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