Are background checks legal in Myanmar?
Yes. Pre-employment background checks are lawful in Myanmar and standard practice for sensitive roles, provided the employer obtains the candidate's written consent, limits checks to job-relevant items (identity, education, employment history, criminal record, sanctions), and does not screen on prohibited grounds such as religion or ethnicity. Use the results consistently across candidates.
What Myanmar law and practice say
Background checks are not regulated by a single Myanmar statute, but they are legal and widely used. The framework comes from a combination of: the Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 (which expects accurate identity in the appointment letter), the constitutional non-discrimination principle, sector-specific KYC rules (banks, financial institutions, payment platforms), and general contract law on candidate consent.
In practice, employers obtain a written consent form from the candidate before running checks, limit checks to job-relevant items, and apply the same checks consistently across candidates for the same role. This protects against discrimination claims and against later disputes about what the candidate did or did not authorise.
What background checks typically cover
| Check | Source | Lawful? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| NRC / passport identity | Original document | Yes | Required for ESDL appointment letter |
| Education verification | Issuing institution | Yes | Direct contact with institution best |
| Employment history | Prior employers | Yes (with consent) | Reference letters / phone calls |
| Criminal record | Township police certificate | Yes | Candidate-led; results redacted to job-relevant |
| Sanctions / PEP screening | UN / OFAC / EU lists | Yes | Required in BFI / regulated sectors |
| Credit check | Bank statements / CIB | Limited | Only for finance-handling roles |
| Religion / ethnicity | — | No | Discrimination grounds |
| Pregnancy / family planning | — | No | Discrimination grounds |
Process and timeline
- Conditional offer letter issued — Day 0.
- Candidate signs background-check consent form — Day 0.
- Run identity, education, and employment checks — 3–5 days.
- Candidate obtains township police certificate (if required) — 5–10 days.
- Sanctions / PEP screen for regulated sectors — same day.
- Hiring decision confirmed; ESDL appointment letter issued within 30 days of start.
- Background-check pack archived in the personnel file.
Employer takeaway
Run background checks with written candidate consent, limit to job-relevant items (identity, education, employment, criminal record, sanctions where applicable), and apply the same set consistently across candidates. Never screen on religion, ethnicity, pregnancy, or other discrimination grounds. Retain the consent form and check results in the personnel file for at least 7 years post-exit.
Edge cases
- Foreign-national candidate — request home-country police certificate plus international sanctions screen.
- Internal transfer / promotion — re-confirm scope of consent; do not assume original consent extends.
- Failed check — document the basis, give the candidate a chance to respond, and retain the file.
- Regulated-sector roles — KYC and PEP screen mandatory under sector regulations.
Common hiring mistakes
- Running checks without written candidate consent.
- Inconsistent checks across candidates for the same role.
- Asking religion or ethnicity questions in the interview to "verify" check results.
- Skipping reference checks on senior hires.
- Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 — appointment letter and lawful hiring practice
- Constitution of Myanmar — non-discrimination principle
- Industry KYC / sanctions guidance (BFI sectors)
Related questions
Stop calculating PIT manually.
QHRM's payroll engine applies the latest Union Tax Law brackets, basic relief, and dependant allowances automatically.