Quick Answer
To get your Walmart pay stub, log in to OneWalmart (one.walmart.com) or the Me@Walmart app with your Walmart credentials, open the paystub section, pick the pay period, and view, download, or print it. You can also use an in-store WIRE computer. Can't log in — or no longer work there? Your people lead, the store personnel office, or Walmart People Services can provide your pay stubs and W-2.
Every Walmart associate is paid as a W-2 employee, so each paycheck comes with a pay stub showing your hours, earnings, taxes, and take-home pay. Whether you need it for a loan, an apartment, or just to check your hours were paid right, here's how to get your Walmart pay stub — and what to do if you're locked out.
How to get your Walmart pay stub
Method 1 — OneWalmart portal
- Go to one.walmart.com.
- Sign in with your Walmart user ID and password.
- Open the pay / paystub section.
- Select the pay period you want.
- View it online, or download / print the PDF.
Tip: on the clock, you can reach the same portal from an in-store WIRE computer.
Method 2 — Me@Walmart app
Download the Me@Walmart app and sign in with your Walmart credentials. It gives you pay, schedule, and time-off access from your phone — handy for checking a stub on payday.
Method 3 — Your people lead or personnel office
If you're having trouble logging in, your people lead or the store's personnel office can help you regain access or print a copy on the spot.
Method 4 — Walmart People Services (HR)
Walmart People Services can pull pay records and resend W-2s, and can help former associates who no longer have OneWalmart access.
When does Walmart pay you?
Walmart generally pays hourly associates every two weeks, by direct deposit or pay card. Exact pay days vary by store, so confirm yours with your people lead. Whatever the schedule, your stub always shows the pay period it covers — check those dates against the hours you actually worked, and make sure any overtime (1.5× over 40 hours a week) is paid correctly.
Check your Walmart paycheck is correct
If your take-home looks low, it's usually just taxes: federal income tax, any state tax, and FICA (7.65%) come out of every check. To confirm the numbers, plug your hourly rate and hours into the paycheck calculator, see your annual figure with the hourly to salary calculator, or learn what each line means in our guide to reading a pay stub.