Time Recording Obligation 2025 – Quick Check for Employers

“Time clock? That’s for grandma’s factory!” Anyone who thinks that way risks a fine faster than the barista can serve the first cappuccino. Since the Federal Labor Court’s decision of September 13, 2022 (1 ABR 22/21), every company must introduce an “objective, reliable, and accessible” time tracking system – immediately, regardless of industry, size, or work model.


1 | Status Quo 2025: Obligation without its Own Law

Paradoxical, but true: The obligation stems directly from § 3 Abs. 2 Nr. 1 ArbSchG . A specific time tracking law is still stuck in parliamentary gridlock; the BMAS draft (electronic, entry no later than seven days after shift end, two-year retention) is awaiting approval. Transition periods? None. Supervisory authorities have long been checking – and know the BAG’s stance by heart.


2 | What are the Consequences if Nothing Happens?

Occupational safety authorities can already issue orders and sanction with up to €30,000 per violation. The draft aims to extend this upper limit soon to all documentation errors. So, whoever plays the “wait-and-see” game bets €30,000 on red – and the wheel spins monthly.


3 | Three Costly Myths

MythRealityRisk
“We have trust-based working hours – so nothing needs to be recorded.”Even trust-based models require objective documentation; only the control remains trust-based.Fine + lack of evidence in overtime lawsuits
“Excel is enough.”Perhaps in the short term, but in the long term, policy demands tamper-proof software or terminals.Conversion twice as expensive, evidential value questioned
“Student workers or freelancers are excluded.”The obligation applies to all employees – including mini-jobbers, interns, external companies; only genuine managing directors are exempt.Collective claims, intensive authority visits

4 | Five Immediate Measures – Quick Affordable

  1. Choose a System
    Cloud tool, terminal, or app – the main thing is that it’s tamper-proof, daily available, and GDPR-compliant (EU server, deletion concept).
  2. Update Work Instructions
    Clear rule: “Start, end, and breaks are to be entered on the same day.” Mobile teams use the app.
  3. Involve the Works Council
    Regarding the how of recording, the works council has full co-determination rights (§ 87 Abs. 1 Nr. 6 BetrVG). A clear works agreement saves endless discussions.
  4. Establish a Control Process
    Monthly spot checks for 11-hour rest periods and 10-hour daily limits. Reprimand violations in writing – otherwise, you will be held liable later.
  5. Properly Regulate Data Protection
    Retention for two years, access only “need-to-know”. Integrate information obligation according to Art. 13 GDPR into employee information.

5 | Case Study Cologne

A digital agency (five people) used handwritten time sheets. Following a complaint, the district government found missing records and repeated 10-hour overruns. Result: Immediate switch to electronic recording and a €5,000 fine per violation. A smartphone tool for four euros a month would have prevented this.


6 | My Offer – Concise, yet Precise

I review your contracts and policies, formulate legally sound service instructions, and represent you before authorities or in court if things are already critical. No workshops, no glossy audits – but targeted legal support, exactly where it’s needed.


Key takeaway: Not tracking working hours doesn’t save time – it costs it.