How to Run Monthly Payroll in Myanmar — Step-by-Step (2026)
The 12-step monthly payroll process every Myanmar HR and finance team should run. PIT, SSB, overtime, payslips, and filing — done right, done on time.

Written for new payroll administrators, finance managers, and HR generalists who need a repeatable monthly process they can follow without skipping steps.
A clean monthly payroll run in Myanmar has 12 steps, split across a 5-day window before payday. Follow them in order and you'll catch attendance errors, SSB mis-mapping, and PIT bracket creep before they land in an employee's payslip. The whole process takes 4–6 hours for a 100-employee business on a proper system; 2–3 days on Excel.
The 12-step Myanmar payroll checklist
Pre-run (5–4 days before payday)
Step 1 — Close attendance for the pay period
- Pull attendance from biometric devices
- Reconcile against leave records
- Flag any unexplained absence to the employee's manager for immediate resolution
- Lock the attendance period once approved
Step 2 — Review overtime
- Sum OT by employee for the period
- Flag any worker with >12 hours OT in any week — this is the Factories Act cap
- Get supervisor sign-off on OT claims above a threshold (e.g. 15 hrs in the month)
- Confirm public-holiday OT is flagged at the correct premium (see overtime guide)
Step 3 — Review leave
- Pull approved leave for the period (casual, earned, medical, maternity)
- Confirm leave balances are not in negative territory for any employee
- Flag unapproved absences and unreconciled leave to HR
Step 4 — Update employee master
- Process new joiners for the period (confirm start date, salary, SSB registration)
- Process leavers — final settlement calculation (see termination guide)
- Process changes — promotions, salary revisions, department transfers
Pre-run (3–2 days before payday)
Step 5 — Apply salary structure
- Base salary × prorated days worked
- Add fixed allowances (transport, meal, housing, etc.)
- Add variable payments (OT, incentives, bonuses)
Step 6 — Calculate SSB contributions
- Employer: 3% of monthly wage (capped at MMK 300,000 wage base → max MMK 9,000)
- Employee: 2% of monthly wage (capped at MMK 300,000 → max MMK 6,000)
- Verify every SSB-eligible employee is registered with a valid SSB number
Step 7 — Calculate PIT (personal income tax)
Using the 2025-2026 Union Tax Law brackets:
| Annual taxable income | Rate |
|---|---|
| 1 to 20L | 0% |
| 20L to 100L | 5% |
| 100L to 300L | 10% |
| 300L to 500L | 15% |
| 500L to 700L | 20% |
| 700L & above | 25% |
1 Lakh (L) = 100,000 MMK.
- Apply personal reliefs: 20% of income capped at MMK 10,000,000, spouse 1M, child 500K each, parent 1M each
- Verify no employee with salary below MMK 4,800,000/year has PIT deducted (below basic exemption threshold)
Step 8 — Apply other deductions
- Advance salary recovery
- Loan installment
- Uniform/tool deduction (if in Standing Order)
- Union dues (if applicable)
- Court orders / garnishments
Pre-run (1 day before payday)
Step 9 — Generate payslips and review
- Bilingual (English + Burmese) payslip for each employee
- Spot-check 5–10 random payslips:
- Does gross × 2% = employee SSB? (capped at 6,000)
- Does attendance days match?
- Are allowances correct?
- Are deductions itemized?
Step 10 — Management approval
- Export total payroll summary for CFO/MD approval
- Confirm payroll total is in expected range (±2% of previous month unless known headcount change)
- Get sign-off before bank file generation
Payday
Step 11 — Disburse salaries
- Generate bank transfer file in the format your bank requires (MFTB, KBZ, AYA, etc.)
- Execute bank transfer
- Email/Viber notification to each employee with payslip attached (bilingual)
Post-payday (within 5 working days)
Step 12 — Statutory filings and reconciliation
- SSB filing — submit monthly SSB contribution return to Social Security Board
- PIT withholding — remit to Internal Revenue Department (monthly/quarterly depending on size)
- Reconcile payroll GL against finance books
- Archive signed payslips and bank confirmations
- Update running total for annual PIT reconciliation (year-end)
Timing: the 5-day window
A well-run Myanmar payroll follows this calendar:
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| T-5 | Attendance cut-off, data reconciliation |
| T-4 | OT and leave review, manager sign-off |
| T-3 | Salary structure applied, SSB + PIT calculated |
| T-2 | Payslip generation + spot check |
| T-1 | Management approval, bank file prepared |
| T (payday) | Salaries disbursed, payslips distributed |
| T+1 to T+5 | Statutory filings, reconciliation |
If you're still calculating SSB on T-1, you're at error risk. Push earlier.
The three biggest failure modes
1. Attendance data arrives on T-1
If biometric logs aren't integrated, someone types attendance data on the day before payroll. This is where most transcription errors happen.
Fix: Integrate biometric devices directly into payroll (see biometric attendance guide).
2. OT calculation formula in Excel gets overwritten
Someone edits the formula to fix a single row, doesn't notice the formula now refers to the wrong column, and for 2 months payroll is systematically wrong by 3%.
Fix: Use a system where OT rules are configured once, not in formulas.
3. SSB and PIT remittance delayed
Payroll runs fine but the SSB return is filed 2 weeks late. Compounded over 6 months, you're looking at interest and penalties.
Fix: Calendar alerts for filing deadlines, automated export from payroll system.
Annual year-end wrap-up
In addition to the monthly 12-step process, run these year-end tasks:
- Annual PIT reconciliation — compare cumulative withholding vs. actual PIT liability per employee. Issue adjustment or refund certificate.
- Annual SSB reconciliation — confirm all months are filed and reconciled.
- Annual leave roll-over — earned leave carry-forward (company policy) and casual leave forfeit.
- Year-end payslip archive — keep for 7 years minimum for audit.
- Gratuity / severance provision review — book annual provision in finance.
How QHRM automates the 12 steps
| Step | QHRM automation |
|---|---|
| 1 | Live biometric integration, auto-lock period |
| 2 | OT auto-calculated with cap alerts |
| 3 | Leave balances live, auto-reconciled |
| 4 | New joiner wizard, leaver settlement |
| 5 | Salary structure engine |
| 6 | SSB auto-calc with cap |
| 7 | PIT engine with 2025-2026 brackets + reliefs |
| 8 | Custom deduction rules |
| 9 | Bilingual payslip auto-generate |
| 10 | Summary dashboard for MD approval |
| 11 | Bank file in MFTB/KBZ/AYA format |
| 12 | SSB return export, PIT export, GL journal export |
Total processing time for a 200-employee payroll: under 2 hours end-to-end.
📥 Also free: Monthly Payroll Checklist (PDF) — print and follow the 12 steps.
Frequently asked questions
Q: Can we pay salaries on the last working day of the month instead of the 1st? Yes — Myanmar law doesn't mandate a specific payday. Many Myanmar businesses pay on the 25th–30th for cash flow reasons. Payday policy must be in the employment contract and/or Standing Order.
Q: What if we discover an error after payday? Adjust in the next payroll with a clear correction line on the payslip. Never retroactively alter a processed payslip. Communicate to the employee in writing with the correction reason.
Q: Do we need to give employees a physical payslip? A digital bilingual payslip (email, employee portal, or Viber) is acceptable. Keep the digital record archived.
Q: What happens if we miss the SSB filing deadline? Interest and penalties accrue. File as soon as possible with explanation. For repeat delays, SSB can pursue stronger enforcement.
Next steps
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.