Workforce management and scheduling for shift-based teams
Deputy is the go-to workforce management tool for businesses with complex shift scheduling. Its AI-powered scheduling and compliance features save operations teams hours each week.
Scheduling, HR, and payroll modules priced separately. Minimum 5 users.
Deputy is a workforce management platform designed for businesses with hourly and shift-based employees: retail, hospitality, healthcare, logistics, and other industries where scheduling, time tracking, labour cost management, and compliance are core operational concerns. Founded in Australia in 2008 and now serving 350,000+ businesses globally across 100+ countries, Deputy is consistently rated among the best workforce management solutions for small-to-large businesses in shift-intensive industries. The platform covers scheduling, time and attendance, task management, team communication, and payroll integration in a single mobile-first platform.
Pricing: From $6/user/month (Scheduling) | $6/user/month (Time & Attendance) | $7.50/user/month (Premium) | 31-day free trial available
Deputy addresses the operational complexity of managing shift-based workforces across the full lifecycle of a shift: building and publishing the schedule, ensuring the right employees are in the right place at the right time, accurately tracking time worked, managing compliance with labour laws, and connecting time data to payroll. Unlike simpler scheduling tools that cover only one or two of these functions, Deputy is a platform that spans the full workforce management workflow.
The platform is built for industries where workforce management complexity is high: a 50-location retail chain managing thousands of part-time employees across multiple states, a healthcare organisation tracking nursing certifications and ensuring coverage ratios, a multi-location restaurant group managing variable demand, labour cost targets, and food handler certification compliance. Deputy’s breadth of capability and international coverage (labour law compliance modules for US, Australia, UK, and other markets) makes it competitive for organisations that have outgrown simpler tools.
Deputy has been acquired by and operates alongside its parent company’s broader workforce management ecosystem. The platform has invested significantly in AI-powered scheduling features that automate shift creation based on demand forecasts, employee availability, and labour cost targets — reducing manual schedule-building time for complex multi-location operations.
The split between strong editorial and user ratings (4.6/5 on G2) and weaker Trustpilot scores (3.6/5) is notable. Trustpilot tends to capture customers with negative experiences more than satisfied users, and the support quality issues that dominate negative Trustpilot reviews are a real concern worth flagging. For most organisations evaluating Deputy, the G2 ratings with 663 verified reviews provide stronger statistical confidence in the platform’s overall quality.
Deputy’s scheduling module is the strongest in the market for complex, multi-location operations. The schedule builder supports drag-and-drop shift creation, shift templates, and recurring schedule patterns. The AI Auto-Scheduling feature generates complete schedules based on inputs: required coverage by time slot, employee availability, skills and qualifications, labour cost targets, and compliance requirements. For a retail manager who needs to build a 50-person week schedule across three locations, auto-scheduling reduces the process from hours to minutes. Schedule conflicts — overtime, unavailability, certification mismatches, break law violations — are flagged in real time. Schedules are published to employees via push notification with acknowledgement requirements (employees must confirm they’ve seen their schedule).
Deputy’s time clock is available as a mobile app clock-in (with GPS location capture), a web browser clock-in, or a shared tablet kiosk (iPad). Mobile clock-in uses geofencing to restrict clock-ins to employees within a defined radius of the work location. GPS location is recorded at each clock-in and clock-out, giving managers a map view of where each employee was when they started and ended their shift. Facial recognition authentication is available for kiosk clock-ins to prevent buddy punching. The GPS time clock is a key differentiator from When I Work and Homebase, which don’t offer location-verified clock-ins.
Deputy includes labour compliance rules for break requirements, overtime thresholds, minor work restrictions, and predictive scheduling requirements (for jurisdictions like New York City and San Francisco that mandate advance schedule notice). Compliance rules are configured per location and jurisdiction; when a schedule violates a rule (e.g., a shift that doesn’t include a required meal break), the violation is flagged before the schedule is published. For healthcare employers tracking nursing certification requirements and coverage ratios, compliance rules ensure only qualified employees are scheduled for roles that require specific certifications.
Deputy’s labour cost module connects scheduling decisions to financial outcomes in real time. As managers build schedules, they see projected labour cost, labour cost as a percentage of revenue (if POS data is integrated), and overtime cost warnings. Labour cost dashboards show actual vs. budgeted labour by location, department, and time period. For multi-location operators where labour cost management is a primary financial discipline, these analytics support data-driven scheduling decisions rather than intuition-based schedule building.
Deputy allows managers to create tasks associated with shifts or locations. Employees see their task lists when they clock in and can mark tasks complete through the app. Managers can view task completion status across all shifts in real time. This feature is particularly valuable for retail and hospitality businesses with shift-handover checklists, opening/closing procedures, or compliance-required tasks (temperature logs, safety checks) that need to be completed and documented each shift.
Deputy’s team communication tools include shift-specific messaging, news feed announcements, and direct messages. Managers can send targeted messages to everyone scheduled on a specific shift, all employees at a location, or specific teams. Shift journals allow employees to leave notes for the next shift. The communication features centralise work-related messaging in the Deputy platform, reducing reliance on informal personal messaging and creating an auditable communication record.
Deputy manages time-off requests, accrual balances, approval workflows, and leave calendars. Employees submit requests through the app; managers approve or deny with the leave calendar visible to show impact on coverage. Leave accrual calculations cover standard leave types (annual, sick, personal) with configurable accrual rates per employment type. Approved leave is blocked in the scheduling module.
Deputy’s AI scheduling engine is the most advanced available in the workforce management category. By ingesting demand forecasts (from POS or manual inputs), employee availability, skills requirements, and labour cost targets simultaneously, the AI generates schedules that optimise across all these parameters. For a manager previously spending 4–6 hours building a complex weekly schedule manually, auto-scheduling that produces a compliant, cost-optimised schedule in minutes is a genuine operational improvement. The AI doesn’t replace manager judgment — the generated schedule is always reviewable and adjustable — but it reduces the manual work dramatically.
Several US cities and states have enacted predictive scheduling laws requiring employers to provide advance notice of schedules (typically 2 weeks) and pay premiums for last-minute changes. Deputy’s compliance engine tracks predictive scheduling requirements by jurisdiction and flags violations in real time. For large retailers and restaurant groups operating in New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, and other jurisdictions with these laws, built-in compliance management reduces both regulatory risk and manual tracking overhead.
Deputy is well-regarded for ease of use despite its feature depth. Forbes’ 5.0/5 rating specifically cites simplicity, reliability, and ease of adoption as primary strengths. The manager scheduling interface is clean and navigable for managers without dedicated scheduling expertise. The employee app is consistently praised as intuitive — employees clock in, view schedules, and request time off without training. The platform’s depth becomes apparent in the analytics, compliance, and multi-location management features, which have a steeper learning curve but are navigated by operations managers rather than frontline employees.
Deputy implementations for most small businesses take 1–2 weeks. The process includes importing employees, configuring locations and roles, setting up compliance rules, and connecting payroll integration. For multi-location enterprise deployments with complex integrations and compliance configurations, implementations can take 4–8 weeks. Deputy provides onboarding support and implementation guides. The 31-day free trial allows organisations to run a complete month of real-world scheduling before committing — longer than most competitors’ trials.
Customer support is the most common area of concern in Deputy reviews. While editorial reviews praise the platform, Trustpilot’s 3.6/5 from direct users highlights that reaching effective support when issues arise can be difficult. Support is available via live chat and email; phone support is available on Enterprise plans. For businesses where a scheduling platform failure could directly impact operations — a missed shift due to a notification bug, a payroll discrepancy from time tracking errors — the variable support experience is a real risk to factor into the evaluation. Organisations that prioritise strong support should evaluate this carefully, potentially through direct support testing during the free trial.
Deputy has the most extensive integration library in the scheduling platform category with 250+ integrations. Payroll: ADP, Gusto, Xero, QuickBooks, Paychex, MYOB (Australia), Rippling, and others. POS: Square, Toast, Lightspeed, NCR, Clover, and others for demand-based scheduling. HRIS: BambooHR, Workday, SAP SuccessFactors. Accounting: Xero, QuickBooks. API access for custom integrations. The depth of POS integrations is particularly valuable for retail and food service businesses that want to use sales data to drive demand forecasting in scheduling.
Deputy offers modular pricing across three plans:
At $7.50/user/month for Premium, a 50-person business pays $4,500/year. This is more expensive than When I Work’s Pro plan ($5/user/month) for comparable employee counts, but the GPS time tracking, AI scheduling, and compliance features justify the premium for organisations that need those capabilities. The modular pricing means businesses can choose Scheduling-only or Time & Attendance-only if they need only one function, which is unusual and useful for businesses that already have one of the two covered.
When I Work is simpler, cheaper at small employee counts, and faster to implement. Deputy has GPS time tracking, AI scheduling, stronger compliance tools, and a more extensive integration library. When I Work is better for small businesses under 100 employees with straightforward scheduling needs. Deputy is better for multi-location operations, businesses needing GPS verification, or organisations with compliance complexity. As a business grows and scheduling complexity increases, many outgrow When I Work and upgrade to Deputy.
Homebase includes payroll processing in its paid plans, making it a more complete solution for small businesses wanting scheduling + payroll in one tool. Deputy does not include payroll but has better GPS time tracking, AI scheduling, and multi-location capabilities. Homebase also offers a free single-location plan that undercuts Deputy’s pricing at the smallest scale. For businesses that want integrated payroll, Homebase may be the better choice. For businesses that need GPS time tracking or manage multiple locations, Deputy is stronger.
7shifts is purpose-built for restaurants with features like tip pooling, restaurant POS integrations, and compliance with restaurant-specific labour laws. For restaurant operators, 7shifts’ industry specialisation often makes it the stronger choice. Deputy is more broadly applicable across industries and has better GPS time tracking and compliance tools for non-restaurant businesses. Multi-industry operators (e.g., a hospitality group with restaurants and hotels) often find Deputy’s breadth more useful than 7shifts’ depth.
Deputy is used for employee scheduling, GPS time tracking, labour cost management, compliance management, and team communication for shift-based workforces. It serves retail, hospitality, healthcare, logistics, and other industries where managing hourly employee schedules is a daily operational requirement.
Deputy costs $6/user/month for Scheduling or Time & Attendance, and $7.50/user/month for the Premium plan (which includes both). Enterprise pricing is custom for 250+ employees. A 31-day free trial is available with all features included.
Yes. Deputy’s mobile time clock captures GPS location when employees clock in, verifying they are at the correct work site. Geofencing restricts clock-ins to employees within a defined radius. Managers see a map view of clock-in locations. GPS tracking is available on all paid Deputy plans.
Deputy does not process payroll. It integrates with payroll platforms (ADP, Gusto, Xero, QuickBooks, Paychex, Rippling) to export approved timesheets. Businesses need a separate payroll provider alongside Deputy.
Yes — Deputy is one of the most widely used scheduling platforms for retail businesses. The combination of AI scheduling, demand-based scheduling from POS integrations, labour cost management, and compliance tools makes it well-suited for multi-location retailers managing complex hourly workforces. Forbes explicitly cited retail as a primary strength in its 5.0/5 review.
Deputy is the strongest workforce management platform in the market for mid-to-large shift-based businesses that need more than basic scheduling: GPS time tracking, AI-powered auto-scheduling, labour compliance management, and a broad integration ecosystem. The 4.6/5 G2 rating across 663 reviews and Forbes’ 5.0/5 editorial score reflect genuine platform quality in its core scheduling and time tracking functions.
The primary concerns are customer support quality (Trustpilot 3.6/5 reflects real user frustration when issues arise) and the cost increase when add-ons are included. For businesses with straightforward scheduling needs and under 100 employees, When I Work or Homebase may provide better value. For businesses with multi-location operations, GPS requirements, or compliance complexity, Deputy’s capabilities justify the investment.