What Myanmar law says
The Payment of Wages Law permits a damage deduction only when:
- The employee has caused identifiable damage to property, equipment, or stock through wilful or negligent action.
- The employee has signed a written agreement consenting to the deduction.
- The deduction does not push total non-statutory deductions past ~50% of monthly wages.
Without written consent, the employer cannot self-deduct. Recovery must run through the township labour office or the civil courts under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law.
Worked example — phased damage recovery
Damage value: MMK 600,000. Employee monthly gross: MMK 800,000. Cap on damage deduction (within 50% non-statutory cap): MMK ~200,000/month after other deductions.
| Month | Damage instalment (MMK) | Outstanding (MMK) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 200,000 | 400,000 |
| 2 | 200,000 | 200,000 |
| 3 | 200,000 | 0 |
Employee signs the schedule before the first deduction. Each instalment is itemised on the payslip.
Documentation requirements
- Damage assessment report (date, item, value, employee role).
- Signed written consent including instalment schedule.
- Payslip itemising each instalment separately from PIT, SSB, and other lines.
- Record retention: at least 7 years.
Edge cases
- Wilful damage — employer can pursue criminal charges separately.
- Disputed damage value — neutral assessment recommended; do not self-assess.
- Employee refuses to sign — must use dispute resolution, not payroll deduction.
- Deduction beyond the cap — schedule across multiple months.
- Resignation during instalment — set off against final settlement only with consent or court order.
- Tools / uniform loss — typically covered; written consent still required.
Employer takeaway
Damage deductions require written employee consent and must respect the ~50% non-statutory cap. Always assess the damage formally, agree the value, sign an instalment schedule, and itemise on the payslip. Without consent, route the claim through the township labour office or civil courts. Retain consent records 7 years.
Common payroll mistakes
- Self-deducting damages without written consent.
- Recovering full damage in one month and breaching the 50% cap.
- Skipping the formal damage assessment.
- Confusing damages with fines — fines are not a permitted deduction category (see wage deduction law).
- Deducting from final settlement on resignation without authorisation (see final settlement).
We publish practical, legally-grounded HR guidance for Myanmar employers. Each piece is reviewed by our compliance team against current MLIP and Labor Law requirements.