HR Insights · Myanmar

What documents are needed to hire an employee in Myanmar?

Checklist of documents to hire an employee in Myanmar — appointment letter, NRC, education certs, SSB enrolment within 30 days, plus foreign-worker documents.

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

What Myanmar law and practice require at hiring

Myanmar's Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 is the principal statute governing the hiring relationship. ESDL requires every employer to issue a written, signed appointment letter (employment agreement) within 30 days of an employee's start date. Alongside that contract, employers gather a standard set of documents to verify identity, complete payroll setup, and discharge the post-hire registrations with the Social Security Board (SSB) and the Internal Revenue Department (IRD).

The Directorate of Investment and Company Administration (DICA) registration of the employer is a prerequisite for hiring at all — only a DICA-registered company (or DICA-registered branch / representative office of a foreign investor) can lawfully employ in Myanmar.

Required documents for a local hire

DocumentMandatory?Issued byValidity
Signed offer letterYes (practice)EmployerUntil appointment letter signed
ESDL-compliant appointment letterYes (within 30 days)EmployerTerm of employment
NRC photocopyYesMinistry of ImmigrationLifetime
Residential address proof (household list / Form 10)YesTownship adminUpdated on move
Education certificatesYesSchool / universityLifetime
Prior-employer references / experience lettersPracticePrevious employern/a
Bank account details (KBZ, AYA, etc.)Yes for payrollLocal bankActive account
Passport-size photosYesn/an/a
SSB Insured Person registration formYes (within 30 days)Township SSB officeTerm of employment
IRD Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN)YesIRDLifetime

Onboarding process and timeline

  1. Issue offer letter — Day 0 (candidate accepts).
  2. Run reference and background checks — 3–5 days.
  3. Issue ESDL-compliant appointment letter, signed in duplicate — within 30 days of start.
  4. Day-1 onboarding — collect NRC photocopy, education certs, address proof, bank details, photos.
  5. Register with township SSB office — within 30 days of start (SSB rules).
  6. Apply for IRD TIN if the employee has none — before first payroll.
  7. Add to township labour register and payroll system — before first pay run.
Download the Myanmar onboarding checklist Day-1 documents, SSB registration form, IRD TIN application — bundled in one pack.
Get the checklist →

Foreign-worker specifics

For a foreign-national employee, add: a valid passport, an employer-sponsored work permit, a Stay Permit (residence authorisation), and a Multiple Re-Entry Visa (MRV) if the employee will travel out of Myanmar during the assignment. The DICA-registered employer must sponsor and hold quota allocation for the role. The Foreign Workers' Quota Notification governs how many foreign workers a company may hire per total headcount. Inside SEZs (e.g. Thilawa), the SEZ Authority issues these documents under a separate workflow.

Employer takeaway

Collect the offer letter, NRC photocopy, education certs, address proof, bank details, and photos on Day 1. Issue the ESDL appointment letter within 30 days. Register the employee with SSB within 30 days, secure an IRD TIN, and add the employee to the township labour register. Retain personnel files at least 7 years post-exit.

For HR teams onboarding 5+ hires per quarter
First-day-ready in 60 minutes. QHRM auto-generates appointment letters, captures NRC + bank + SSB info, and produces the township labour register entry — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Edge cases

  • Contract worker (true contractor) — ESDL appointment letter not required; service agreement instead, no SSB.
  • Intern doing employee-like work — must be paid; ESDL implications apply.
  • Apprentice — governed by ESDL apprenticeship provisions; written apprenticeship agreement.
  • Remote worker abroad — typically engaged through an employer-of-record (see remote workers abroad).

Common hiring mistakes

  • Skipping the written appointment letter past Day 30.
  • Missing the 30-day SSB registration window.
  • Treating an employee as a contractor to avoid SSB and PIT (mis-classification risk).
  • Forgetting to verify NRC details against the original document.
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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