What Myanmar law says
For daily-paid workers — common in factories, construction, and seasonal operations — Myanmar OT starts with deriving an hourly basic wage by dividing the contracted daily wage by the contracted hours per day (typically 8). The same OT multipliers used for monthly-paid staff apply: weekday OT at 2×, rest-day OT at 2×, and public-holiday work at 3× (subject to confirmation against the latest sector notification).
The Factories Act 1951 and Shops & Establishments Act apply identically to daily-paid workers; the only difference is the wage-base derivation. The OT-authorisation requirement is the same — written approval or established practice — and the OT register must show the same per-instance detail.
OT formula for daily-paid workers
| Element | Formula / value |
|---|---|
| Daily wage | D |
| Contracted hours/day | 8 (typical) |
| Hourly wage | D ÷ 8 |
| Weekday OT pay | OT hours × 2 × hourly wage |
| Rest-day work | 2 × daily wage minimum (or hourly OT method) |
| Public holiday work | OT hours × 3 × hourly wage (or 3 × daily wage if full day) |
Worked example. Daily-paid worker at MMK 8,000/day, 8 hours/day:
- Hourly wage = 8,000 ÷ 8 = MMK 1,000
- Weekday OT (2 hrs) = 2 × 2 × 1,000 = MMK 4,000
- Rest-day work (full 8 hrs) = 8 × 2 × 1,000 = MMK 16,000 (i.e., 2× the daily wage)
- Public holiday work (full 8 hrs) = 8 × 3 × 1,000 = MMK 24,000 (i.e., 3× the daily wage)
Edge cases
- Casual / piece-rate workers — OT base usually computed from average hourly earnings; document the methodology.
- Daily-paid plus monthly bonus — bonuses generally excluded from OT base; basic-only is the norm.
- Half-day daily workers — derive hourly from contracted half-day hours rather than 8.
- Skipped lunch — break-skip does not extend the regular day for OT-base purposes; OT starts at the contracted end-time.
- Comp off in lieu — allowed by mutual agreement; document.
Records and inspections
The OT register and attendance log must show daily-rate, hourly conversion, OT hours, OT type (weekday/weekend/holiday), and resulting OT pay per worker per day. The township labour office reviews these at inspection — daily-paid worker OT is a frequent first-time finding because hourly conversions are often missed. Retention ≥ 7 years.
Employer takeaway
Convert daily wage to hourly by dividing by contracted hours/day (typically 8), then apply 2× for weekday OT, 2× for rest-day work (or 2× the daily wage as a floor), and 3× for public-holiday work. Authorise every OT instance in writing and log it in the register. Retain daily-paid OT records for 7 years; the township labour office cross-checks daily wage to hourly conversion during inspection.
Common mistakes
- Paying daily-paid workers a flat extra "day rate" for OT instead of computing hourly conversion.
- Skipping rest-day pay because the worker "didn't have a contract for that day" — daily-paid still get rest-day pay if they work.
- Treating piece-rate workers as exempt from OT — they aren't; methodology must be documented.
- Failing to convert daily-paid OT hourly when daily-paid workers cross to monthly-paid mid-tenure.
Related reading: OT for monthly-paid employees, how OT is authorised, and records employers must keep.
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