Publisher
Qanoon Oman
Checked
26. März 2026

Globale Einblicke
Oman private-sector hiring depends on contract-based wage setting, wage-protection execution, statutory hours and leave controls, and worker-type-specific exit treatment under the Labour Law and Social Protection Law.
Operational snapshot
Oman private-sector hiring depends on contract-based wage setting, wage-protection execution, statutory hours and leave controls, and worker-type-specific exit treatment under the Labour Law and Social Protection Law.
Hauptstadt
Muscat
Payroll cycle
Monthly
Employer contribution
11%
Languages
Arabic
Währung
Omani Rial (OMR)
Last reviewed
23. März 2026
Employment and compliance summary
Employer cost and contributions
Employer budgeting should distinguish between insured Omani employees under the Social Protection Fund and workers who still rely on Labour Law end-of-service gratuity treatment. Cost...
Payroll and tax operations
Payroll should keep the basic salary and allowances explicit because overtime, leave, and gratuity calculations depend on the wage structure used in the contract and payroll file. Wages...
Leave and holiday rules
Leave administration should align annual, sick, and special leave handling with the 2023 Labour Law and maintain disciplined balances before payroll cutoff. Working-time controls should...
Termination and notice
Termination handling should distinguish between statutory notice, final wage closeout, and end-of-service gratuity for workers outside the Social Protection Law scope. Employers should...
Oman does not apply one private-sector wage floor to every worker in every role. Omani nationals may still be affected by ministry wage decisions or Omanisation-linked pay rules, while expatriate compensation is usually contractual unless a sector rule says otherwise. Employers should set out the basic salary, allowances, payroll cycle, and any housing or ticket commitments in writing.
Employment income is generally not subject to personal income tax in Oman. For insured Omani employees, official Social Protection Fund materials publish a core contribution split of 11% employer and 7.5% employee for old-age, disability, and death insurance, with additional employer-funded branches such as work injury, job security, and family-related insurance. Workers outside the Social Protection Law remain entitled to Labour Law end-of-service gratuity.
| Payroll item | Operational baseline |
|---|---|
| Income tax | No routine payroll withholding for personal income tax on salary. |
| Social protection | Budget 11% employer and 7.5% employee for the core insured-salary branch, then confirm any extra employer-funded branches from current SPF schedules. |
| Workers outside SPF coverage | End-of-service gratuity is at least one basic wage for each completed year of service until the savings-system rules fully apply. |
| Wage timing | Wages should move through the employee's local bank or licensed financial account within the statutory payment window. |
Article 87 requires wages to be transferred to the worker's account at a bank or other licensed local financial institution, and the Ministry's WPS guidance states that payment should not be delayed beyond three days from the due date. Daytime overtime is paid with at least a 25% premium on the basic hourly wage and night overtime with at least a 50% premium. If work is performed on the weekly rest day or an official holiday, the employer must generally either pay the day wage plus an additional amount equal to 100% of the worker's daily basic wage or grant substitute leave.
Under the 2023 Labour Law, normal working time is eight actual working hours per day and 40 actual hours per week. A daily rest and meal break of at least one hour sits outside working time, and continuous work should not exceed six hours. During Ramadan, Muslim workers move to six hours a day and 30 hours a week. Weekly rest must be at least two consecutive paid days.
Employees become entitled to at least 30 calendar days of paid annual leave after six months of service. If business needs prevent leave from being taken, up to 30 days may be carried. Sick leave can run up to 182 days in a year, paid at 100% from day 1 to day 21, 75% from day 22 to day 35, 50% from day 36 to day 70, and 35% from day 71 to day 182.
Special paid leave is relatively broad. The Labour Law provides seven days of paternity leave, 10 days on the death of a spouse or child, 15 days for Hajj once during service, and 98 days of maternity leave, with up to 14 days available before childbirth on medical recommendation.
Probation may not exceed three months and should be written into the contract. For indefinite-term contracts, notice is 30 days for monthly-paid workers and 15 days for other workers unless a longer employer notice period is agreed. During notice, the employer must allow the worker ten paid hours each week to search for new work.
Summary dismissal without notice and without gratuity is limited to the misconduct cases listed in the Labour Law. Outside those cases, termination should rest on a lawful reason, such as documented performance failure after remediation, approved economic grounds, or a permitted Omanisation replacement scenario for non-Omani staff. Ministry notification rules should be checked before efficiency or restructuring exits.
Employers should settle wages and outstanding amounts immediately when the relationship ends, except that where the worker leaves on their own initiative the law allows payment within seven days. If a court finds dismissal arbitrary or unlawful, it may order reinstatement or compensation of at least three months and up to twelve months of the last gross wage. For workers outside Social Protection Law coverage, gratuity is at least one basic wage for each completed year of service.
An Oman services arrangement becomes harder to defend if the individual works fixed hours, uses employer tools as part of the internal team, or is supervised like an employee. If the business needs day-to-day control, local employment is usually the safer structure.
Employment contracts should be in writing and in Arabic, or at least accompanied by an approved Arabic text with equal evidentiary force. Core terms should cover wage structure, job title, work location, notice, and benefits.
Hiring non-Omani workers requires the correct Ministry of Labour permission route. On exit, employers should close payroll and permit files together and confirm any repatriation duty before the worker leaves Oman.
The main execution points in Oman are Arabic contract readiness, bank-transfer payroll compliance, correct mapping of SPF versus gratuity treatment, annual leave tracking, and verification of any Omanisation or sector-specific pay rules before hiring starts.
Reviewed by
Last reviewed
23. März 2026
Sources
Reviewed by PIO Compliance Research Team against public labor, payroll tax, social contribution, leave, termination, and employer compliance references relevant to the approved country guide set.
Referenced sources
Publisher
Qanoon Oman
Checked
26. März 2026
Publisher
Qanoon Oman
Checked
26. März 2026
Publisher
Social Protection Fund
Checked
26. März 2026
Publisher
Social Protection Fund
Checked
26. März 2026