What Myanmar law says
Myanmar permits employment of minors aged 14 to 17 in non-hazardous roles, with protective restrictions on daily hours, night work, and the type of duties they can perform. The Factories Act 1951 sets the minimum age for non-hazardous factory work at 14 and the minimum age for hazardous work at 18. The OSH Law 2019 overlays a duty of care on the employer for any minor on the premises.
Children under 14 cannot be employed at all. Employers caught hiring an under-14 face fines, criminal exposure for serious cases, and reputational damage that can disqualify them from international supplier programs.
Minor-employment rules
| Age | Allowed work | Hour and condition limits |
|---|---|---|
| Under 14 | None | Prohibited |
| 14–15 | Non-hazardous, light work | Stricter daily caps; no night work; no factory machine operation |
| 16–17 | Non-hazardous | Stricter caps; no night work; written parental consent advised |
| 18+ | All work, including hazardous | Standard adult caps |
Edge cases
- Apprenticeships — minors can be apprentices in approved trades; hours still count toward the daily cap.
- Family business — narrow exemptions for family-run, non-hazardous workplaces; do not extend to factory operations.
- Documentation — keep age verification (NRC, birth registration, school certificate) on file.
- Hazardous list — chemical handling, heavy machine operation, mining, construction at height — all require 18+.
- School-attendance overlap — schedule outside school hours where compulsory schooling applies.
Records and inspections
Age verification documents, parental consent forms (where used), and minor-specific hour logs must be kept on file. Retention ≥ 7 years. The township labour office reviews minor-employment records during any inspection of a factory or retail site that hires young workers. International buyers' social-compliance audits scrutinise these records aggressively in garment, footwear, and food sectors.
Employer takeaway
Minors aged 14–17 can work in non-hazardous Myanmar roles with stricter daily-hour caps and no night work. Children under 14 cannot be employed; hazardous work requires age 18 under the Factories Act 1951. Verify age with NRC or school certificate, document parental consent, and screen out hazardous tasks. Retain records for 7 years; missing age verification is a high-priority inspection finding for both township labour office and international buyers.
Common mistakes
- Hiring a 14–15-year-old for "light" work that turns out to involve unguarded machinery.
- Skipping age verification because the candidate "looks 18".
- Letting minors work the same OT and night shifts as adults during peak season.
- Relying on parental consent alone — consent does not lift hazardous-work or hour caps.
Related reading: minimum age for employment, Factories Act on hours, and night-shift regulation.
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