Calculate your current PTO balance by tracking opening balance, accrued hours, time used, forfeitures, and carryover. Stay on top of your leave bank.
Your PTO balance represents the total number of paid time-off hours available to you at any given moment. It starts with any carryover from the prior year, adds hours you've accrued through each pay period, and subtracts time you've already used or forfeited. Keeping an accurate running balance prevents you from over-booking vacations or leaving valuable days on the table.
This calculator consolidates every factor that affects your balance into a single view: opening balance, newly accrued hours, hours used, any forfeited or expired hours, and carryover additions. The result is your real-time available PTO.
Whether you're mid-year planning a holiday trip or heading into year-end trying to use remaining days, this tool shows exactly where you stand. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Manually tracking PTO across multiple pay stubs, HR portals, and calendar apps is error-prone. A single miscounted sick day can throw off your entire plan. This calculator gives you one consolidated view and helps you catch discrepancies before they become problems. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Current Balance = Opening Balance + Accrued Hours − Hours Used − Forfeited Hours + Carryover Adjustments Days Equivalent = Current Balance ÷ 8
Result: 76 hours (9.5 days) available
Starting with 40 hours carried over, plus 60 hours accrued this year, minus 32 hours used, minus 0 forfeited, plus an 8-hour adjustment gives 40 + 60 − 32 − 0 + 8 = 76 hours, or 9.5 eight-hour days.
Your PTO balance is a running tally that changes with every pay period and every day off. Think of it like a bank account: deposits come in as accrual, withdrawals go out as usage, and penalties reduce it through forfeiture.
Employees frequently find discrepancies between their personal tracking and their HR system. Common causes include: retroactive policy changes, holidays incorrectly counted as PTO, accrual pauses during unpaid leave, and timing differences between when you request time off and when it's deducted.
As the year draws to a close, review your balance against your company's carryover cap. If you're at risk of forfeiting hours, schedule time off or check if your employer offers a cash-out option. Planning ahead ensures you maximize the benefit you've earned.
Your opening balance is typically the PTO hours you had at the start of the year. This includes any carryover from the previous year that your employer allowed, plus any front-loaded hours granted on January 1 or your anniversary date.
It depends on your employer's policy. If your company uses a combined PTO bank that includes sick, vacation, and personal days, then yes. If sick time is tracked separately, exclude it from this calculation.
Forfeited hours are PTO that you lost due to a use-it-or-lose-it policy, an accrual cap, or a policy change. Not all employers have forfeiture — some states prohibit it entirely.
A negative balance means you've used more time than you've earned. Some employers allow borrowing against future accrual. If you leave with a negative balance, the company may deduct the overage from your final paycheck where legally permitted.
Policies vary. Some employers reset balances to zero with a carryover cap. Others use an anniversary-based system where accrual is continuous. Check your employee handbook for your company's reset date and carryover rules.
Employers can generally change PTO policies going forward, but accrued PTO is often legally protected as earned compensation. In states like California, accrued PTO cannot be forfeited or reduced retroactively.