What is the difference between resident and non-resident PIT in Myanmar?
Myanmar tax residents (≥ 183 days presence) pay PIT on worldwide income at progressive 0–25% bands after a 20% basic personal relief. Non-residents (under 183 days) pay a flat 25% on Myanmar-source income only, with no reliefs and no allowances. Employer PAYE withholding applies in both cases by the 15th.
Step-by-step calculation
Residency is the single biggest variable in Myanmar PIT. The 183-day rule determines whether the progressive 0–25% bands apply (with the 20% basic relief) or a flat 25% applies (with no relief). The Myanmar tax year runs 1 April – 31 March. The two worked examples below use the same gross salary to highlight the difference.
Step 1 — Apply the 20% basic personal relief (residents only)
For a salary of MMK 12,000,000/year:
| Item | Resident | Non-resident |
|---|---|---|
| Annual gross salary | MMK 12,000,000 | MMK 12,000,000 |
| Less: 20% basic personal relief | − MMK 2,400,000 | 0 (not eligible) |
| Less: spouse / child / parent allowances | 0 (default) | 0 (not eligible) |
| Annual taxable income | MMK 9,600,000 | MMK 12,000,000 |
Step 2 — Apply the appropriate rate(s)
Residents run through the Union Tax Law 2025-2026 progressive bands. Non-residents pay flat 25% on Myanmar-source income.
| Annual taxable income (resident) | Marginal rate |
|---|---|
| 1L – 20L (MMK 0 – 2,000,000) | 0% |
| 20L – 100L (MMK 2,000,000 – 10,000,000) | 5% |
| 100L – 300L (MMK 10,000,000 – 30,000,000) | 10% |
| 300L – 500L (MMK 30,000,000 – 50,000,000) | 15% |
| 500L – 700L (MMK 50,000,000 – 70,000,000) | 20% |
| 700L & above | 25% |
| Status | Calculation | Annual PIT (MMK) |
|---|---|---|
| Resident (taxable 9,600,000) | 0% on 2M + 5% on 7,600,000 | 380,000 |
| Non-resident (taxable 12,000,000) | 25% × 12,000,000 | 3,000,000 |
Step 3 — Convert to monthly withholding
- Resident monthly PIT: MMK 380,000 ÷ 12 ≈ MMK 31,667/month
- Non-resident monthly PIT: MMK 3,000,000 ÷ 12 = MMK 250,000/month
- Monthly gross: MMK 1,000,000 in both cases.
What about SSB and the true net salary?
Both residents and non-residents employed by Myanmar-registered employers are subject to SSB on the same terms — 2% employee on wages capped at MMK 300,000/month (max MMK 6,000/month), employer 3% (max MMK 9,000/month).
| Monthly gross (resident) | MMK 1,000,000 |
| Less: PIT | − MMK 31,667 |
| Less: SSB | − MMK 6,000 |
| Monthly take-home | MMK 962,333 |
Employer takeaway
Verify residency at hire (passport stamps, contract length) and re-check at year-end — the 183-day count drives the entire PIT outcome. Withhold residents through the progressive bands after the 20% basic relief; withhold non-residents at flat 25% with no relief. Remit PIT to IRD by the 15th of the following month, file annual reconciliation by 30 June, and retain residency evidence for 7 years.
Common variations to watch for
- Mid-year status switch — when an expat crosses 183 days, reconcile from non-resident to resident treatment in the next return. See expat PIT flow.
- Treaty residents — check applicable double-tax treaty for relief from withholding. See treaty benefits.
- Short-term assignees — see short-term assignment treatment.
- Foreign-source income for residents — residents are liable on worldwide income; coordinate with home-country tax.
- Citizenship is not residency — Myanmar citizens working abroad may be non-resident for the year.
Common residency-status mistakes
- Defaulting to resident treatment — verify 183 days first.
- Granting reliefs to non-residents — none apply.
- Ignoring foreign income for residents — assess worldwide income, then apply treaty if relevant.
- Myanmar Income Tax Law (as amended) — residency definition and non-resident flat rate
- Union Tax Law 2025-2026 — Section 5 (PIT brackets and non-resident rate)
- Social Security Law 2012 — SSB coverage of foreign workers
Related questions
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