What Myanmar law says
Both the Factories Act 1951 and the Shops & Establishments Act cap continuous working time at 5 hours. After 5 hours of continuous work, an employee must receive at least a 30-minute break. The rule applies regardless of workplace type — factory, office, retail, restaurant, or home — and regardless of whether the employee is monthly-paid or daily-paid.
The break is unpaid and sits outside the 8-hour regular day. An 8-hour shift therefore typically takes 8.5 hours of clock time. Multiple short breaks can collectively meet the 30-minute requirement, provided no continuous block exceeds 5 hours.
Continuous-work and break rules
| Element | Standard |
|---|---|
| Continuous-work cap | 5 hours |
| Triggered break | 30 minutes |
| Break paid? | No |
| Counted in 8-hour day? | No |
| Breakable into shorter pauses? | Yes — total ≥ 30 min, no block > 5 hrs |
| Applies to | Factories, offices, retail, remote |
Edge cases
- Customer-facing roles — break is per-employee, not per-store; rotate staff to maintain coverage.
- Long meetings or training — count toward continuous work; build in a break if scheduled past 5 hours.
- Voluntary skip — employees cannot waive the break right; the duty sits on the employer.
- Split shifts — if the gap between shift segments is ≥ 30 min, no separate break is needed within each segment.
- WFH — same rule applies; track in the attendance log.
Records and inspections
The attendance register must capture break-out and break-in times alongside start and end. The township labour office reviews these during inspection and looks for any continuous block exceeding 5 hours without a logged break. Repeat-skip patterns are a frequent inspection finding and a common trigger for back-pay or remediation orders. Retention ≥ 7 years.
Employer takeaway
Schedule at least a 30-minute unpaid break before any employee crosses 5 continuous hours of work. Track break-out and break-in times in the attendance register. The break is unpaid and sits outside the 8-hour regular day. Apply the rule equally to factories, offices, retail, and WFH staff. Retain records for 7 years; missed breaks are a routine inspection finding.
Common mistakes
- Letting back-to-back meetings push a single employee past 5 hours without a break.
- Allowing customer-facing staff to "skip lunch" during peak hours instead of rotating.
- Counting the break inside the 8-hour day so total presence is only 8 hours.
- Failing to capture break-out / break-in times in the attendance log.
Related reading: how long is a lunch break, daily working-hour cap, and hours records to keep.
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