HR Insights · Myanmar

How are SSB contributions handled on termination in Myanmar?

On termination, pay SSB on final-month wages, deregister within 30 days at township SSB office. ESDL severance and notice are separate from SSB.

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

How SSB works for Myanmar employers

Termination is operationally similar to resignation from an SSB perspective: SSB applies to final-month wages, the leaver is reported on the next monthly return, and deregistration must happen at the township SSB office within 30 days of the last working day. The big difference is on the employer-side labour-law obligations — notice and severance under the Employment and Skill Development Law 2013 (ESDL) — which run in parallel with the SSB process.

Termination step-by-step (SSB perspective)

  • Issue the termination notice in line with ESDL notice rules.
  • Compute final-month wages (including any payment in lieu, if structured as wages).
  • Apply 2% / 3% capped SSB to final-month wages.
  • Pay severance per ESDL (length-of-service formula) — separate from SSB.
  • File deregistration at the township SSB office within 30 days.
  • Reflect the leaver on the next monthly return.
  • Issue service certificate (with SSB ID and contribution dates).

Contribution rates and the wage-base cap

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 — termination with 1 month payment in lieu

An IP earning MMK 800,000/month is terminated effective immediately, with 1 month payment in lieu of notice plus ESDL severance:

Final-month wages (last actual + payment in lieu treated as wages)MMK 1,600,000
SSB wage base (capped)MMK 300,000
Final-month employee SSBMMK 6,000
Final-month employer SSBMMK 9,000
ESDL severanceSeparate, per length-of-service formula
Deregistration deadline30 days from last working day

Note: the SSB cap binds at MMK 300,000/month. Severance is generally treated as one-time terminal pay outside SSB scope.

Registration and monthly returns

  • Run final-month SSB on wages and any wage-equivalent payments (payment in lieu).
  • Treat ESDL severance separately — do not double-add SSB.
  • File deregistration within 30 days at the township SSB office.
  • Issue the service certificate including SSB ID + contribution dates.
  • Retain leaver records 7 years post-exit.
Termination + SSB + ESDL final-pay pack Notice template, severance calculator, deregistration form, service certificate — built for Myanmar HR.
Get the pack →

Benefits SSB provides

  • Medical (continues briefly post-exit per schedule).
  • Sickness cash benefit (history carries forward).
  • Maternity — 14 weeks of paid leave with cash benefit through SSB (if covered at next employer).
  • Work-injury benefit while employed.
  • Funeral grant + survivors' pension.

Employer takeaway

Termination: SSB on final-month wages (capped), deregister at the township SSB office within 30 days, and reflect the leaver on the next monthly return. ESDL severance and notice are parallel obligations, not part of SSB. Issue a service certificate including SSB ID. 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

  • Summary dismissal for misconduct — same SSB flow; ESDL notice/severance treatment differs.
  • Redundancy — same SSB flow; ESDL severance applies in full.
  • Termination during work-injury recovery — coordinate with the SSB work-injury claim; do not break the IP's contribution history mid-claim.

Common SSB mistakes

  • Treating severance as wages for SSB and overpaying.
  • Skipping the 30-day deregistration, leaving phantom contributions.
  • Not coordinating with a pending SSB benefit claim — can complicate the IP's payout.

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: SSB on resignation, What happens when an employee leaves?, Late payment penalties.

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.

More from the QHRM Blog

All articles →