Is flexi-time legal in Myanmar?

Updated May 3, 2026·3 min read
Direct answer

Yes. Flexi-time is legal in Myanmar so long as the arrangement still respects the 8-hour daily cap, 44- or 48-hour weekly cap, the 30-minute break after 5 continuous hours, and the one-day weekly rest under the Factories Act 1951 or Shops & Establishments Act. Flexi-time should be documented in the employment agreement or a written flexi-time policy.

What Myanmar law says

Flexi-time is permitted in Myanmar. The Factories Act 1951 and Shops & Establishments Act set ceilings on daily and weekly hours, breaks, and weekly rest, but they do not prescribe fixed start and end times. Employers can therefore offer flexi-time provided the underlying caps are still respected for each individual employee.

The most common patterns are core hours (e.g., everyone present 10 AM – 4 PM, with flexible start/end) and flexi-shift (employees pick a daily start time within a window, with consistent shift length). Both are legal so long as daily hours stay ≤ 8, weekly hours stay ≤ 44 (offices) or ≤ 48 (factories), the 30-minute break after 5 continuous hours is honoured, and the one-day weekly rest is preserved.

Flexi-time guardrails

RuleStill applies under flexi-time?
Daily 8-hour capYes
Weekly 44/48-hour capYes
30-minute break after 5 hrsYes
One weekly rest dayYes
OT authorisation if past 8 hrsYes
Women's factory night-work restrictionYes (10 PM – 5 AM)

Edge cases

  • Banked hours — banking 1 short day to "make up" with a 10-hour day next week breaches the 8-hour daily cap; not permitted as a standard arrangement.
  • Customer-facing roles — flexi-time conflicts with operational coverage; usually limited to back-office.
  • Multi-site coordination — core-hours overlap is the practical workaround.
  • Cross-border teams — flexi-time helps but cannot push individual employees past the daily cap.
  • Pay and OT — OT triggers at the same daily/weekly thresholds, regardless of when the hours were worked.
Flexi-time policy template — free download Localised Myanmar templates covering core-hours design, flexi-shift bands, and attendance tracking.
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Records and inspections

Flexi-time arrangements should be documented in the employment agreement or in a flexi-time policy circular issued to staff. Attendance records still capture daily start, break, and end times per employee. The township labour office reviews flexi-time during inspection only when the resulting daily or weekly hours exceed caps; the flexible start time itself is not the issue. Retention ≥ 7 years.

Employer takeaway

Flexi-time is legal in Myanmar so long as daily 8-hour, weekly 44/48-hour, 30-minute-break, and weekly-rest rules continue to bind for each individual employee. Document the flexi-time arrangement in writing. Banked-hours schemes that push past 8 hours/day are not permitted as a standard arrangement; OT applies at the same thresholds as a fixed-time schedule. Retain attendance records for 7 years.

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

  • Allowing a 10-hour day in exchange for a 6-hour day later — breaches the daily cap.
  • Skipping the 30-minute break "because the employee chose to skip it".
  • Failing to document the flexi-time arrangement, then defending it during a dispute.
  • Treating flexi-time as exempting OT pay — OT triggers at the same thresholds.

Related reading: WFH legal recognition, daily working-hour cap, and biometric attendance.

Sources
  1. Factories Act 1951 — Hour and break rules
  2. Shops and Establishments Act — Hour and break rules
  3. Compliance Calendar — Records retention

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