Are fire safety drills mandatory at workplaces in Myanmar?

Updated May 3, 2026·3 min read
Direct answer

Yes. The Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019 makes fire safety drills mandatory at Myanmar workplaces, typically at least twice per year. Higher-risk sites — factories, hospitals, hotels — face stricter cadences and more rigorous evacuation-time tracking. Drills must be documented in the safety records and reviewed by the safety committee in workplaces with 50 or more employees.

What Myanmar law says

Yes — fire safety drills are mandatory under the Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019. Cadence is typically at least twice per year for general workplaces, with stricter requirements for high-risk sectors. The duty applies to factories, offices, retail outlets, hotels, hospitals, and any workplace where employees and visitors could be exposed to fire risk.

Drills must simulate realistic evacuation, time the response, identify bottlenecks, and result in corrective actions. Documentation is the audit evidence — a drill that wasn't recorded, didn't happen.

Fire-drill rules

ElementStandard
Cadence (general workplaces)≥ 2 per year
Cadence (factories, hospitals, hotels)Typically quarterly or stricter
Drill componentsAlarm test, evacuation, headcount, debrief
Time-to-evacuate targetSite-specific; documented
Marshalled byTrained fire wardens
RecordsDate, time, attendees, evacuation time, observations, follow-ups
ReviewSafety committee (≥ 50 employees)
Retention≥ 5 years

Edge cases

  • Multi-tenant offices — building-wide drill organised by landlord; employer keeps own attendance and observations.
  • Night-shift workforce — separate drill for night staff; cannot rely on day-shift drill alone.
  • Hotels and hospitals — evacuation drill must consider guests / patients; sectoral notifications add specific duties.
  • Construction sites — site-evacuation plan adapts as the site changes; drill must reflect current layout.
  • WFH workforce — drill not applicable; ensure office-based duties still met.
Fire-drill SOP and record template — free download Localised Myanmar templates covering drill plan, fire-warden duties, attendance log, evacuation-time tracking, and post-drill debrief.
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Records and inspections

The fire-drill record is one of the OSH inspectorate's standard checks. Records show date, time, attendees, evacuation time, observations, and follow-up corrective actions. Retention ≥ 5 years. Buyer audits in export sectors demand the most recent two drill reports as evidence.

Employer takeaway

Fire safety drills are mandatory at Myanmar workplaces under the OSH Law 2019, typically at least twice per year. Run realistic evacuations, track time-to-evacuate, debrief, and act on findings. Run a separate drill for night-shift staff. Keep records — date, time, attendees, evacuation time, observations, corrective actions — for 5 years. Multi-tenant offices can rely on building-wide drills but must keep their own attendance and observations.

For HR teams managing factory or multi-site compliance
Stay on the right side of the labour office. QHRM tracks attendance, OT caps, weekly-off, and surfaces compliance flags before the township office does — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Common mistakes

  • Running one drill per year and skipping the second.
  • Treating the alarm test as a drill — it isn't; full evacuation is required.
  • Missing the night-shift workforce.
  • Holding drills without recording attendees, evacuation time, or follow-ups.

Related reading: workplace safety law, first-aid kits mandatory, and safety records to maintain.

Sources
  1. Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019 — Fire-safety and emergency-response provisions
  2. Factories Act 1951 — Factory fire-safety overlay
  3. Compliance Calendar — Records retention

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