Walmart Pay Stubs: How to View Them on OneWalmart

Updated July 2026 · PaystubWiz Help Center

Quick answer: Current Walmart employees view pay stubs through OneWalmart at one.walmart.com or the Me@Walmart app. Former employees lose portal access — jump to the former-employee section below.

Current employees: step by step

  1. Go to one.walmart.com (or the Me@Walmart app) and sign in with your employee credentials.
  2. Open the Pay / Pay Stub section of OneWalmart.
  3. Pick the pay period you need — most platforms keep 1-3 years of statements.
  4. Download or print the PDF. Save copies every few months; portal access ends when you leave.

Walmart pays biweekly, and OneWalmart also shows your schedule and W-2 when tax season comes.

Former Walmart employees: how to get your pay stubs

Once you leave Walmart, your portal login is usually deactivated within days — often before you realize you need one more stub for a lease or loan. The reliable path:

Need a pay record you can't retrieve?

If you know your true pay figures (bank deposits + W-2), rebuild a clean earnings statement in minutes.

Open the paystub generator

Frequently asked questions

How do I get my Walmart pay stubs after quitting?
Portal access typically ends at separation. Send a written request to Walmart's payroll or HR department for copies of your pay statements — payroll records are retained for years, and many states require employers to provide copies to former employees. Meanwhile, bank statements plus your W-2 cover most proof-of-income needs, and you can rebuild a records copy from true figures with our generator.
Does Walmart mail paper pay stubs?
Generally no — like most large employers, Walmart delivers pay statements electronically through OneWalmart. Print or save PDFs yourself if you need paper copies.
Can I make my own pay stub if I can't reach payroll?
For your own records, yes — with true figures. Use your bank deposits and W-2 to get the numbers right, then generate a clean statement. Creating documents with false information to obtain housing or credit is fraud, and our terms prohibit it.

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