HR Insights · Myanmar

How does pilgrimage leave work in Myanmar?

Pilgrimage leave is not mandated in Myanmar. Employees use annual leave or unpaid leave with employer agreement for pilgrimages.

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

What Myanmar law says

Pilgrimage leave is not statutorily mandated in Myanmar under the Leave and Holidays Act. The Act sets the floor for paid leave types (annual, casual, sick, maternity, public holidays) but does not create a separate pilgrimage entitlement. Employees who wish to undertake a pilgrimage — whether a Buddhist temple tour, the Muslim Hajj, the Catholic visit to Rome, or the Hindu visit to Varanasi — typically combine accrued annual leave with unpaid leave, with employer agreement under the Employment and Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013.

Some Myanmar employers — particularly those with workforces from observant communities — grant a one-time pilgrimage allowance of up to 30 days unpaid leave for major events, with job protection during the absence. This is a contractual benefit and not statutorily required.

Typical pilgrimage-leave structure

Pilgrimage typeTypical durationCommon pay treatment
Local Buddhist pilgrimage (e.g., to Shwedagon, Kyaiktiyo)1–3 daysAnnual leave or casual leave
Major regional Buddhist pilgrimage1–2 weeksAnnual leave + unpaid leave by agreement
Hajj (Muslim)~30 daysAnnual leave + unpaid leave (typical: up to 30 days unpaid)
Indian / Sri Lankan Buddhist pilgrimage1–2 weeksAnnual leave + unpaid leave
Christian Holy Land or Vatican visit1–2 weeksAnnual leave + unpaid leave
Hindu pilgrimage (e.g., Varanasi, Tirupati)1–2 weeksAnnual leave + unpaid leave

How to apply and approval process

  • Written request well in advance. Most pilgrimages have fixed travel windows; request 2 to 3 months in advance.
  • Travel itinerary. Attach booking confirmation or pilgrimage organiser's letter so the dates are documented.
  • Employer assessment. Operational impact, overlap with peak periods, cover arrangements.
  • Pay treatment agreement. Annual leave portion uses the existing accrued balance; unpaid portion is documented in a short leave letter with clear start and end dates.
  • Job protection. Documented unpaid pilgrimage leave protects the employee's role during the agreed absence.
Download a Myanmar leave-policy template Includes a pilgrimage-leave clause with annual + unpaid combination, advance notice rules, and job-protection language. No sign-up needed.
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Effect on accruals and benefits during unpaid pilgrimage

ItemTreatment during unpaid pilgrimage leave
SalaryNot paid during unpaid days
Annual-leave accrualTypically pauses for unpaid leave longer than 1 month
SSB contributionsPause for unpaid months
PITNo PIT withholding for unpaid days
Insurance / contractual benefitsTypically continue for short unpaid leave; per company policy
Job protectionPreserved per the documented agreement

Edge cases and exceptions

  • Probationary employees. Most employers refuse pilgrimage leave during probation; encourage rescheduling.
  • Daily-wage workers. Use accrued annual leave (after 12 months engagement); unpaid leave is straightforward.
  • Hajj quotas. Hajj travel is regulated; once a quota slot is granted, employers typically accommodate the timing.
  • Multiple pilgrimages. One major pilgrimage per career is the typical accommodation; second-time requests are at employer discretion.
  • Foreign workers. Same accommodation; visa logistics may require additional planning.
  • Notice period overlap. Pilgrimage leave during notice is normally refused unless approved well before resignation.
  • Factory vs office. Same accommodation under both sub-statutes.

Employer takeaway

Pilgrimage leave is not statutorily required, but accommodating it through accrued annual leave plus an unpaid extension (up to ~30 days for major events) is the market norm for inclusive Myanmar employers. Require 2–3 months' advance notice with travel documentation. Document the leave letter with start and end dates and pay treatment. Pause annual-leave accrual and SSB for long unpaid spells. Retain leave records for at least 7 years.

For HR teams running diverse workforces
Leave balances that update themselves. QHRM tracks pilgrimage leave with annual + unpaid splits and accrual-pause logic — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Frequently asked questions

Does this entitlement apply to employees on fixed-term contracts?

Yes. Fixed-term contract employees in Myanmar receive the same statutory leave floor as permanent employees once they meet the relevant service-tenure thresholds. The Leave and Holidays Act, the Factories Act 1951, and the Shops and Establishments Act do not distinguish between fixed-term and indefinite contracts for leave purposes — eligibility is set by months of continuous service. Contract expiry is not termination, so unused annual-leave balance is encashed at the end of the contract using (monthly salary ÷ 30) × unused-days. See the bucket E pages on fixed-term contracts for the contract-side rules.

How does this interact with payroll and SSB?

All paid leave is treated as ordinary salary income for Myanmar payroll purposes. PIT is withheld through PAYE on every payslip that includes leave pay. SSB contributions (2% employee + 3% employer, capped on a wage base of MMK 300,000/month) continue during paid leave because the employee is still earning wages. SSB contributions pause only during unpaid leave. Encashment of accrued annual leave at exit is part of taxable salary for PIT but practitioners differ on SSB treatment of the lump sum — confirm with the township SSB office on filing.

What records does the township labour office expect?

Inspectors typically request the leave register for the past 12 months, medical certificates for sick leave over 3 days, maternity / paternity SSB filings, final settlement worksheets for recent leavers, and the public-holiday gazette for the current year. Records must be retained for at least 7 years under both the Factories Act 1951 and the Shops and Establishments Act. Keeping a clean per-employee leave file with tagged entries makes inspections quick and defensible. Digital records from a payroll system are acceptable provided they can be printed on demand.

Common leave-law mistakes

  • Refusing pilgrimage leave outright. Even if not statutorily required, blanket refusal creates labour disputes.
  • Granting verbally without dates. Always document start/end dates and pay treatment in writing.
  • Continuing accrual during long unpaid pilgrimage. Codify the accrual-pause threshold (typically 1 month).
  • Forgetting SSB pause for unpaid months. Continued contributions on zero pay create reconciliation issues.
  • Not protecting the role. Without explicit job protection in the leave letter, returning becomes uncertain.
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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