What Myanmar law and practice say
The Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 requires the appointment letter to state wages and pay schedule. The Payment of Wages Law expects regular wage payment, and Myanmar's minimum-wage notification sets a floor on the daily wage that an employer can lawfully pay an employee. Pure commission-only employment, where the employee earns nothing in months without a sale, sits awkwardly against all three.
Two compliant patterns work. First, "base + commission" — the employee gets a fixed monthly base at or above the minimum-wage floor, plus a commission tied to sales. Second, a genuine independent-contractor arrangement with a sales agent who runs their own business, has multiple clients, and invoices the company on B2B terms. Mixing the two — calling someone a contractor while controlling them like an employee — re-classifies as employment with retroactive ESDL and SSB exposure.
Three engagement patterns compared
| Pattern | Legal basis | SSB / PAYE | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base + commission employment | ESDL appointment letter | Yes — both | Low (compliant) |
| Pure commission-only employment | ESDL appointment letter | Yes — both | High (likely below minimum wage in slow months) |
| Independent sales agent (contractor) | Service agreement | No — agent's own tax | Medium (mis-classification risk if employee-like) |
If you go base + commission (employee)
- Set the base at or above the minimum-wage daily rate × working days.
- Define commission scheme in writing — basis (revenue / margin / collected cash), rate, payment cadence, claw-back rules.
- Issue ESDL appointment letter with base + commission scheme attached — within 30 days of start.
- Register with SSB within 30 days; SSB applies to total wages including commission, capped at MMK 300,000.
- Withhold PIT PAYE on total earnings monthly.
- Pay commissions on a stated cadence (monthly / quarterly).
If you go contractor sales agent
The sales agent must genuinely run their own business — multiple clients, own tools, control over how they sell. Use a B2B service agreement with commission terms, not an ESDL appointment letter. The agent invoices monthly, handles their own PIT and Commercial Tax, and has no SSB. Mis-classification risk is the headline danger — see contractor vs employee.
Employer takeaway
Avoid pure commission-only employment in Myanmar. Use base + commission for employees — the base must clear the minimum-wage floor — and run SSB and PIT PAYE on the total. Use an independent-contractor agreement only for genuine sales agents with multiple clients. Issue the ESDL appointment letter within 30 days, retain the personnel file at least 7 years post-exit.
Edge cases
- High-base, low-commission senior sales — clearly an employee; classic ESDL letter.
- Outbound call-centre piece-rate — employee with piece-rate base at minimum-wage floor, plus output commission.
- Multi-level marketing — typically agent-style; written B2B agreement, not ESDL.
- Foreign-national sales agent — immigration constraints; see foreign-worker hiring.
Common hiring mistakes
- Running pure commission-only employees and falling below minimum wage in dry months.
- Skipping the SSB calculation on commission earnings (capped at MMK 300,000).
- Calling an employee-like sales rep a "contractor" to avoid SSB and PAYE.
- Forgetting to write the commission scheme into the appointment letter (see appointment letter).
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.