What Myanmar law says
Daily-wage workers in Myanmar receive the same statutory leave entitlements as monthly-paid employees once they are continuously engaged for the qualifying service period. The Leave and Holidays Act, the Factories Act 1951 for factory workers, and the Shops and Establishments Act for office, retail, and hospitality staff all apply to daily-wage workers in the same manner as they apply to salaried employees — the only mechanical difference is that leave pay and encashment use the daily wage rather than (monthly salary ÷ 30).
The qualifying threshold for "continuous engagement" is typically 12 months of regular work for the same employer (for annual leave) and 6 months (for sick leave). Casual leave and public holidays apply from day one of continuous engagement.
Entitlement table — daily-wage workers
| Leave type | Days/year | Eligibility | Pay | Encashable? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annual leave | 10 | After 12 months continuous engagement | Daily wage × days | Yes — at daily wage |
| Casual leave | 6 | From day one of continuous engagement | Daily wage × days | No |
| Sick leave | 30 | After 6 months continuous engagement | Daily wage × days | No |
| Maternity | 14 weeks | Female workers; SSB if registered IP | SSB or employer at daily wage | n/a |
| Public holidays | ~21 | Continuously engaged | Daily wage × gazetted days | n/a |
How leave pay is calculated
- Annual / casual / sick / public holiday. Daily wage × number of leave days taken. The daily wage is the basic daily rate, excluding bonuses and OT.
- Encashment of unused annual leave. Daily wage × unused days, paid at exit. The /30 conversion used for monthly-paid employees is unnecessary because the daily wage is already the base.
- Holiday-rate work. Working on a public holiday triggers 3× the basic daily wage for the hours worked, in addition to the regular paid-holiday daily wage.
- SSB. Daily-wage workers contribute to SSB on the same 2% / 3% basis (capped at MMK 300,000 monthly equivalent) once registered as IPs.
Worked example — daily-wage worker leave pay
Daily-wage construction worker earns MMK 15,000/day, continuously engaged for 18 months:
- Annual leave (10 days): 10 × 15,000 = MMK 150,000 if all taken
- Casual leave (6 days): 6 × 15,000 = MMK 90,000 if all taken
- Sick leave (up to 30 days): 30 × 15,000 = MMK 450,000 if maximum used
- Encashment at exit (5 unused annual days): 5 × 15,000 = MMK 75,000
"Continuous engagement" — what counts
The qualifying service period for statutory leave is the duration of continuous engagement with the same employer. Short gaps for industrial reasons (such as a few days between projects) typically do not break continuity. Genuine breaks in service (resignation, re-hire after months apart) restart the clock. Document each engagement period clearly to avoid disputes:
- Daily attendance register signed by the worker.
- Wage payment record showing daily payments.
- Engagement letter confirming the start date and rate.
- Township labour office can request these records during inspection.
Edge cases and exceptions
- Casual / one-off daily workers. Workers engaged for a single project or a few days do not meet the continuous-engagement threshold; statutory leave does not accrue.
- Project-based daily workers. Long-running project engagements that resume regularly may meet continuous-engagement criteria; document carefully.
- Daily wage including overtime. The leave-pay base is the basic daily wage, excluding OT and shift differentials.
- Probation. Daily-wage workers do not typically have a formal probation; the 6-month and 12-month thresholds operate as the de facto qualifying periods.
- Foreign workers on daily wage. Same entitlements when continuously engaged.
- Factory vs office. Same statutory floor; only inspection regime differs.
- Encashment at exit. Daily-wage encashment uses the daily wage rather than (monthly ÷ 30); see leave encashment on resignation.
Employer takeaway
Treat continuously engaged daily-wage workers the same as monthly-paid employees for statutory leave — 10 days annual after 12 months, 6 casual from day one, 30 sick after 6 months, and ~21 public holidays. Pay leave at the basic daily wage; encash unused annual leave at exit using daily wage × unused days. Document continuous engagement carefully through attendance and wage registers, and retain records for at least 7 years.
Frequently asked questions
Does this entitlement apply to employees on fixed-term contracts?
Yes. Fixed-term contract employees in Myanmar receive the same statutory leave floor as permanent employees once they meet the relevant service-tenure thresholds. The Leave and Holidays Act, the Factories Act 1951, and the Shops and Establishments Act do not distinguish between fixed-term and indefinite contracts for leave purposes — eligibility is set by months of continuous service. Contract expiry is not termination, so unused annual-leave balance is encashed at the end of the contract using (monthly salary ÷ 30) × unused-days. See the bucket E pages on fixed-term contracts for the contract-side rules.
How does this interact with payroll and SSB?
All paid leave is treated as ordinary salary income for Myanmar payroll purposes. PIT is withheld through PAYE on every payslip that includes leave pay. SSB contributions (2% employee + 3% employer, capped on a wage base of MMK 300,000/month) continue during paid leave because the employee is still earning wages. SSB contributions pause only during unpaid leave. Encashment of accrued annual leave at exit is part of taxable salary for PIT but practitioners differ on SSB treatment of the lump sum — confirm with the township SSB office on filing.
What records does the township labour office expect?
Inspectors typically request the leave register for the past 12 months, medical certificates for sick leave over 3 days, maternity / paternity SSB filings, final settlement worksheets for recent leavers, and the public-holiday gazette for the current year. Records must be retained for at least 7 years under both the Factories Act 1951 and the Shops and Establishments Act. Keeping a clean per-employee leave file with tagged entries makes inspections quick and defensible. Digital records from a payroll system are acceptable provided they can be printed on demand.
Common leave-law mistakes
- Treating daily-wage workers as ineligible for statutory leave. Continuous engagement triggers eligibility just as for monthly employees.
- Skipping public-holiday pay. Continuously engaged daily-wage workers must receive the daily wage on each gazetted holiday.
- Using a /30 divisor for encashment. Daily-wage workers already have a daily rate — multiply directly by unused days.
- Not registering daily-wage workers with SSB. If the employer has 5+ employees in total, daily-wage workers must be enrolled within 30 days of joining.
- Failing to document continuous engagement. Without a register, disputes about leave eligibility become hard to resolve.
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