but usually these dates will both be the same as the employee’s start date.

Available and accruing annual leave (New Zealand)

Employees accrue the specified amount of annual leave over the course of the year. On their anniversary date, it becomes available, and moves from their accruing balance to their available balance.

It’s possible for employees to negotiate to take leave that is accrued but not yet available, but this will result in a negative available balance until the next anniversary date, when the accruing leave (already taken by the employee in this case) becomes available.

For more information about managing your employees’ leave in MYOB Essentials, see Managing your employees’ leave.