HR Insights · Myanmar

Is a written employment contract mandatory in Myanmar?

Yes — ESDL 2013 requires a written employment contract within 30 days of joining. The rule, the penalty, and what counts as compliant.

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

What Myanmar law says

The Employment & Skills Development Law (ESDL) 2013 makes a written employment contract mandatory for every employer-employee relationship, regardless of company size, employee level, or full-time vs part-time status. The contract must be signed within 30 days of the employee's start date. A verbal offer, an unsigned offer letter, or an email confirmation is not a substitute. One signed copy goes to the employee, one to the employer; the form follows the template prescribed by the Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population (MoLES).

Who is covered

  • All employees — local and foreign, full-time and part-time.
  • Probationers — the contract must cover the probation period itself.
  • Fixed-term staff — fixed-term contracts must be in writing with the term clearly stated.
  • Casual / daily-rated workers — still require a written agreement, even if simplified.
  • True independent contractors — covered by a service contract, not an employment contract; classification must be genuine.

What "written" means

FormCompliant?
Bilingual (English + Myanmar) printed contract, signed by both partiesYes
Myanmar-only printed contract, signedYes
English-only signed contractRisky — Myanmar version recommended for enforceability
Signed digital PDF (e-signature)Acceptable if both parties keep copies
Email confirmation, no signatureNo
Verbal offerNo
Download the QHRM Myanmar offer-letter template Bilingual contract with all ESDL-required clauses pre-filled, ready to issue inside the 30-day window.
Get the template →

What if there's a dispute

  • Township labour office first — the employee files a complaint that no written contract was issued; the office orders the employer to issue one and may impose a fine.
  • Conciliation Body — if the missing-contract complaint also covers wage or termination disputes, the matter moves to formal conciliation under the Settlement of Labour Disputes Law.
  • Arbitration Council — final binding step. Statute of limitations: typically 6 months from the disputed action.

Employer takeaway

Issue a bilingual written contract on day one and have it signed within 30 days. Cover all nine ESDL clauses (job title, wages, hours, leave, probation, termination grounds, notice, severance, term). Keep the signed original for at least 7 years. On exit, issue the relieving letter, experience letter, and full-and-final settlement statement within 7 days of the last working day.

For HR teams running terminations across regions
Run a clean exit, every time. QHRM generates ESDL-compliant Myanmar contracts on day one and tracks every signature deadline — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Edge cases and unenforceable clauses

  • Probationer fired on day 5 with no contract yet — still owed 2 weeks notice or pay in lieu; the absence of a written contract does not waive ESDL protections.
  • Long-tenure staff hired before 2013 — must still be regularised with a written ESDL-compliant contract.
  • "Consultant" titles for de facto employees — misclassification risk; the township labour office tests substance over form.
  • See required clauses and probation period.

Common contract mistakes

  • Issuing only an offer letter and never converting to a signed contract.
  • Letting the 30-day window lapse for new hires.
  • Using a parent-company global template that omits the Myanmar severance schedule.
  • Failing to retain signed copies — see exit clearance process.
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 →