What Should a Pet Services Time Clock Track?
A pet services time clock should make busy care shifts reviewable before payroll, not replace your pet-care software.
Start with the shift you have to approve
A pet services time clock should answer one payroll question: can a manager tell who worked, what changed, and what payroll received?
For a boarding kennel, grooming shop, daycare, training center, or pet transport service, the useful record starts with clock-ins, clock-outs, missed punches, breaks if you track them, corrections with reasons, and final approval. If department or location detail helps review time, capture kennel, grooming, daycare, front desk, cleaning, or transport detail while the shift happens. If nobody uses that detail before payroll, do not make staff tap through it.
What to check this week
- Watch one busy handoff and list what the manager needs before payroll.
- Mark which roles need department, location, or transport detail.
- Decide whether breaks are tracked in the time clock or somewhere else.
- Require a reason for each missed punch or manual edit.
- Approve time cards before exporting hours to payroll.
Where pet services teams get stuck
- A kennel attendant misses a Sunday clock-out; payroll needs the fix and reason.
- A groomer covers front desk after appointments; the hours need the right detail.
- A driver returns from transport late; the manager needs hours before payroll.
- Pet-care notes live in one system while employee time changes live in another.
Keep animal care separate from payroll time
The time clock should not become a second kennel, grooming, booking, billing, or customer-message system. Use it to keep employee hours reviewable before payroll. When in doubt, track the work record first; leave pet-care records where staff already manage them.
Keep reading
- Quick-read1 min
When Do You Owe Overtime?
When employers owe overtime, which states add daily or 7th-day rules, and why salaried misclassification creates the biggest exposure.
- Quick-read1 min
Why Overtime Isn't Just the Base Rate
Why overtime isn't just 1.5× base pay, the 'discretionary' bonus trap, and the math that compounds into back-pay liability.
- Quick-read1 min
Do Salaried Employees Get Overtime?
Why paying a salary doesn't make an employee exempt from overtime, what counts as 'exempt' under federal law, and the tracking that keeps you defensible.
About this guide
Clockspot has been making time-tracking software for small businesses since 2007. Every quick-read article we publish is fact-checked. Each claim is verified against the underlying laws and court cases, with a dated report published alongside the piece so any reader can audit it.