HR Insights · Myanmar

What does the Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019 cover in Myanmar?

Myanmar's OSH Law 2019 covers all workplaces, mandates a safety committee at 50+ employees, PPE, training, drills, first-aid, and 24-hour accident reporting.

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

What Myanmar law says

The Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019 ("OSH Law") covers all workplaces in Myanmar — factories, construction sites, mines, oil & gas installations, agricultural operations, offices, retail outlets, restaurants, hotels, and similar. Some duties are universal; others scale up with headcount or hazard. The law sits alongside the Factories Act 1951 for factories, with no double-counting — the more specific provision applies to factories.

OSH Law 2019 — what it covers

AreaCoverage
ScopeAll workplaces; factories, construction, mines, offices, retail
Risk assessmentRequired for all hazardous operations
Personal protective equipmentEmployer-provided; use enforced
Safety trainingAt hire + refresher cadence
Fire drillsTypically twice/year
First-aid kitMandatory at every workplace
Safety committee≥ 50 employees: composition incl. employee reps + safety officer
Accident reportingSerious accidents (death, hospitalisation, permanent disability) → MoLES within 24 hours
RecordsAccident register, training log, committee minutes, PPE log; retention ≥ 5 years
PenaltiesFines, remediation orders; repeat offences risk operating-licence action

Edge cases

  • Construction sites — site-safety officer, fall protection, scaffolding rules; bespoke notifications layered on top.
  • Mining — sector-specific OSH duties under mining notifications.
  • SME offices < 50 employees — no mandatory committee, but PPE, training, drills, first-aid, and accident reporting still apply.
  • WFH workstations — duty of care extends; document via OSH home-workstation policy.
  • Visitors and contractors — included in safe-workplace duty; document induction.
OSH Law 2019 compliance pack — free download Localised Myanmar templates covering committee charter, risk-assessment matrix, training curriculum, drill checklist, accident report form.
Download templates →

Records and inspections

The OSH inspectorate (under MoLES) inspects committee minutes, training rosters, PPE issuance log, accident register, and risk-assessment files. Township labour office handles accident report intake at first instance for many sectors. Retention ≥ 5 years for OSH records. Buyer audits in export sectors specifically demand recent training rosters and accident-investigation reports.

Employer takeaway

The OSH Law 2019 covers all Myanmar workplaces. Run risk assessments, provide PPE, train staff at hire and refresh, hold fire drills (typically twice a year), maintain a first-aid kit, and constitute a safety committee at 50+ employees. Report serious accidents to MoLES within 24 hours. Retain records for 5 years. Construction, mining, and high-hazard industries face additional sectoral duties.

For HR teams managing factory or multi-site compliance
Stay on the right side of the labour office. QHRM tracks attendance, OT caps, weekly-off, and surfaces compliance flags before the township office does — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming OSH Law applies only to factories — it covers offices and retail too.
  • Forgetting the safety committee threshold at 50 employees.
  • Letting PPE issuance lapse — the issuance log is the audit evidence.
  • Missing the 24-hour accident report when a worker is hospitalised.

Related reading: workplace safety law, first-aid kits mandatory, and law on workplace accidents.

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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