What Myanmar law says
Yes — trade unions are legal in Myanmar. The Labour Organization Law 2011 recognises the right to form a basic labour organisation (BLO) at workplace level, registered with the township labour office. The minimum size for a BLO is 30 employees. Above the BLO, a hierarchy runs to township-level federation, then regional federation, then state-level confederation.
Employees who participate in lawful labour-organisation activity are protected from retaliation. Strikes are legal subject to a 14-day prior notice requirement under the Labour Organization Law 2011, with essential services (water, electricity, hospitals, certain SOEs) excluded.
Trade-union framework
| Element | Standard |
|---|---|
| Right to organise | Recognised |
| Minimum BLO size | 30 employees |
| Registration | Township labour office |
| Hierarchy | BLO → township → regional → state |
| Strike notice | 14 days |
| Essential services | Excluded from strike right |
| Workplace Coordinating Committee | Where labour organisation recognised |
| Anti-retaliation | Built into Labour Organization Law 2011 |
Edge cases
- Workplaces under 30 employees — cannot form a stand-alone BLO; can join a township-level federation.
- Multiple unions in one workplace — possible; recognition rules govern bargaining standing.
- SEZ-registered employers — same union framework applies.
- Foreign employees — generally cannot hold union leadership roles.
- SOE / essential services — different strike rules; unions still legal.
Records and inspections
BLO registration certificates, recognition agreements, WCC minutes, and strike-notice files should be on file. Retention ≥ 7 years. The township labour office handles BLO registration and verifies during dispute escalation. The Conciliation Body and Arbitration Council request the records when collective disputes arrive.
Employer takeaway
Trade unions are legal in Myanmar under the Labour Organization Law 2011. Employees can form a basic labour organisation with 30 members, registered at the township labour office. Strikes are legal with 14-day prior notice; essential services are excluded. Anti-retaliation protections apply. Engage with recognised unions through the Workplace Coordinating Committee and respect lawful organising activity. Retain registration and engagement records for 7 years.
Common mistakes
- Treating union activity as misconduct and disciplining organisers — anti-retaliation provisions are robust.
- Refusing to recognise a registered BLO that meets the 30-member threshold.
- Treating wildcat action as protected — it isn't without 14-day notice.
- Putting foreign-national executives in BLO leadership.
Related reading: what Labour Organization Law 2011 covers, can employees strike legally, and workplace coordinating committee.
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