Need your money before the weekly payday? You can use Instant Pay to transfer your available balance to your bank account or debit card.
Key details:
Fee: Each Instant Pay cash out costs $2.99.
Cutoff: You must cash out eligible timecards for the prior pay period before Tuesday at 11:30 a.m. ET.
Minimum balance: You need at least $5.00 to cash out.
Requirements: You must have a linked payout method and no active rejected timecards or unresolved deductions.
Late cancellation timecards are not eligible for instant pay at the moment
Prerequisites to Cash Out: Before you can use this feature, you must have:
A Balance of at least $5.00.
A payout method linked to your account.
No active rejections or deductions: Any rejected timecards, overpayment deductions, or garnishments must be resolved first.
Step-by-Step Guide:
Step-by-Step Guide:
Open the Wallet.
Check your balance and confirm it is above the $5 minimum.
Tap "Cash out": Press the blue Cash out button located directly under your balance.
Select your Payout Method: You will see your linked accounts listed with labels indicating how fast the funds will arrive. Ensure you select the correct option:
Instant (Green Label): Money arrives in minutes. This is typically for Debit Cards.
Standard (Blue Label): Money takes 1-2 business days. This is typically for Bank Accounts.
Confirm Transfer:
You will see a summary showing the payout amount and the $2.99 fee.
Tap Confirm cash out to finalize the transaction.
Success: You will see a confirmation message. Funds will arrive based on the speed label you selected.
Where does the record go? After you cash out, your balance updates to reflect the withdrawal. You can find the record in Payout History, labeled as an Instant payout
Why is the "Cash out" button grayed out? If you cannot tap the button, check the following:
Is your balance under $5.00?
Do you have a valid U.S. bank account on file?
Are you past the cutoff for withdrawing from the prior pay period (Tuesday at 11:30 a.m. ET)?
Do you have a rejected timecard, a previous overpayment deduction, or a garnishment that must be resolved?

