HR Insights · Myanmar

How do I manage HR for a hotel in Myanmar?

Hotel HR in Myanmar — S&E Act 44-hour week, shift rosters, service charge, tipping pools, SSB, OSH and seasonal payroll. Realistic budgets.

QC
QHRM Content Team
HR & Compliance Editors
May 3, 2026
3 min read

What this looks like in practice

Myanmar hotels operate under the Shops & Establishments Act (44-hour week, 1-day weekly rest), with peak demand around Thingyan, Christmas, Chinese New Year and conference season. Shift work, service charge handling and tipping pools dominate the HR conversation. SSB triggers at 5 employees, OSH committee at 50, and ESDL applies from Day 1 to all roles including casuals and trainees.

Step-by-step setup

  1. Register the hotel with DICA, the township labour office and the relevant Ministry of Hotels and Tourism authority.
  2. Issue ESDL appointment letters to all staff including F&B, housekeeping, kitchen, front-office, security and casuals.
  3. Build a 3-shift roster respecting the 44-hour week and 1-day weekly rest with handover documentation.
  4. Document the service-charge policy in the appointment letter — distribution percentage, frequency, taxation.
  5. Run monthly payroll by the 7th, PIT and SSB by the 15th; treat service-charge distributions as wages for PIT purposes.
  6. Set up OSH committee at 50 employees with safety officer, fire safety drills, kitchen-hazard PPE and accident register.
  7. Plan seasonal staffing — fixed-term contracts for high-season roles with severance correctly excluded on contract expiry.

Tools, templates and costs

  • Hotel HRMS with shift roster, service-charge pool and tipping log: MMK 400,000–1,000,000/month for 50–200 staff.
  • Per-staff monthly cost: MMK 350,000–800,000 in Yangon, MMK 250,000–600,000 in Mandalay, including SSB and meals.
  • Seasonal-hire budget: 15–25% headcount swing typical.
  • Templates: shift roster, service-charge policy, tipping pool log, fixed-term contract, kitchen safety briefing.
Download the Myanmar hotel HR pack Shift-roster template, service-charge policy, fixed-term contract and OSH kitchen-safety briefing.
Get the pack →

Service charge and tips

Service charge collected from guests (typically 10%) is distributed per the hotel's published policy and is taxable as wages for PIT. Tips received directly by staff in cash are technically taxable but are commonly handled through a documented pooling policy. Both should appear on the payslip line — opaque distribution is the leading source of staff disputes at the township labour office.

Employer takeaway

Run hotels under the S&E Act 44-hour week, with documented shift rosters, service-charge policy and SSB from 5 employees. Pay 2x for weekend and 3x for public-holiday work. Treat service-charge distributions as wages for PIT. The single most-failed obligation is undocumented tipping pools that staff later challenge.

For hospitality HR leads in Myanmar
Skip the spreadsheet phase. QHRM gives you payroll, attendance, leave and statutory compliance ready on Day 1 — used by 350+ Myanmar employers across factories, retail, hospitality, BPO and SaaS.

Pitfalls to avoid

  • Undocumented tipping pool — staff disputes and PIT under-withholding.
  • Service charge not on the payslip — Payment of Wages Law violation.
  • Casuals without ESDL contracts — violation regardless of hours.
  • Skipping SSB on seasonal hires — registration is required for any IP, however short-term.
  • OT calculated only on basic, not gross — leads to brand-standard audit findings for international hotel chains.

Related: restaurant HR, hospitality-sector challenges, and seasonal-business HR.

Share this articleLast updated May 3, 2026
QC
QHRM Content Team
HR & Compliance Editors · Yangon

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.

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