How do I manage HR for a logistics company in Myanmar?
A Myanmar logistics company manages drivers, warehouse staff, riders and an office team across the S&E Act and Factories Act (warehouse). SSB applies at 5, ESDL from Day 1 (including delivery riders), and OSH at 50. Driver-hours management, accident reporting and DG/cargo handling are the operational priorities. Total HR budget runs MMK 1.5M–4M/month for a 30-50 person operation.
What this looks like in practice
A Myanmar logistics operator typically combines a head office, a warehouse, a transport pool (drivers and helpers) and a last-mile rider fleet. The S&E Act covers office, the Factories Act 1951 typically covers warehouse operations classified as factory-coded sites, OSH Law 2019 covers accident reporting and the safety committee at 50+. Driver classification is the most-litigated area — drivers paid per trip can still be employees under ESDL.
Step-by-step setup
- Register the company with DICA, get the transport licence per the Ministry of Transport & Communications.
- Issue ESDL appointment letters to office, warehouse, drivers, helpers and riders — including those paid per-trip.
- Set the driver-hours register with start/end logs; cap weekly hours at 48 per Factories Act if warehouse-bound.
- Run consolidated monthly payroll — fixed salary for office; variable + per-trip for drivers/riders, treated as wages for PIT.
- Register with SSB at 5 employees — drivers and riders are IPs.
- Set OSH committee at 50 — warehouse PPE, lift safety, fire drill, accident register.
- Report serious accidents within 24 hours — vehicle crashes with injury are MoLES-reportable plus traffic-law reporting.
Tools, templates and costs
- Logistics HRMS with shift, route and trip-pay: MMK 600,000–1,500,000/month for 30–80 staff.
- Driver salaries: MMK 400,000–800,000/month + per-trip allowance + meal allowance.
- Rider salaries: MMK 350,000–600,000/month + delivery incentive (often piece-rate per delivery).
- Templates: driver appointment letter, trip-pay register, warehouse OT log, accident report, vehicle inspection log.
Driver classification
"Per-trip" or "per-delivery" pay does not by itself make a driver a contractor. Tests applied at the township labour office include exclusivity, control over schedule, ownership of vehicle, and whether the driver works for multiple clients. A driver wearing the company uniform, using the company vehicle, and dispatching only the company's deliveries is an employee — issue an ESDL contract and register with SSB.
Employer takeaway
Logistics HR straddles S&E and Factories Acts. Issue ESDL contracts to drivers and riders even on per-trip pay, register SSB at 5, set up OSH committee at 50, and report vehicle accidents within 24 hours. The single most-failed obligation is driver misclassification — backdated SSB and ESDL exposure when challenged.
Pitfalls to avoid
- Drivers and riders treated as contractors — biggest classification risk in the sector.
- Per-trip pay not on payslip — Payment of Wages Law violation.
- No driver-hours register — risk of OT under-payment and accident-liability exposure.
- Warehouse run as S&E Act — Factories Act 1951 typically applies.
- Late accident report — 24-hour deadline is hard, plus traffic-law reporting layered on top.
Related: factory HR compliance, daily-wage workers in payroll, and running payroll.
- ESDL 2013 — appointment letters for drivers and riders
- Factories Act 1951 — warehouse working hours
- OSH Law 2019 — accident reporting, safety committee at 50+
- Social Security Law 2012 — 5-employee threshold
Related questions
Stop calculating PIT manually.
QHRM's payroll engine applies the latest Union Tax Law brackets, basic relief, and dependant allowances automatically.