Step-by-step calculation
This walk-through covers a foreign individual on a short-term assignment to Myanmar — for example a project engineer flown in for a 4-month deployment. Default: foreign passport, present in Myanmar fewer than 183 days in the tax year (1 April – 31 March). Brackets are not used for non-residents; instead a flat 25% rate applies to Myanmar-source income with no 20% basic relief and no dependant allowances. Tax year framing remains 1 April – 31 March.
Step 1 — Confirm non-resident status (under 183 days)
Count physical presence days in the Myanmar tax year. If under 183 days, the assignee is non-resident; if 183 or more, resident rules apply (see expat PIT). Counting includes part-days of arrival and departure as full days unless otherwise specified by IRD circular.
| Days in Myanmar (1 April – 31 March) | (count) |
| If < 183: non-resident, flat 25% | — |
| If ≥ 183: resident, 20% relief + 0–25% bands | — |
Step 2 — Apply the non-resident flat rate
Non-residents pay 25% on Myanmar-source income — no 20% relief, no spouse/child/parent allowances, no donation deduction. The flat rate applies to gross Myanmar-source income, paid by Myanmar payers or earned through duties performed in Myanmar.
| Status | Rate | Reliefs |
|---|---|---|
| Resident (≥ 183 days) | 0–25% progressive | 20% basic relief + dependant allowances |
| Non-resident (< 183 days) | Flat 25% | None |
Worked illustration — non-resident engineer on a 4-month Myanmar assignment paid USD 30,000 (≈ MMK 90,000,000) for the project. Myanmar-source income = MMK 90,000,000. Non-resident PIT = 25% × MMK 90,000,000 = MMK 22,500,000. Compare: resident calculation would be ~MMK 9–10M after relief and brackets — non-resident treatment costs roughly twice as much for the same gross.
Step 3 — Convert to per-payment withholding
- Each payment: Myanmar paying entity withholds 25% before remitting net to the assignee.
- Remit to IRD by the 15th of the following month with the withholding return.
- Treaty relief may reduce the rate for residents of treaty-partner jurisdictions; require a tax residency certificate.
- If status flips (assignee crosses 183 days unexpectedly), recompute as resident with credit for non-resident tax already paid.
What about SSB and the true net salary?
SSB applies only to employees registered under the Social Security Scheme. Non-resident short-term assignees are typically not enrolled, especially when their home-country social security continues to cover them under a totalisation agreement or by election. If enrolled, the standard 2% employee + 3% employer on the MMK 300,000/month wage base applies.
Employer takeaway
Test the 183-day rule before the first payment. For non-resident assignees, withhold a flat 25% on every Myanmar-source payment with no relief or allowance, remit to IRD by the 15th of the following month, and apply for treaty relief only with a valid residency certificate from the treaty-partner country. Track presence days closely — exceeding 183 days flips the regime to resident. Retain travel logs, contracts, and remittance evidence for at least 7 years.
Common variations to watch for
- Treaty relief — see tax-treaty benefits.
- Multiple short trips totalling ≥ 183 days — aggregate days across trips.
- Split contract (partly offshore, partly Myanmar) — duties performed in Myanmar are Myanmar-source regardless of where paid.
- Mid-year flip from non-resident to resident — recompute the year as resident; credit the non-resident PAYE.
- Reimbursed business expenses — receipted reimbursements are not Myanmar-source income.
Common PIT mistakes to avoid
- Applying the 20% relief to a non-resident — non-residents get no relief.
- Withholding less than 25% without treaty backing — full 25% is the default.
- Counting calendar days instead of tax-year days — Myanmar tax year is 1 April – 31 March. See tax-year explainer.
- Forgetting to recompute on status change — flip triggers full recalculation. See expat PIT.
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