The most common causes of mismatches, and how to get ahead of them.
Let’s talk about timecards. Not the clean, approved ones that get filed without issue. We’re talking about the messy ones. The ones that show up missing tasks, with mismatched hours, or that trigger a bunch of flags before payroll even starts.
When timecards don’t match up with care assignments or EVV records, everything starts to fall apart.
It’s frustrating. It’s avoidable. And unfortunately, it’s extremely common.
These issues don’t happen because your team isn’t working hard. They happen because your tools don’t work together. Most errors come from the same five trouble spots:
A few mismatches might not feel like a big deal. But when they’re happening week after week, it adds up fast.
This isn’t just about cleaning up errors. It’s about the stress and time those errors create.
A timecard should be simple. It should reflect what really happened. But too often, agencies are stuck with data that needs a full investigation before it can be approved.
Here’s what a better system provides:
And most importantly, all of that should live in one place. One system. Not three.
You don’t need more dashboards. You need tools that are actually made for the way your team works. That means:
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s trust. You need to trust that what’s in the system is accurate. Your caregivers need to trust their hours are right. And your leadership needs to trust that claims will go through without constant cleanup.
Timecard errors don’t just throw off payroll. They mess with your whole week.
You’ve probably had to explain a dozen times why a caregiver’s pay is short. You’ve stayed late fixing visits from three days ago. You’ve juggled it all while still trying to run your day.
It’s exhausting. And it shouldn’t be this hard.
You’re doing your best. You’re just stuck with tools that weren’t built for this pace, this workload, or this much responsibility.
But there are systems out there that can help—ones that make timecards less of a burden and more of a background task.
If you’re ready to stop spending hours fixing things that shouldn’t be broken in the first place, we get it. We’ve been there too. And we’re building tools to make it better.