How SSB works for Myanmar employers
The Social Security Board (SSB) is the statutory social-insurance authority operating under the Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population (MoLES). It administers the Social Security Law 2012, which is the legal backbone for Myanmar's mandatory employee insurance scheme. Day-to-day registration and monthly returns are handled at the township SSB office for the township in which the employer operates.
Any employer with five or more employees must register with SSB within 30 days of starting operations or crossing the five-person threshold. Each enrolled employee becomes an "Insured Person" (IP) under the law. Once registered, the employer becomes responsible for monthly contributions on behalf of every employee.
Funds collected by SSB pay for medical care, sickness cash benefits, maternity benefits, work-injury cover, temporary and permanent disability allowances, survivors' pensions, and a funeral grant. The scheme is funded by a combined 5% payroll contribution: 2% withheld from the employee and 3% paid by the employer, both calculated on a capped wage base.
Contribution rates and the wage-base cap
| Item | Rate | Maximum (capped at MMK 300,000 wage base) |
|---|---|---|
| Employee contribution | 2% of wages | MMK 6,000 / month |
| Employer contribution | 3% of wages | MMK 9,000 / month |
| Total | 5% | MMK 15,000 / month per employee |
Wages above the MMK 300,000 cap are not subject to SSB. Wages below the cap are charged at the rate against actual wages.
Worked example — wages above the cap
Take an employee earning MMK 800,000/month gross. Because that exceeds the cap, SSB applies only to MMK 300,000 of wages:
| Monthly gross wage | MMK 800,000 |
| SSB wage base (capped) | MMK 300,000 |
| Employee SSB (2% × 300,000) | MMK 6,000 |
| Employer SSB (3% × 300,000) | MMK 9,000 |
| Combined SSB cost | MMK 15,000 / month |
Registration and monthly returns
- Register the company with the township SSB office within 30 days of starting operations or crossing the 5-employee threshold.
- Register each new employee within 30 days of joining.
- File the monthly contribution return and remit payment by the 15th of the following month.
- Deregister leavers within 30 days; register dependants to unlock medical benefits.
- Keep SSB records for at least 7 years.
Benefits SSB provides
- Medical care — IPs and registered dependants, no waiting period, treatment at SSB-registered clinics and hospitals.
- Sickness cash benefit — payable after at least one year of contributions.
- Maternity benefit — 14 weeks of paid leave with cash benefit through SSB.
- Work-injury benefit — medical, temporary disability, and permanent disability cover from Day 1.
- Funeral grant — lump sum to the family on death of an IP.
- Survivors' pension — for dependants of an IP who dies of a covered cause.
Employer takeaway
If headcount is five or more, register with the township SSB office within 30 days, then run 2% employee + 3% employer contributions on each employee's wages capped at MMK 300,000/month (max MMK 15,000 per employee). File the monthly return and pay by the 15th of the following month. Late payment triggers penalty interest. Retain SSB records for 7 years.
Common variations
- Foreign workers on the Myanmar payroll are covered on the same terms as locals.
- Directors on the company payroll are subject to SSB; pure board-fee directors are not.
- Part-time and daily-wage workers are covered if registered as employees.
- Employees earning under MMK 300,000 contribute the rate against actual wages — there is no minimum floor.
Common SSB mistakes
- Contributing on uncapped wages — overpayment that is not reclaimable.
- Forgetting to deregister leavers, leading to phantom contributions.
- Filing late — penalty interest accrues from the 16th of the month.
- Skipping dependant registration, which blocks medical benefit claims.
Practical workflow for HR teams
Whether the SSB obligation in question is registration, contribution calculation, a benefit claim, or a leaver event, three operational habits prevent most non-compliance issues:
- Anchor the SSB calendar to payroll close. The 15th of the following month is non-negotiable for the contribution return at the township SSB office. Treating SSB as a payroll-close output, not a separate task, eliminates last-minute filings.
- Reconcile the SSB register against the payroll register monthly. Joiners enrolled within 30 days, leavers deregistered within 30 days, dependant changes captured — these are the three reconciliation lines that catch most defects before they become audit findings.
- Cap discipline. Apply the MMK 300,000/month wage cap on every Insured Person, every month, before computing 2% / 3%. Most Myanmar SSB overpayments trace back to a payroll system that runs the rate against full gross.
Payslip transparency
Show the SSB withholding line distinctly on the payslip, alongside Personal Income Tax (PIT). Employees should see the 2% line item, the wage base it was applied to, and the SSB ID. Transparent payslips reduce employee queries about take-home pay and create a clean trail for any future SSB or IRD audit. Where the wage cap binds, label the line "SSB (capped at MMK 300,000 base)" so the maths is self-explanatory.
Multi-site coordination
For employers operating across more than one township, the township SSB office for the workplace — not the corporate head office — is the operational counterparty. Maintain a per-site SSB ledger covering: employer code, township office, monthly return file location, and copy of stamped acknowledgements. Centralised SSB tracking with site-level sub-ledgers is the simplest way to reconcile a multi-site monthly return. The same logic applies for PIT remittances to the IRD office covering the workplace.
Recordkeeping checklist
- Original employer registration acknowledgement.
- Per-IP enrolment forms with stamped SSB receipts.
- Dependant registration forms — track updates for life events (marriage, birth).
- Monthly contribution returns + payment vouchers (12 per year).
- Annual SSB summary return.
- Wage / service certificates issued on benefit claims.
- Deregistration acknowledgements for leavers.
- Penalty assessments and remediation correspondence (if any).
Retention rule: at least 7 years for SSB records, aligned with the payroll-record retention requirement under the Income Tax Law and the personnel-record requirement under ESDL.
Related reading: Which employers must register with SSB?, How is the SSB contribution calculated?, and SSB vs PIT in Myanmar.
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