What Myanmar law says
Myanmar's minimum age for employment is set primarily by the Factories Act 1951, which establishes 14 as the minimum for non-hazardous work and 18 as the minimum for hazardous work. The Shops & Establishments Act applies similar minor protections in offices, retail, and restaurants. The OSH Law 2019 defines hazardous-work categories and adds employer duty-of-care obligations.
Children under 14 cannot be lawfully employed in any Myanmar workplace. Employers in international supply chains face additional scrutiny from buyers' social-compliance programs, which often impose stricter standards (commonly 16+) than Myanmar law requires.
Minimum-age table
| Age | Status | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Under 14 | Cannot be employed | Statutory floor |
| 14–15 | Non-hazardous only | Stricter daily caps; no night work; light work; school-attendance compatible |
| 16–17 | Non-hazardous only | Stricter caps; no night work; parental consent advised |
| 18+ | Full adult employment | Standard hour caps; hazardous work permitted |
Edge cases
- Hazardous-work list — chemical handling, heavy machinery, mining, construction at height, certain food-processing operations.
- Apprenticeships — covered by the Factories Act minor caps; hours still count.
- International buyer code requirements — many global brands require 16+ regardless of Myanmar law.
- Family-business exemption — narrow; does not extend to factory operations.
- Documentation — age must be verifiable from NRC, birth registration, or school certificate.
Records and inspections
Age verification documents must be retained for ≥ 7 years. The township labour office reviews minor-employment records during inspections, and international buyer audits routinely demand age-verification files for the entire current and recent workforce. Failure to verify is treated as failure to comply.
Employer takeaway
Myanmar's minimum employment age is 14 for non-hazardous work and 18 for hazardous work under the Factories Act 1951. Under-14s cannot be employed. Verify age with NRC or birth registration before hire and screen the role against the hazardous-work list. International buyer codes often impose stricter floors (commonly 16+); align internal hiring policy to the higher of the two. Retain age-verification records for 7 years.
Common mistakes
- Skipping age verification because the candidate "looks adult".
- Hiring 14–15-year-olds onto hazardous machine operation roles.
- Failing to align internal policy with the stricter 16+ buyer-code requirement.
- Storing only photocopies that don't reach the 7-year retention horizon.
Related reading: are minors allowed to work, Factories Act on hours, and night-shift regulation.
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