HR Insights · Myanmar

What is the tax treatment of company-provided housing in Myanmar?

Employer-leased housing in Myanmar is a taxable benefit valued at rent paid - 0-25% PIT after 20% relief. Cash allowances also taxable.

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

Step-by-step calculation

This walk-through covers a Myanmar tax resident receiving employer-leased accommodation as part of their package — typical for senior managers and expat assignees. Default: single, no dependant allowances, no donations. Brackets are from the Union Tax Law 2025-2026 (Section 5). Tax year: 1 April – 31 March. The benefit value is the actual rent paid by the employer (plus utilities if also paid). Strictly short-term business accommodation (hotel during a project trip) is generally not a benefit.

Step 1 — Apply the 20% basic personal relief

Quantify the benefit: annual rent paid by employer + utilities + any other associated costs. Add to base salary. Apply the 20% basic personal relief on the combined gross (capped MMK 10,000,000/year).

Annual base salary(figure)
Plus: rent paid by employer (in-kind value)(figure)
Plus: utilities paid by employer (if any)(figure)
= Annual gross assessable salary(sum)
Less: 20% basic personal relief− up to MMK 10,000,000
Less: spouse / child / parent allowances0 in default case
Annual taxable income= residual

Step 2 — Apply the Union Tax Law 2025-2026 brackets

Annual taxable incomeMarginal rate
1L – 20L (MMK 0 – 2,000,000)0%
20L – 100L (MMK 2,000,000 – 10,000,000)5%
100L – 300L (MMK 10,000,000 – 30,000,000)10%
300L – 500L (MMK 30,000,000 – 50,000,000)15%
500L – 700L (MMK 50,000,000 – 70,000,000)20%
700L & above (MMK 70,000,000+)25%

Worked illustration — base salary MMK 30,000,000 + employer rent MMK 24,000,000 (USD 1,000/month equivalent) = MMK 54,000,000 annual gross (taxable = MMK 44,000,000 after 20% relief on MMK 10M cap):

BandAmount in band (MMK)RateTax (MMK)
First 2,000,0002,000,0000%0
2,000,001 – 10,000,0008,000,0005%400,000
10,000,001 – 30,000,00020,000,00010%2,000,000
30,000,001 – 44,000,00014,000,00015%2,100,000
Annual PIT (incl. housing)MMK 4,500,000

Step 3 — Convert to monthly withholding

  • Monthly PIT: MMK 4,500,000 ÷ 12 = MMK 375,000/month
  • Process imputed rent through payroll as an income line; no cash deduction since employer pays landlord directly.
  • Withhold PAYE from the cash salary portion to cover both salary and housing PAYE.
Compute housing-benefit PAYE in 30 seconds Free Myanmar PIT calculator — model employer-paid rent in the assessable line. No sign-up needed.
Open free calculator →

What about SSB and the true net salary?

SSB on cash wages typically already maxes at the MMK 300,000/month cap at salaries this high — so the housing benefit usually doesn't change SSB (employee MMK 6,000, employer MMK 9,000 max). Where the cap doesn't bind, confirm with the Social Security Board whether housing forms part of the wage base.

Monthly cash grossMMK 2,500,000
Plus: imputed rentMMK 2,000,000 (in-kind)
Less: PAYE on cash + imputed− MMK 375,000
Less: SSB (employee, 2% on cap)− MMK 6,000
Monthly cash to employeeMMK 2,119,000 (employer also paid landlord MMK 2,000,000 separately)

Employer takeaway

Value the housing benefit at the actual rent paid by the employer (plus utilities), add it to assessable salary, withhold PAYE on the cash portion to cover the combined liability. Strictly short-term business accommodation is generally not assessable. Remit PIT to IRD by the 15th of the following month, reflect housing on the annual reconciliation by 30 June, and retain lease, payment evidence, and assignment letter for at least 7 years.

For HR teams structuring expat packages
Stop under-taxing employer-paid rent. QHRM imputes housing into assessable salary and applies clean PAYE — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Common variations to watch for

  • Cash housing allowance — see housing allowance tax.
  • Hotel during initial relocation — short-term may be excluded; long-stay placements are salary.
  • Serviced apartment — full cost (rent + service charges) is the benefit value.
  • Employer-owned property — value at fair market rent for similar property.
  • Shared housing — apportion the rent across occupants.

Common PIT mistakes to avoid

  • Excluding employer-paid rent because no cash to employee — IRD treats it as a benefit.
  • Valuing at a lower notional figure than actual rent — actual rent is the standard.
  • Forgetting utilities — also part of the benefit if employer pays.
  • Missing PAYE on the cash side to cover housing — net cash may turn negative if housing is large; structure carefully. See housing allowance.
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.

More from the QHRM Blog

All articles →