HR Insights · Myanmar

How does Myanmar SSB compare to social security in Thailand or Singapore?

Myanmar SSB = 2%+3% capped MMK 300,000. Thailand SSO = 5%+5% capped THB 15,000. Singapore CPF = up to 20%+17% — built mostly for retirement and housing.

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

How SSB works for Myanmar employers

Myanmar SSB sits at the lower end of the regional payroll-cost spectrum. For HR leaders managing pan-ASEAN payrolls, the most useful framing is to compare three things across schemes: the contribution rate, the wage cap, and what the contribution actually buys. The headline answer: Myanmar SSB is intentionally narrow and inexpensive; Thailand's SSO is wider but still modest; Singapore's CPF is structurally different — much higher rates, primarily a forced-savings vehicle for retirement and housing rather than an insurance pool.

Side-by-side comparison (illustrative — confirm latest rates)

DimensionMyanmar SSBThailand SSO Singapore CPF
Employee rate2%5%Up to 20%
Employer rate3%5%Up to 17%
Wage capMMK 300,000/monthTHB 15,000/monthSGD ~6,800/month (Ordinary Wage cap)
Max combined per employee/monthMMK 15,000THB 1,500SGD ~2,500+ (cap binds for high earners)
Primary benefitsMedical, sickness, maternity, work-injury, survivors', funeralSickness, maternity, work-injury, child, old-age, unemployment, deathRetirement savings, housing, healthcare savings, MediShield Life
Filing authorityTownship SSB officeSSO Bangkok / provincial officeCPF Board (online)
Threshold to register5+ employees1+ employee (typical)Citizens / PRs only

Contribution rates and the wage-base cap (Myanmar SSB)

ItemRateMaximum (cap = MMK 300,000)
Employee contribution2%MMK 6,000 / month
Employer contribution3%MMK 9,000 / month
Total5%MMK 15,000 / month per employee

Worked example — same MMK 800,000/month employee, three schemes

SchemeCapped wage baseCombined contributionWhat it funds
Myanmar SSBMMK 300,000MMK 15,000 / mo (5%)Medical, sickness, maternity, work-injury
Thailand SSO (illustrative)THB 15,000THB 1,500 / mo (10%)Insurance + old-age + unemployment
Singapore CPF (illustrative — citizen/PR)SGD ~6,800 cap~37% combined within bandsRetirement, housing, healthcare savings

Caveats: Myanmar SSB is mandatory only for 5+ employee employers; Thailand SSO covers most employers with employees; Singapore CPF applies only to citizens and PRs (not foreign workers). Reviewer should refresh the comparator rates before publication.

Registration and monthly returns

  • For Myanmar SSB: register at the township SSB office, file monthly return + pay by the 15th of the following month.
  • For pan-ASEAN HR teams, calendars and rates differ — don't copy-paste a Thai or Singapore template into Myanmar SSB.
  • Confirm rates and caps annually — all three jurisdictions update via notifications.
  • Retain SSB records 7 years.
ASEAN payroll cost benchmarker Compare statutory employer cost across Myanmar, Thailand, and Singapore for any salary band.
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Benefits SSB provides

  • Medical (IP + dependants).
  • Sickness cash benefit (after 1+ year of contributions).
  • Maternity — 14 weeks of paid leave with cash benefit through SSB.
  • Work-injury benefit (Day 1).
  • Funeral grant + survivors' pension.

Employer takeaway

Myanmar SSB is the cheapest of the three regional schemes — 5% combined on a low MMK 300,000 cap, max MMK 15,000/month per employee. Don't bench against Thailand SSO (wider benefits, double the rate) or Singapore CPF (very different model — retirement-and-housing forced savings). Use a country-by-country lens for HR planning. Records retained 7 years.

For HR teams managing multi-site SSB
Stop tracking SSB on spreadsheets. QHRM auto-calculates capped SSB for every payroll run, generates the monthly return, and flags employees missing SSB IDs — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Common variations

  • Foreign workers — covered by Myanmar SSB on local payroll; Thailand SSO covers expats with work permits; Singapore CPF excludes most foreign workers.
  • Voluntary scheme — Myanmar has one for the self-employed; Thailand has Section 39/40; Singapore has self-employed Medisave contributions.
  • Annual reconciliations — all three jurisdictions require annual filings on top of monthly returns.

Common SSB mistakes

  • Replicating CPF logic in Myanmar — wrong rate, wrong purpose, wrong cap.
  • Assuming Thailand SSO benefits map to Myanmar SSB benefits — the SSO scheme covers more events.
  • Quoting candidates a "regional-standard" employer payroll cost without backing into the actual Myanmar 3% capped figure.

Practical workflow for HR teams

Whether the SSB obligation in question is registration, contribution calculation, a benefit claim, or a leaver event, three operational habits prevent most non-compliance issues:

  1. Anchor the SSB calendar to payroll close. The 15th of the following month is non-negotiable for the contribution return at the township SSB office. Treating SSB as a payroll-close output, not a separate task, eliminates last-minute filings.
  2. Reconcile the SSB register against the payroll register monthly. Joiners enrolled within 30 days, leavers deregistered within 30 days, dependant changes captured — these are the three reconciliation lines that catch most defects before they become audit findings.
  3. Cap discipline. Apply the MMK 300,000/month wage cap on every Insured Person, every month, before computing 2% / 3%. Most Myanmar SSB overpayments trace back to a payroll system that runs the rate against full gross.

Payslip transparency

Show the SSB withholding line distinctly on the payslip, alongside Personal Income Tax (PIT). Employees should see the 2% line item, the wage base it was applied to, and the SSB ID. Transparent payslips reduce employee queries about take-home pay and create a clean trail for any future SSB or IRD audit. Where the wage cap binds, label the line "SSB (capped at MMK 300,000 base)" so the maths is self-explanatory.

Multi-site coordination

For employers operating across more than one township, the township SSB office for the workplace — not the corporate head office — is the operational counterparty. Maintain a per-site SSB ledger covering: employer code, township office, monthly return file location, and copy of stamped acknowledgements. Centralised SSB tracking with site-level sub-ledgers is the simplest way to reconcile a multi-site monthly return. The same logic applies for PIT remittances to the IRD office covering the workplace.

Recordkeeping checklist

  • Original employer registration acknowledgement.
  • Per-IP enrolment forms with stamped SSB receipts.
  • Dependant registration forms — track updates for life events (marriage, birth).
  • Monthly contribution returns + payment vouchers (12 per year).
  • Annual SSB summary return.
  • Wage / service certificates issued on benefit claims.
  • Deregistration acknowledgements for leavers.
  • Penalty assessments and remediation correspondence (if any).

Retention rule: at least 7 years for SSB records, aligned with the payroll-record retention requirement under the Income Tax Law and the personnel-record requirement under ESDL.

Related: What is SSB?, How SSB is calculated, SSB vs PIT.

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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