HR Insights · Myanmar

What clauses are unenforceable in Myanmar employment contracts?

Seven categories of contract clause that Myanmar courts and the township labour office disregard — at-will, forfeiture, severance waivers, more.

QC
QHRM Content Team
HR & Compliance Editors
May 3, 2026
3 min read

What Myanmar law says

Employment-contract clauses in Myanmar must operate above — not below — the statutory floor set by the Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013, the Payment of Wages Law, the Leave & Holidays Act, and the Social Security Law 2012. Any clause that purports to waive or undercut a statutory right is treated as unenforceable. The township labour office and Conciliation Body routinely disregard such clauses regardless of the employee's signature.

The seven categories most often struck down

  1. At-will termination — ESDL requires lawful grounds and tenure-based notice.
  2. Forfeiture of earned wages — Payment of Wages Law prohibits withholding earned wages.
  3. Salary reduction without written consent — unilateral reduction is unenforceable and may trigger constructive-dismissal grounds.
  4. Probation longer than 3 months — only enforceable as 3 months + a written extension.
  5. Severance waivers — cannot contract out of Notification 84/2015 severance for confirmed employees.
  6. Blanket non-compete — overly broad geography, duration, or scope is not enforced.
  7. Waivers of statutory leave or SSB — annual leave, sick leave, maternity, and SSB rights cannot be waived.

Other commonly struck-down provisions

ClauseWhy unenforceable
"Notice may be waived by the employer"Notice is bilateral; cannot be waived unilaterally
"Final settlement only after exit clearance"Wage withholding pending clearance is illegal
"All overtime included in salary"OT pay is statutory under the Factories / S&E Act
"Employee waives SSB enrolment"SSB enrolment is mandatory at 5+ employees
"Termination at sole discretion of employer"Lawful grounds required under ESDL
"No leave for first 12 months"Pro-rata leave is good practice; statutory leave kicks in at 12 months for annual
Download the QHRM contract clause checker Reviews each clause against ESDL minimum standards and flags unenforceable language.
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What if there's a dispute

  • Township labour office first — the office disregards unenforceable clauses and orders compliance with statutory minimums.
  • Conciliation Body — formal conciliation under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law.
  • Arbitration Council — final binding step. Statute of limitations: typically 6 months.

Employer takeaway

Audit every Myanmar employment contract against the ESDL, Payment of Wages Law, Leave & Holidays Act, and SSB Law minimums. Strip out any clause that waives or undercuts a statutory right — those clauses are not enforceable and create liability rather than protection. Re-issue compliant bilingual contracts within 30 days of any change. Keep records for at least 7 years.

For HR teams running terminations across regions
Run a clean exit, every time. QHRM ships an ESDL-compliant master contract template that auto-applies the latest notification — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Edge cases and unenforceable clauses

  • Choice-of-law to a non-Myanmar jurisdiction — unlikely to override Myanmar mandatory employment law.
  • Mandatory arbitration in another country — Myanmar courts retain jurisdiction over local employment disputes.
  • Liquidated-damages for early resignation — enforceable only if reasonable and quantifiable.
  • See required clauses and salary reduction.

Common unenforceable-clause mistakes

  • Importing a US "at-will" template wholesale.
  • Inserting a "severance waiver in exchange for offer letter" clause.
  • Drafting a 5-year worldwide non-compete.
  • Saying SSB or leave entitlements are "subject to company policy".
Share this articleLast updated May 3, 2026
QC
QHRM Content Team
HR & Compliance Editors · Yangon

We publish practical, legally-grounded HR guidance for Myanmar employers. Each piece is reviewed by our compliance team against current MLIP and Labor Law requirements.

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