I. Introduction
In Philippine employment and tax law, the fact that an employee is probationary does not exempt the employer from withholding tax obligations. A probationary employee may still receive wages, salaries, allowances, bonuses, commissions, overtime pay, holiday pay, night shift differential, and other forms of compensation. These payments are generally treated as compensation income, and the employer is required to withhold the proper amount of tax, if any, in accordance with Philippine tax rules.
The central principle is straightforward: probationary employment affects labor tenure, not the taxability of compensation income. Once a person renders services as an employee and receives compensation, the employer must determine whether withholding tax on compensation applies in the same manner as it would for regular employees.
This article discusses the Philippine rules on withholding tax on compensation income as they apply to probationary employees, including the nature of probationary employment, taxable and non-taxable compensation, employer obligations, employee rights, substituted filing, annualization, minimum wage earners, benefits, common payroll issues, and practical compliance considerations.
II. Probationary Employment in Philippine Labor Law
A probationary employee is an employee who is placed on trial for a limited period so the employer may determine whether the employee qualifies for regular employment based on reasonable standards made known at the time of engagement.
Under Philippine labor law, probationary employment generally may not exceed six months, unless a longer period is authorized by law, required by the nature of the work, or voluntarily agreed upon under circumstances recognized by jurisprudence, such as certain apprenticeship or training arrangements.
A probationary employee is not a casual worker merely because of probationary status. The employee is still part of the employer’s workforce and is entitled to statutory labor standards, including applicable minimum wage, holiday pay, service incentive leave where applicable, overtime pay, premium pay, night shift differential, and social legislation coverage.
For tax purposes, the key point is that the employee-employer relationship already exists. Therefore, payments made by the employer to the probationary employee are generally treated as compensation income.
III. Meaning of Compensation Income
Compensation income refers to all remuneration for services performed by an employee for an employer, unless specifically excluded by law or regulation. It includes compensation paid in cash or in kind.
Common examples include:
- Basic salary or wage;
- Overtime pay;
- Holiday pay;
- Night shift differential;
- Hazard pay;
- Commissions;
- Taxable allowances;
- Bonuses;
- 13th month pay and other benefits in excess of the tax-exempt ceiling;
- Taxable fringe-like benefits given to rank-and-file employees;
- Separation-related payments that do not qualify for tax exemption;
- Other benefits received because of employment.
The label used by the employer is not controlling. A payment called an “allowance,” “incentive,” “subsidy,” “honorarium,” “training pay,” or “probationary stipend” may still be taxable compensation if it is compensation for services rendered and is not covered by a statutory exclusion.
IV. Probationary Status Does Not Create a Tax Exemption
There is no general rule in Philippine tax law exempting probationary employees from withholding tax on compensation income. The same withholding tax system applies to probationary, regular, project-based, seasonal, casual, and fixed-term employees, provided an employer-employee relationship exists.
The determining factors are not the employee’s tenure classification but:
- Whether the worker is an employee;
- Whether compensation income is paid;
- Whether the income is taxable or exempt;
- The amount of taxable compensation;
- The applicable withholding tax table or annualized tax computation;
- Whether the employee qualifies as a minimum wage earner;
- Whether the employee has other employers or other taxable income affecting filing obligations.
Thus, a probationary employee earning taxable compensation above the applicable thresholds may be subject to withholding tax. Conversely, a probationary employee earning only non-taxable compensation, or whose compensation falls within exempt treatment, may have no withholding tax due.
V. Employer’s Obligation to Withhold
In the Philippines, the employer acts as a withholding agent for compensation income. This means the employer is required to deduct and withhold the appropriate tax from compensation paid to employees and remit the tax to the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
The obligation exists at the time compensation is paid or made available to the employee. The employer cannot avoid withholding by saying that the employee is still under probation, newly hired, temporary, under evaluation, or not yet regularized.
Failure to withhold, remit, or report the proper tax may expose the employer to tax assessments, penalties, interest, compromise penalties, and possible administrative or criminal consequences under tax law.
The withholding obligation is separate from the employer’s obligations under labor law and social legislation. Even if the employer is also required to register the employee with the SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG, those contributions are distinct from withholding tax.
VI. Taxable Compensation of Probationary Employees
The following are generally taxable when received by probationary employees, unless a specific exemption applies:
1. Basic Salary or Wage
The basic salary paid to a probationary employee is compensation income. If the employee is not a minimum wage earner exempt from income tax, the salary is included in taxable compensation.
2. Overtime Pay
Overtime pay is generally compensation income. For non-minimum wage earners, it is taxable. For qualified minimum wage earners, overtime pay may be exempt if covered by the statutory exemption for minimum wage earners.
3. Holiday Pay
Holiday pay is also compensation income. It may be exempt for qualified minimum wage earners but taxable for employees who do not fall under the minimum wage earner exemption.
4. Night Shift Differential
Night shift differential is taxable compensation unless exempt under rules applicable to minimum wage earners.
5. Hazard Pay
Hazard pay is generally taxable unless exempt for qualified minimum wage earners or otherwise covered by a specific statutory exemption.
6. Commissions and Incentives
Sales commissions, performance incentives, productivity bonuses, and similar payments are taxable compensation if received because of employment.
For probationary employees in sales, business development, recruitment, real estate support, insurance agency support, or similar roles, commissions paid by the employer are normally included in compensation income.
7. Taxable Allowances
Allowances are taxable if they are fixed, regularly given, or not subject to liquidation. Examples include transportation allowance, meal allowance, representation allowance, communication allowance, housing allowance, and cost-of-living allowance when not otherwise exempt.
An allowance may be non-taxable if it is a legitimate business expense advance that is properly liquidated and supported by receipts. However, if the employee receives the amount regardless of actual expense, or is not required to return or liquidate unused amounts, it is more likely taxable compensation.
8. Bonuses
Bonuses paid to probationary employees are generally taxable, subject to the special rule on 13th month pay and other benefits.
9. Signing Bonus or Hiring Bonus
A signing bonus, hiring bonus, joining bonus, or onboarding incentive is generally taxable compensation because it is received by reason of employment.
10. Taxable Benefits in Kind
Benefits in kind, such as free housing, personal use of a company vehicle, personal travel, or other non-cash benefits, may be taxable depending on the employee’s rank and the nature of the benefit.
For rank-and-file employees, these are usually treated as compensation income unless excluded. For managerial or supervisory employees, certain benefits may fall under the fringe benefits tax regime rather than ordinary compensation withholding.
VII. Non-Taxable or Exempt Items
Not all amounts received by a probationary employee are taxable. The law recognizes exclusions and exemptions.
1. Statutory Contributions
Employee contributions to SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and union dues are generally excluded or deductible in determining taxable compensation, subject to applicable rules.
These are commonly reflected as payroll deductions before computing withholding tax.
2. De Minimis Benefits
Certain small-value benefits are treated as de minimis benefits and are not subject to income tax and withholding tax, provided they fall within the types and limits allowed by tax regulations.
Examples traditionally include monetized unused vacation leave credits within limits, medical cash allowance to dependents within limits, rice subsidy within limits, uniform and clothing allowance within limits, actual medical assistance within limits, laundry allowance within limits, employee achievement awards meeting conditions, gifts during Christmas and major anniversary celebrations within limits, daily meal allowance for overtime or graveyard shift within limits, and benefits under a collective bargaining agreement or productivity incentive scheme within limits.
The exact limits are regulatory and may be amended. Employers should apply the current BIR rules when processing payroll.
3. 13th Month Pay and Other Benefits Within the Exempt Ceiling
The 13th month pay and other benefits are exempt from income tax up to the statutory ceiling. Amounts exceeding the ceiling are taxable compensation.
This rule applies to probationary employees as well. Even if the employee has not yet completed one year of service, the employee may be entitled to a proportionate 13th month pay under labor rules, and the tax treatment follows the same compensation tax rules.
“Other benefits” may include Christmas bonus, productivity incentives, loyalty awards, and similar benefits, subject to classification and applicable limits.
4. Minimum Wage Earner Exemption
A minimum wage earner is generally exempt from income tax on statutory minimum wage and certain related wage payments, such as holiday pay, overtime pay, night shift differential, and hazard pay, subject to applicable conditions.
This exemption can apply to probationary employees if they are genuinely paid the statutory minimum wage and meet the requirements for minimum wage earner treatment.
However, if a probationary employee receives compensation above the statutory minimum wage or receives taxable income not covered by the exemption, the employer must carefully determine whether the employee remains exempt or whether withholding tax applies.
5. Reimbursements and Liquidated Advances
Amounts advanced to employees for business expenses are generally not taxable compensation if they are subject to liquidation, supported by receipts, and any excess is returned.
For example, a probationary sales employee who receives a cash advance for transportation to visit clients may not be taxed on the amount if it is properly liquidated as a business expense. But a fixed monthly transportation allowance given regardless of actual expense is generally taxable unless covered by a specific exclusion.
6. Separation Benefits Due to Causes Beyond the Employee’s Control
If a probationary employee is separated due to causes beyond the employee’s control, certain separation benefits may be exempt from income tax, depending on the circumstances and documentation.
Examples may include separation due to retrenchment, redundancy, closure, illness, or other authorized causes. However, ordinary final salary, taxable bonuses, and other compensation earned before separation remain taxable unless separately exempt.
VIII. Withholding Tax Computation
The withholding tax on compensation is computed using BIR-prescribed withholding tax tables and annualization rules.
In general, payroll systems determine taxable compensation for the payroll period, subtract non-taxable contributions and exclusions, and apply the withholding tax table based on payroll frequency, such as daily, weekly, semi-monthly, or monthly.
For employees who are newly hired during the year, including probationary employees, employers normally compute withholding based on compensation paid during the period of employment and later perform annualized computation at year-end or upon termination.
The employer must consider:
- Gross compensation;
- Non-taxable statutory deductions;
- De minimis benefits;
- 13th month pay and other benefits subject to the exempt ceiling;
- Taxable allowances and benefits;
- Prior taxable compensation from the same employer during the year;
- Any tax already withheld;
- Termination or year-end annualization.
The fact that the employee has worked only for a few weeks or months does not automatically mean no withholding tax is due. The withholding system looks at compensation and applicable tax rules, not merely length of service.
IX. Annualization of Compensation
Annualization is the process of determining the employee’s total taxable compensation for the year, computing the annual income tax due, comparing it with tax already withheld, and making the necessary adjustment.
Annualization usually occurs:
- At year-end for employees still employed as of the end of the year; or
- Upon termination or separation of employment during the year.
For probationary employees, annualization is especially important because they may be hired mid-year, regularized during the year, fail probation, resign, or be terminated before year-end.
If too much tax was withheld, the employer may refund the excess through payroll, usually during year-end annualization or final pay processing. If too little was withheld, the employer may withhold the deficiency from remaining compensation, subject to lawful payroll and final pay procedures.
X. Probationary Employee Hired Mid-Year
When a probationary employee is hired mid-year, the employer should obtain the employee’s tax information, including whether the employee had a previous employer during the same taxable year.
If the employee had a previous employer, the new employer may need the employee’s BIR Form 2316 from the prior employer for proper annualization and substituted filing analysis.
Where the employee had only one employer during the year, the rules are simpler. Where the employee had multiple employers during the year, the employee may be required to file an annual income tax return personally, even if taxes were withheld by each employer.
A common payroll issue arises when a probationary employee starts in the middle of the year and payroll computes withholding only on current earnings without accounting for prior compensation. This may result in under-withholding unless corrected during annualization or by the employee’s own annual tax filing.
XI. Probationary Employee Who Fails Probation or Resigns
If a probationary employee resigns, is dismissed for failure to meet reasonable standards, or is otherwise separated before regularization, the employer must process final compensation and compute withholding tax on taxable amounts.
Final pay may include:
- Unpaid salary;
- Pro-rated 13th month pay;
- Unused leave conversion if applicable;
- Commissions earned;
- Incentives earned;
- Taxable allowances;
- Return of cash bond or deposits, if any;
- Separation pay, if applicable;
- Other benefits due under contract, company policy, or law.
The employer must distinguish between taxable compensation and non-taxable payments. The final withholding computation should account for tax previously withheld during the year.
The employer must also issue BIR Form 2316 covering compensation paid and tax withheld.
XII. BIR Form 2316
BIR Form 2316 is the Certificate of Compensation Payment/Tax Withheld. It shows the employee’s compensation income and taxes withheld for the taxable year or period of employment.
Probationary employees are entitled to receive BIR Form 2316 from their employer if compensation was paid. The form is important because it serves as proof of income and withholding tax.
The employer generally issues Form 2316:
- On or before the applicable deadline for employees employed at year-end;
- Upon termination or separation, covering compensation paid during the year;
- As needed by the employee for new employment, tax filing, loans, visa applications, or personal records.
For probationary employees who are not regularized or who resign, Form 2316 is still required because compensation was paid during employment.
XIII. Substituted Filing
Substituted filing allows certain employees to avoid filing an individual annual income tax return because the employer’s annual information return and the employee’s BIR Form 2316 serve as the substitute return.
A probationary employee may qualify for substituted filing if all legal conditions are met. Generally, this requires that the employee:
- Receives purely compensation income;
- Has only one employer in the Philippines during the taxable year;
- Has the correct amount of tax withheld by the employer;
- Has no other income requiring the filing of an annual income tax return;
- Meets the other requirements under BIR rules.
If a probationary employee had two employers during the year, such as a previous employer before joining the current employer, substituted filing may not apply. The employee may need to file an annual income tax return.
Probationary status itself neither grants nor disqualifies substituted filing. The controlling factors are the employee’s income sources, number of employers, and correctness of withholding.
XIV. Minimum Wage Probationary Employees
Many probationary employees receive entry-level wages. If the employee is a true minimum wage earner, the tax treatment may be different.
A minimum wage earner is generally exempt from income tax on statutory minimum wage and certain related payments. This means the employer may not be required to withhold income tax if the employee receives only exempt minimum wage compensation.
However, employers must be careful. The exemption may not apply, or may be affected, when the employee receives taxable compensation beyond the statutory minimum wage or benefits outside the exemption.
For example:
| Situation | Likely Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Probationary employee receives only statutory minimum wage | Generally exempt from income tax |
| Minimum wage employee receives holiday pay, overtime pay, night shift differential, or hazard pay covered by exemption | Generally exempt |
| Employee receives salary above minimum wage | Subject to regular compensation tax rules |
| Employee receives taxable commissions or allowances beyond exempt items | May be subject to withholding |
| Employee is labeled “minimum wage” but receives guaranteed additional taxable compensation | Requires careful payroll treatment |
The employer should not rely merely on job title or employment status. The actual wage rate and compensation package determine the tax treatment.
XV. Rank-and-File versus Managerial or Supervisory Employees
The classification of the employee may affect the tax treatment of benefits.
For rank-and-file employees, benefits are generally treated as compensation income unless exempt as de minimis benefits, 13th month pay and other benefits within the ceiling, statutory contributions, or other exclusions.
For managerial or supervisory employees, certain benefits may be treated as fringe benefits subject to fringe benefits tax. In that case, the tax is generally imposed on the employer, not withheld as ordinary compensation tax from the employee.
A probationary employee can be managerial, supervisory, or rank-and-file. Probationary status does not determine the tax treatment of benefits. The employee’s actual position, authority, and nature of benefits must be considered.
XVI. Tax Treatment of Common Probationary Employment Payments
1. Probationary Salary
Taxable unless exempt, such as in the case of a qualified minimum wage earner.
2. Training Allowance
Taxable if paid as compensation for services or as a fixed employment benefit. It may be non-taxable only if it is a legitimate reimbursement or expense advance subject to liquidation.
3. Meal Allowance
May be non-taxable if it qualifies as a de minimis benefit within allowed limits. Otherwise, it is taxable compensation.
4. Transportation Allowance
Usually taxable if fixed and unliquidated. Non-taxable if it is a reimbursable business expense properly liquidated.
5. Communication Allowance
Usually taxable if fixed and personal in nature. Non-taxable to the extent it is a properly supported business expense reimbursement.
6. Uniform Allowance
May be non-taxable if it qualifies under de minimis benefit rules within applicable limits.
7. Perfect Attendance Incentive
Generally taxable unless it falls under a specific exempt benefit category.
8. Productivity Incentive
May be exempt only if it falls within applicable de minimis or statutory benefit rules. Otherwise, taxable.
9. Sales Commission
Taxable compensation.
10. Signing Bonus
Taxable compensation.
11. Completion Bonus after Probation
Taxable compensation unless covered by the 13th month pay and other benefits exemption within the ceiling.
12. Pro-rated 13th Month Pay
Exempt up to the statutory ceiling together with other covered benefits; excess is taxable.
13. Leave Conversion
Tax treatment depends on the type of leave, amount, and applicable de minimis rules. Excess or non-qualifying leave conversion is taxable.
14. Separation Pay
May be exempt if paid due to causes beyond the employee’s control and supported by proper basis. Otherwise, it may be taxable.
XVII. Payroll Deductions and Withholding Tax
Payroll deductions for probationary employees commonly include:
- SSS employee share;
- PhilHealth employee share;
- Pag-IBIG employee share;
- Withholding tax on compensation;
- Loans or salary advances;
- Authorized deductions;
- Company-related deductions allowed by law.
The withholding tax is not the employer’s money. It is tax collected from the employee and held in trust for remittance to the government. The employer must remit it properly.
An employer may not simply withhold arbitrary amounts. The amount must be based on tax rules. Excessive withholding may require refund or adjustment, while deficient withholding may expose the employer to liability.
XVIII. Employer Registration and Payroll Compliance
An employer hiring probationary employees should ensure that the employee is properly included in payroll and tax records.
Key compliance steps include:
- Registering as a withholding agent, if not already registered;
- Obtaining the employee’s Taxpayer Identification Number;
- Including the employee in the payroll system;
- Determining whether the employee is taxable or exempt;
- Applying the correct withholding tax table;
- Tracking taxable and non-taxable compensation;
- Remitting withholding taxes on time;
- Filing required withholding tax returns;
- Preparing and issuing BIR Form 2316;
- Maintaining payroll records for audit purposes.
Even where no tax is due because the employee is exempt or compensation is below the taxable threshold, the employer should still maintain proper records.
XIX. Employee Without a TIN
A probationary employee should have a Taxpayer Identification Number. If the employee does not yet have one, the employer should assist or require compliance with the applicable BIR registration process.
The absence of a TIN does not mean the employee’s compensation is not taxable. It is an administrative issue that must be corrected. Employers should avoid maintaining employees outside payroll merely because they are probationary or lack complete tax documents.
XX. Probationary Employees with Previous Employers
A probationary employee who joins a new employer during the taxable year may have received compensation from a previous employer.
This matters because:
- The employee may not qualify for substituted filing;
- The employee may need to file an annual income tax return;
- The new employer may need prior compensation data for annualization;
- Under-withholding or over-withholding may occur if prior income is ignored.
Employers commonly require a new hire to submit the prior employer’s BIR Form 2316. The employee should keep copies of all Form 2316 certificates received during the year.
XXI. Probationary Employees with Concurrent Employment
Some probationary employees may have more than one employer at the same time. This is common in part-time, teaching, consulting-like employment arrangements, or flexible work setups.
If there is an employer-employee relationship with each employer, each employer must withhold tax on compensation it pays. However, because each employer computes withholding based only on its own payroll, the employee may still have a year-end tax payable when total income is combined.
An employee with multiple employers generally cannot rely on substituted filing and may be required to file an annual income tax return.
XXII. Employees Misclassified as Independent Contractors
A major issue in Philippine practice is the misclassification of workers as independent contractors, consultants, freelancers, or trainees when the relationship is actually employment.
If a worker is treated as an independent contractor, payments may be subject to expanded withholding tax rather than withholding tax on compensation. However, if the facts show an employer-employee relationship, the BIR and labor authorities may treat the worker as an employee.
Indicators of employment include control over work methods, fixed work hours, integration into the business, provision of tools, regular payment of wages, supervision, disciplinary authority, and the power to dismiss.
A probationary employee should not be treated as an independent contractor merely to avoid withholding tax, SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, labor standards, or regularization rules.
Misclassification can lead to tax assessments, labor claims, social contribution deficiencies, and penalties.
XXIII. Probationary Employees Paid Daily, Weekly, Semi-Monthly, or Monthly
The payroll frequency affects the withholding tax table used.
A probationary employee may be paid:
- Daily;
- Weekly;
- Semi-monthly;
- Monthly;
- Per output, if still within an employment relationship;
- By commission plus basic salary.
The employer should apply the correct withholding method based on the payroll period. For irregular compensation, bonuses, commissions, and supplemental compensation, the employer should follow applicable withholding rules and annualized computation.
XXIV. Probationary Employees Paid Below Minimum Wage
A probationary employee generally cannot be paid below the applicable minimum wage unless a lawful exception applies, such as recognized apprenticeship or learner arrangements under labor law.
From a tax standpoint, paying below minimum wage does not automatically create a withholding tax issue if the income is below taxable thresholds. However, it creates a labor compliance issue. Tax compliance does not cure wage violations.
Employers should not confuse tax treatment with labor legality. A payment may be correctly reported for tax purposes but still violate labor standards.
XXV. Tax Refunds for Probationary Employees
A probationary employee may be entitled to a tax refund if the employer withheld more tax than the employee’s actual annual tax liability.
This often happens when:
- The employee worked only part of the year;
- Payroll assumed the employee would earn the same amount for the full year;
- The employee resigned or failed probation early;
- Non-taxable benefits were incorrectly treated as taxable;
- Prior payroll computations were not adjusted.
The refund is usually handled through employer annualization or final pay processing. If the employee is required to file an annual income tax return, the employee may claim excess withholding tax subject to BIR procedures.
XXVI. Final Pay and Tax Clearance Issues
When a probationary employee leaves employment, final pay processing should include proper tax computation.
The employer should prepare:
- Final salary computation;
- Taxable and non-taxable benefit breakdown;
- Withholding tax adjustment;
- BIR Form 2316;
- Final pay release documents;
- Certificate of employment, if requested and required;
- Other documents required by company policy or law.
There is generally no requirement that a probationary employee must obtain a BIR tax clearance before receiving final pay. However, the employer may require normal clearance procedures for company property, accountabilities, and payroll documentation, provided these are not used unlawfully to withhold wages.
XXVII. Common Employer Mistakes
1. Not Withholding Because the Employee Is Probationary
This is incorrect. Probationary status does not remove withholding obligations.
2. Treating All Allowances as Non-Taxable
Allowances are taxable unless properly excluded, treated as de minimis benefits, or liquidated as business expense reimbursements.
3. Ignoring Previous Employment
If the employee had a previous employer during the year, annualization and substituted filing may be affected.
4. Failing to Issue BIR Form 2316
Probationary employees must receive proper tax documentation even if they leave before regularization.
5. Misclassifying Employees as Contractors
Calling a worker a contractor does not control if the facts show employment.
6. Not Annualizing upon Separation
When a probationary employee resigns or is terminated, the employer should compute final tax properly.
7. Taxing Exempt Minimum Wage Earners
Employers should correctly identify minimum wage earners and exempt payments covered by law.
8. Treating All Benefits as De Minimis
Only benefits within recognized categories and limits qualify as de minimis.
9. Failing to Refund Excess Withholding
If annualization shows excess withholding, proper adjustment should be made.
10. Keeping Probationary Employees Off Payroll
This creates tax, labor, and social contribution risks.
XXVIII. Common Employee Misunderstandings
1. “I Am Probationary, So I Should Not Be Taxed.”
Incorrect. Taxability depends on compensation and applicable exemptions, not regularization status.
2. “My Salary Is Small, So Any Tax Deduction Is Illegal.”
Not necessarily. The correct answer depends on taxable compensation, pay frequency, benefits, and annualization.
3. “Allowances Are Always Tax-Free.”
Incorrect. Many allowances are taxable unless specifically exempt or liquidated as business expenses.
4. “I Do Not Need BIR Form 2316 Because I Worked Only Three Months.”
Incorrect. If compensation was paid, the employer should issue the certificate covering the period.
5. “The Employer Can Keep My Tax Refund.”
Incorrect. Excess withholding should be properly adjusted or refunded according to tax rules.
6. “No Tax Was Withheld, So I Have No Tax Obligation.”
Not always. If withholding was deficient, the employee may still have filing or payment obligations.
XXIX. Illustrative Examples
Example 1: Probationary Employee Earning Above Minimum Wage
Ana is hired as a probationary marketing associate with a monthly salary above the minimum wage. She receives basic pay, transportation allowance, and performance incentives.
Her basic salary, taxable allowance, and incentives are compensation income. The employer must compute withholding tax using the applicable rules. Her probationary status does not exempt her.
Example 2: Probationary Minimum Wage Earner
Ben is hired as a probationary production worker and receives only the statutory minimum wage plus overtime pay and night shift differential.
If Ben qualifies as a minimum wage earner and the payments are covered by the exemption, the employer may not need to withhold income tax. However, the employer must still maintain payroll records and comply with labor and social contribution rules.
Example 3: Probationary Employee Resigns after Two Months
Cara resigns after two months. She receives unpaid salary, pro-rated 13th month pay, and unused leave conversion.
The employer must compute final withholding tax, determine which amounts are taxable or exempt, refund excess tax if applicable, and issue BIR Form 2316.
Example 4: Probationary Employee with Previous Employer
Dino joins a company in August as a probationary employee. He worked for another employer from January to July.
The new employer withholds tax on compensation it pays. Dino may not qualify for substituted filing because he had more than one employer during the year. He may need to file an annual income tax return combining compensation from both employers.
Example 5: Fixed Monthly Allowance
Ella receives a fixed monthly “transportation allowance” during probation. She does not submit receipts and receives the full amount regardless of actual travel.
The allowance is likely taxable compensation, not a non-taxable reimbursement.
XXX. Relationship Between Withholding Tax and Labor Rights
Withholding tax compliance does not determine whether an employee is validly probationary, regular, or illegally dismissed. These are separate legal issues.
An employee may be properly taxed but illegally dismissed. Conversely, an employee may have a valid probationary termination but still be entitled to correct final pay and tax documentation.
Tax treatment also does not determine whether wages are lawful. An employer cannot justify underpayment, non-payment of overtime, or non-remittance of social contributions by saying that taxes were withheld.
The employer must comply simultaneously with:
- The National Internal Revenue Code and BIR regulations;
- The Labor Code and labor standards;
- Social security laws;
- Employment contracts and company policies;
- Applicable wage orders.
XXXI. Records Employers Should Keep
Employers should keep sufficient records to support withholding tax treatment for probationary employees, including:
- Employment contract or appointment letter;
- Payroll register;
- Daily time records or attendance records;
- Salary structure;
- Allowance policies;
- Expense liquidation documents;
- Receipts for reimbursed expenses;
- Benefits schedule;
- SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG deductions;
- Withholding tax computation;
- BIR returns and proof of payment;
- BIR Form 2316;
- Resignation, termination, or regularization documents;
- Final pay computation.
Good documentation is essential because tax audits and labor disputes often focus on whether payments were properly classified.
XXXII. Rights of Probationary Employees Relating to Withholding Tax
A probationary employee has the right to:
- Be included in lawful payroll records;
- Have taxes computed correctly;
- Receive payslips or payroll information where required or provided by law or company policy;
- Be credited for taxes withheld;
- Receive BIR Form 2316;
- Have excess withholding refunded or adjusted when appropriate;
- Question unexplained or excessive deductions;
- Obtain clarification on taxable and non-taxable components of pay;
- File the required annual income tax return when substituted filing does not apply;
- Use withholding tax certificates as proof of taxes paid.
Employees should check payslips carefully, especially during the probationary period, because errors in tax classification may affect final pay and year-end tax filing.
XXXIII. Practical Compliance Checklist for Employers
Before onboarding a probationary employee, the employer should:
- Confirm employment status and compensation package;
- Secure TIN and tax information;
- Ask for prior BIR Form 2316 if hired mid-year;
- Determine whether the employee is a minimum wage earner;
- Identify taxable and non-taxable benefits;
- Configure payroll frequency correctly;
- Apply the proper withholding tax table;
- Track 13th month pay and other benefits;
- Track de minimis benefits by category and limit;
- Maintain reimbursement documentation;
- Remit withholding tax on time;
- Issue BIR Form 2316 at year-end or separation.
XXXIV. Practical Checklist for Probationary Employees
A probationary employee should:
- Confirm whether the salary is minimum wage or above minimum wage;
- Review payslips for withholding tax deductions;
- Ask whether allowances are taxable or reimbursable;
- Keep copies of employment documents;
- Keep copies of payslips;
- Submit prior BIR Form 2316 when joining mid-year;
- Request BIR Form 2316 upon separation;
- Check final pay computation;
- Determine whether substituted filing applies;
- File an annual income tax return if required.
XXXV. Key Legal Principles
The rules may be summarized as follows:
- A probationary employee is still an employee.
- Compensation paid to an employee is generally taxable unless exempt.
- Probationary status does not create an income tax exemption.
- The employer must withhold tax on taxable compensation.
- Minimum wage earners may be exempt on qualifying compensation.
- Allowances are taxable unless properly excluded or liquidated.
- De minimis benefits are exempt only within recognized categories and limits.
- 13th month pay and other benefits are exempt only up to the statutory ceiling.
- BIR Form 2316 must be issued even if employment ends during probation.
- Annualization is necessary at year-end or upon separation.
- Substituted filing depends on income sources and number of employers, not probationary status.
- Misclassification as a contractor can create serious tax and labor consequences.
XXXVI. Conclusion
In the Philippine context, withholding tax on compensation income applies to probationary employees in substantially the same way it applies to regular employees. The law focuses on the existence of an employer-employee relationship and the payment of taxable compensation, not on whether the employee has already become regular.
Employers must withhold, remit, report, annualize, and document compensation properly. Employees, in turn, should understand that tax deductions from salary may be lawful even during probation, provided they are correctly computed and remitted. Probationary status affects security of tenure and employment evaluation, but it does not by itself change the income tax character of salary, allowances, bonuses, commissions, and other compensation received from employment.