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Target is starting to track employees’ unexcused lateness and absences with a points system—and if they rack up 12, they’re fired | Fortune

Fortune Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Target will begin tracking unexcused tardiness and absences with a points system starting this September.
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Target assigns quarter points for being more than eight minutes late, one point for missing a shift without manager approval, and three points for skipping work without telling the boss.
0.25 points · late arrival1 points · missed shift3 points · skipped work
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Attendance strikes expire after 365 days.
365 days · strike expiration
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Three points require a supervisor check‑in, five points trigger counseling, and twelve points result in termination.
3 points · supervisor check‑in5 points · counseling12 points · termination
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Michael Fiddelke was appointed CEO of Target at the start of February this year.
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Target reported declining comparable sales for the fourth quarter in a row after Fiddelke became CEO.
4 quarter · declining sales period
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Target is a $63 billion company.
63 billion dollars · company revenue
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Walmart and Amazon have introduced points‑based attendance policies to their millions of staffers.
more than 1 million · staffers
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Roblox began monitoring employee ID card swipes in 2023.
2023 year · year of monitoring
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Bloomberg instructed staff to use an internal system to record location each day in 2023.
2023 year · year of instruction
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Dell started tracking badge swipes and VPN usage in 2024.
2024 year · year of tracking
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German workers take an average of 14.8 sick days per year.
14.8 days · sick days per year
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Merz proposed a bonus for workers who take five leave days or fewer each year.
5 days · leave days per year
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The post-pandemic days of coffee badging and logging in from the couch may be coming to an end. More employers have been rolling out novel ways to keep tabs on workers’ whereabouts. And now, retail giant Target is doubling down on its attendance policy with a new points system.

Starting this September, Target will begin tracking the unexcused tardiness and absences of its store and warehouse workers with a new points system, according to Business Insider reporting confirmed by the company. 

Staffers’ attendance violations will be tallied up and addressed accordingly: a quarter of a point for being more than eight minutes late to work, one point for missing a shift without their manager’s approval, and three points for skipping on work without telling their boss. The attendance strikes expire every 365 days.

And the higher the number climbs, the more serious the consequences become. If staffers rack up three points, they’ll have to check-in with their supervisor; after five, counseling is on the table. And ultimately, if employees hit the threshold of 12 points, they’ll be shown the door. 

Target’s attendance system comes as its new CEO, Michael Fiddelke, looks to better store operations and create a better experience for shoppers. Right now, the company is “focused on returning to growth, and elevating our guest experience is a key strategic priority,” a Target spokesperson told Business Insider

Fiddelke was appointed to CEO of the retail chain at the start of February this year after working his way up through the company for two decades, starting as an intern back in 2003. And his ascension to the top role came at a time of business struggles; right after Fiddelke became CEO, Target had reported declining comparable sales for the fourth quarter in a row, though it forecasted net sales growth of 2% for this year. In recent years, shoppers have also complained of high prices, understaffed stores, and messy, poorly-stocked aisles. 

And the $63 billion company, employing more than 400,000 workers, isn’t the only major American retailer who has been rolling out the strategy to make sure employees are on-time; Walmart and Amazon have also introduced a points-based attendance policy to its millions of staffers. And it’s just one of the ways companies are tightening their grip on employee tardiness.

Target did not respond to Fortune’s request for comment. 

Ever since the pandemic eased and office doors began to open, professionals have been begrudgingly dragging their feet back to work. And in response to empty cubicles and mysteriously absent employees, companies have been cracking down with their own ways to keep tabs on employees’ whereabouts.

Employee surveillance has become a very popular tactic in the attendance push. 

Back in 2023, California-based gaming company Roblox began monitoring the number of times employees swipe their ID cards to get into the building, tracking location data from company laptops and phones in an attempt to verify if workers are complying with the firm’s three-day RTO policy. That same year media company Bloomberg also instructed its staff to use an internal system to record their location each day. Any employees who didn’t show up to their assigned offices for the three day in-person workweek would get a slap on the wrist, receiving verbal reminders from their managers.

In 2024, Dell similarly started tracking the electronic badge swipes and VPN usage of its employees to monitor who is and isn’t heading into the office three days a week. And based on how they fare on being consistent, they’ll get a color-coded rating: blue flags for workers who consistently show up, green and yellow flags for those who go into the office semi-regularly, and a red flag to hybrid workers who snub the company’s return-to-office mandate.

“In today’s global technology revolution, we believe in-person connections paired with a flexible approach are critical to drive innovation and value differentiation,” Dell told Fortune in a statement in 2024.  

And even entire countries are rolling out attendance reforms. Germany—where workers take an average of 14.8 sick days per year, one of the highest rates of absenteeism in Europe—has put its foot down on employees playing hooky. 

Chancellor Friedrich Merz and the Christian Democratic Union proposed a plan earlier this year that would give a bonus to workers who take five leave days or fewer each year—and dock pay for those who call in sick. The ultimate goal was to nudge professionals with minor issues, like a cold or stomach bug, back into the office rather than skipping work. 

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