I. Introduction
Holiday pay is a statutory labor benefit in the Philippines. It is not a discretionary bonus, goodwill payment, or company policy benefit that an employer may withhold at will. It is a legally mandated compensation given to covered employees for regular holidays, whether or not work is performed, subject to the conditions provided by law.
Holiday pay nonpayment occurs when an employer fails or refuses to pay an employee the legally required holiday pay, pays less than the required amount, incorrectly treats a holiday as an ordinary workday, misclassifies employees to avoid payment, or imposes unlawful conditions before granting the benefit.
In the Philippine labor context, holiday pay is governed mainly by the Labor Code of the Philippines, its implementing rules, and issuances of the Department of Labor and Employment. The core principle is simple: covered employees are entitled to be paid for regular holidays, and if they work during such holidays, they are entitled to premium compensation.
II. Legal Basis of Holiday Pay
Holiday pay is primarily based on Article 94 of the Labor Code of the Philippines, which provides that every worker shall be paid regular daily wage during regular holidays, except in certain establishments or cases exempted by law.
The law recognizes that regular holidays are days of national, religious, or historical significance. Employees covered by the law are entitled to compensation on these days even if no work is performed, provided the legal requirements are met.
Holiday pay should be distinguished from:
- Premium pay for work on special non-working days
- Overtime pay
- Rest day pay
- Night shift differential
- Service incentive leave
- 13th month pay
Although these benefits may overlap in a single payroll period, each has a separate legal basis and method of computation.
III. Regular Holiday vs. Special Non-Working Day
A common source of holiday pay disputes is confusion between regular holidays and special non-working days.
A. Regular Holidays
For regular holidays, covered employees are generally entitled to receive 100% of their daily wage even if they do not work, subject to applicable conditions.
If the employee works on a regular holiday, the employee is generally entitled to 200% of the daily wage for the first eight hours.
Examples of regular holidays traditionally include:
- New Year’s Day
- Araw ng Kagitingan
- Maundy Thursday
- Good Friday
- Labor Day
- Independence Day
- National Heroes Day
- Bonifacio Day
- Christmas Day
- Rizal Day
- Eid’l Fitr
- Eid’l Adha
The exact list of holidays for a given year may be affected by presidential proclamations.
B. Special Non-Working Days
For special non-working days, the general rule is “no work, no pay,” unless there is a favorable company policy, collective bargaining agreement, employment contract, or practice granting payment even if no work is performed.
If the employee works on a special non-working day, the employee is generally entitled to an additional premium, commonly 30% of the basic wage for the first eight hours.
Examples traditionally include:
- Ninoy Aquino Day
- All Saints’ Day
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception of Mary
- Last day of the year
- Other days declared by presidential proclamation as special non-working days
Misclassifying a regular holiday as a special non-working day can result in underpayment.
IV. Who Is Entitled to Holiday Pay?
The general rule is that rank-and-file employees are entitled to holiday pay, whether paid on a daily, weekly, monthly, or other basis, unless specifically excluded by law or rules.
Covered employees typically include:
- Daily-paid employees
- Monthly-paid employees
- Probationary employees
- Regular employees
- Casual employees
- Seasonal employees, during the period they are employed
- Project employees, during their period of employment
- Part-time employees, proportionate to their work arrangement
- Employees paid by results, subject to applicable rules
The right to holiday pay does not depend solely on being a regular employee. Even non-regular employees may be entitled to holiday pay if they fall within the coverage of the law.
V. Employees Who May Be Excluded from Holiday Pay
Certain workers may be excluded from holiday pay coverage under the Labor Code and implementing rules. Common exclusions include:
Government employees, because they are generally governed by civil service laws and rules.
Managerial employees, if they meet the legal definition of managerial employees.
Officers or members of a managerial staff, if they satisfy the criteria under labor regulations.
Field personnel and other employees whose time and performance are unsupervised by the employer, provided they genuinely meet the legal standard.
Members of the family of the employer who are dependent on the employer for support.
Domestic workers or kasambahays, who are governed by the Domestic Workers Act and specific rules applicable to household employment.
Persons in the personal service of another, depending on the nature of the relationship.
Workers paid by results, in certain cases, where their output-based pay already legally accounts for the holiday benefit or where applicable rules provide otherwise.
Employers sometimes misuse these exclusions. A job title alone is not controlling. For example, calling someone a “manager” does not automatically remove holiday pay entitlement. The actual duties, authority, independence, and employment conditions matter.
VI. Managerial Employees and Holiday Pay
A managerial employee is generally one whose primary duty is management and who has authority to hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, discharge, assign, or discipline employees, or whose recommendations on these matters are given particular weight.
Employees who are merely called supervisors, team leaders, coordinators, or officers may still be entitled to holiday pay if they do not actually exercise managerial authority as legally defined.
For example, a “shift supervisor” who only monitors attendance and reports issues to management may still be a rank-and-file employee for purposes of labor standards. Conversely, an operations manager with real authority over personnel decisions may be excluded.
The substance of the work controls over the title.
VII. Field Personnel and Holiday Pay
Field personnel are employees who regularly perform duties away from the principal place of business and whose actual hours of work in the field cannot be determined with reasonable certainty.
Employers sometimes claim that sales agents, delivery riders, merchandisers, collectors, technicians, or field representatives are not entitled to holiday pay because they work outside the office. This is not always correct.
The key question is whether their working time and performance are genuinely unsupervised and cannot be reasonably determined. If the employer tracks schedules, routes, attendance, sales calls, GPS logs, reports, check-ins, delivery times, or work output in a way that allows reasonable determination of working time, the field personnel exclusion may not apply.
VIII. Holiday Pay for Monthly-Paid Employees
A common misconception is that monthly-paid employees are never entitled to holiday pay because their salary supposedly already includes payment for holidays.
The issue depends on how the monthly salary is structured.
Some monthly-paid employees are paid based on a salary factor that already includes regular holidays. Others may not be. Payroll structure, company policy, employment contract, wage orders, and actual practice matter.
If the monthly salary is intended to cover all days of the month, including regular holidays, the employee may already be receiving holiday pay. But if the employer deducts absences based on working days only, or computes salary using a factor that excludes holidays, the employee may still have a claim if holiday pay is not actually paid.
Employers should be able to show how monthly salary is computed. Employees should examine payslips, contracts, payroll policies, and deductions.
IX. The Basic Rule: Holiday Pay When No Work Is Performed
For a covered employee, the general rule is:
If the employee does not work on a regular holiday, the employee is entitled to 100% of the daily wage, provided the employee is present or on authorized leave with pay on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday.
In simple form:
Holiday pay = 100% of daily wage
Example:
If the employee’s daily wage is ₱610 and the employee does not work on a regular holiday but is entitled to holiday pay:
Holiday pay = ₱610
This is payment for the holiday even if no work was performed.
X. Condition on Workday Immediately Before the Holiday
The employee’s entitlement to holiday pay for an unworked regular holiday may depend on the employee’s status on the workday immediately preceding the holiday.
Generally:
If the employee worked on the day immediately preceding the regular holiday, the employee is entitled to holiday pay.
If the employee was on authorized leave with pay on the day immediately preceding the holiday, the employee is entitled to holiday pay.
If the employee was absent without pay on the day immediately preceding the holiday, the employee may not be entitled to holiday pay for an unworked regular holiday.
This rule is often involved in disputes where the employee was absent before a holiday. However, employers must apply the rule correctly. The relevant day is usually the employee’s scheduled workday immediately preceding the holiday, not necessarily the calendar day before the holiday.
For example, if an employee’s rest day is Sunday and the regular holiday falls on Monday, the relevant preceding workday may be Saturday, depending on the work schedule.
XI. Holiday Pay When Work Is Performed
If a covered employee works on a regular holiday, the employee is generally entitled to 200% of the daily wage for the first eight hours.
Formula:
Regular holiday worked = 200% of daily wage
Example:
Daily wage: ₱610 Regular holiday work for first eight hours:
₱610 × 200% = ₱1,220
This means the employee receives double pay for work performed during a regular holiday.
XII. Work Beyond Eight Hours on a Regular Holiday
If the employee works more than eight hours on a regular holiday, the employee is entitled to additional overtime pay.
The usual formula for overtime on a regular holiday is:
Hourly rate on regular holiday × 130% × number of overtime hours
Since work on a regular holiday is paid at 200%, the overtime hourly rate is generally based on the regular holiday rate.
Simplified example:
Daily wage: ₱610 Hourly rate: ₱610 ÷ 8 = ₱76.25 Regular holiday hourly rate: ₱76.25 × 200% = ₱152.50 Overtime holiday hourly rate: ₱152.50 × 130% = ₱198.25
If the employee worked 2 overtime hours:
₱198.25 × 2 = ₱396.50
Total pay:
₱1,220 + ₱396.50 = ₱1,616.50
XIII. Regular Holiday Falling on a Rest Day
If a regular holiday falls on the employee’s scheduled rest day and the employee works, higher rates may apply.
For work on a regular holiday that also falls on a rest day, the employee is generally entitled to:
260% of the daily wage for the first eight hours
Example:
Daily wage: ₱610 ₱610 × 260% = ₱1,586
If overtime is performed, an additional overtime premium applies based on the applicable holiday/rest day rate.
XIV. Two Regular Holidays on the Same Day
Sometimes two regular holidays fall on the same date. This is known as a double regular holiday.
If the employee does not work but is entitled to holiday pay, the pay may be 200% of the daily wage.
If the employee works on a double regular holiday, the rate may be 300% of the daily wage for the first eight hours.
Example:
Daily wage: ₱610 Worked on double regular holiday:
₱610 × 300% = ₱1,830
Rules on double holidays are especially relevant during years when movable religious holidays coincide with fixed regular holidays.
XV. Special Non-Working Day Pay
Although technically different from holiday pay, special non-working day pay is often included in holiday pay disputes.
For a special non-working day:
If no work is performed
General rule:
No work, no pay
Exception:
The employee is paid if there is a favorable company policy, CBA, contract, or established practice.
If work is performed
The employee is generally entitled to:
130% of daily wage for the first eight hours
Example:
Daily wage: ₱610 ₱610 × 130% = ₱793
If special day falls on a rest day and work is performed
The employee is generally entitled to:
150% of daily wage for the first eight hours
Example:
₱610 × 150% = ₱915
XVI. Overtime on Special Non-Working Days
If the employee works more than eight hours on a special non-working day, overtime pay applies.
For work on a special non-working day, the overtime rate is generally:
Special day hourly rate × 130% × overtime hours
For work on a special day that is also a rest day, overtime is computed based on the applicable special day/rest day rate.
XVII. Night Shift Differential During Holidays
If the employee works between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m., the employee may also be entitled to night shift differential, generally equivalent to at least 10% of the regular wage for each hour of work performed during the night shift period, unless excluded by law.
If work is performed on a regular holiday during night shift hours, holiday pay and night shift differential may both apply.
The computation should layer the legally required premiums properly. Employers may not avoid night shift differential merely because the employee is already receiving holiday pay.
XVIII. Holiday Pay and Overtime Pay Are Separate Benefits
Holiday pay compensates the employee for the legal holiday. Overtime pay compensates the employee for work beyond eight hours.
An employer cannot lawfully say that because an employee was paid holiday pay, overtime pay is no longer due. If the employee worked beyond eight hours, overtime must be computed on top of the applicable holiday rate.
XIX. Holiday Pay and Rest Day Pay Are Separate Benefits
If a holiday coincides with an employee’s rest day and the employee works, the law recognizes both the holiday and rest day character of the workday.
The employer must apply the correct rate. Paying only the regular holiday rate when the day also falls on a rest day may result in underpayment.
XX. Holiday Pay and 13th Month Pay
Holiday pay may affect 13th month pay depending on how it is treated in payroll and whether it forms part of the employee’s basic salary.
As a general rule, 13th month pay is based on basic salary earned during the calendar year. Certain premium payments may be excluded unless treated as part of basic salary by company practice or agreement.
Disputes may arise where employers exclude amounts that should have been treated as part of basic pay, or where holiday pay nonpayment indirectly lowers the 13th month computation.
XXI. Holiday Pay for Part-Time Employees
Part-time employees may still be entitled to holiday pay, but the amount may be proportionate to their work arrangement.
For example, if a part-time employee regularly works four hours per day and is covered by the law, holiday pay should be computed based on the employee’s applicable daily or hourly wage equivalent.
Employers cannot deny holiday pay solely because the employee is part-time.
XXII. Holiday Pay for Probationary Employees
Probationary employees are employees. They are generally entitled to statutory labor standards benefits, including holiday pay, unless lawfully excluded.
An employer cannot deny holiday pay merely because the employee has not yet become regular.
XXIII. Holiday Pay for Project Employees
Project employees may be entitled to holiday pay during the period of their employment if they are covered employees and not lawfully excluded.
If a regular holiday falls within the duration of the project employment, and the employee satisfies the legal conditions, holiday pay may be due.
The project-based nature of employment does not automatically remove statutory benefits.
XXIV. Holiday Pay for Seasonal Employees
Seasonal employees may be entitled to holiday pay during the season or period they are actually employed.
If the holiday falls outside the employment period, holiday pay may not be due. If it falls during the active employment period, the rules on holiday pay may apply.
XXV. Holiday Pay for Piece-Rate Workers
Workers paid by results, such as piece-rate workers, pakyaw workers, or task-based workers, may raise special computation issues.
The general principle is that employees paid by results may still be entitled to statutory benefits unless properly excluded or unless the compensation structure lawfully accounts for those benefits.
The applicable rate may be determined by average earnings, agreed piece rates, or rules approved by labor authorities. Employers should not use piece-rate compensation as a device to avoid holiday pay.
XXVI. Holiday Pay for Commission-Based Employees
Commission-based employees may or may not be entitled to holiday pay depending on the nature of the employment relationship and compensation arrangement.
If the person is an employee and not an independent contractor, and is not lawfully excluded as field personnel or otherwise, holiday pay may be due.
The employer cannot simply label compensation as “commission” to defeat labor standards protection.
XXVII. Holiday Pay for Contractors and Freelancers
True independent contractors and freelancers are not employees and are generally not covered by holiday pay rules under the Labor Code.
However, the label used in a contract is not controlling. If the relationship shows the elements of employment, especially the employer’s control over the means and methods of work, the worker may be considered an employee despite being called a contractor, consultant, freelancer, partner, or service provider.
Misclassification is a common issue in holiday pay nonpayment cases.
XXVIII. Holiday Pay in BPO, Retail, Food Service, Security, and Healthcare
Holiday pay issues are common in industries operating during holidays.
BPO employees
BPO employees who work Philippine regular holidays may be entitled to Philippine holiday pay unless a specific lawful arrangement applies. Work involving foreign clients or foreign holidays does not automatically remove Philippine holiday pay rights.
Retail and mall employees
Retail employees often work during holidays and may be entitled to holiday premium rates. Employers must distinguish regular holidays from special non-working days.
Restaurant and food service employees
Restaurants frequently operate during holidays. Covered employees who work on regular holidays must receive the correct holiday rates.
Security guards
Security guards are commonly assigned during holidays. Their entitlement may depend on their employment arrangement, but covered security personnel are generally entitled to labor standards benefits. Principal-service contractor arrangements do not eliminate statutory pay obligations.
Healthcare workers
Hospitals and clinics operate continuously. Covered healthcare employees working on holidays are entitled to applicable holiday premiums unless lawfully excluded.
XXIX. “No Work, No Pay” and Its Limits
The “no work, no pay” principle does not apply in the same way to regular holidays for covered employees.
For regular holidays, the law itself grants pay even if no work is performed, subject to conditions.
For special non-working days, “no work, no pay” is generally applicable unless a favorable policy, agreement, or practice provides otherwise.
An employer who applies “no work, no pay” to all holidays without distinction may violate the law.
XXX. Company Policy, CBA, and More Favorable Benefits
Employers may grant benefits more favorable than the statutory minimum. These may arise from:
- Employment contracts
- Employee handbooks
- Company policies
- Collective bargaining agreements
- Long-standing company practice
- Payroll practice
- Offer letters
- Memoranda
- Settlement agreements
Once a benefit becomes demandable under contract, CBA, or established practice, the employer may not unilaterally withdraw it if doing so would violate the non-diminution of benefits principle.
For example, if a company has consistently paid special non-working days even when employees do not work, that practice may become enforceable depending on the facts.
XXXI. Common Forms of Holiday Pay Nonpayment
Holiday pay nonpayment may appear in many forms:
Failure to pay holiday pay for an unworked regular holiday.
Payment of only 100% when the employee worked on a regular holiday, instead of the proper 200%.
Payment of only ordinary daily wage for holiday work.
Treating a regular holiday as a special non-working day.
Failure to apply rest day premium when the holiday falls on a rest day.
Failure to compute overtime based on the holiday rate.
Failure to pay night shift differential on top of holiday pay.
Requiring employees to work on a holiday but recording the day as an ordinary workday.
Deducting holiday pay from monthly-paid employees without proper basis.
Misclassifying employees as managers, contractors, consultants, or field personnel.
Paying holiday premiums only to regular employees but not to probationary, project, seasonal, casual, or part-time employees who are covered.
Refusing holiday pay because the employee is newly hired.
Excluding holiday pay from payroll records.
Giving compensatory time off instead of legally required holiday pay without lawful basis.
Averaging wages in a way that hides underpayment.
XXXII. Employer Defenses in Holiday Pay Claims
Employers may raise several defenses, including:
The employee is excluded from holiday pay coverage.
The employee was absent without pay on the workday immediately preceding the holiday.
The monthly salary already includes holiday pay.
The claimant was an independent contractor, not an employee.
The worker was managerial.
The worker was field personnel whose time could not be determined.
The claim has prescribed.
Payment was already made.
The holiday was a special non-working day, not a regular holiday.
The employee did not actually work on the holiday being claimed.
These defenses are fact-specific. The employer generally bears the burden of proving payment when the employee alleges nonpayment and the employer has custody of payroll records.
XXXIII. Evidence in Holiday Pay Nonpayment Cases
Employees claiming holiday pay nonpayment should gather and preserve evidence such as:
- Payslips
- Payroll records
- Time records
- Daily time records
- Bundy cards
- Biometric logs
- Schedules
- Duty rosters
- Attendance sheets
- Emails or chat instructions requiring holiday work
- Company memoranda
- Employment contracts
- Employee handbook
- Screenshots of scheduling systems
- Bank payroll credits
- Certificates of employment
- ID cards
- Work assignment records
- Security logs
- Delivery logs
- GPS or app-based work records
- Witness statements
- Prior payroll comparisons
Employers should maintain accurate payroll and timekeeping records. Failure to keep records can work against the employer in a labor dispute.
XXXIV. Burden of Proof
In labor standards cases, once an employee plausibly alleges nonpayment or underpayment, the employer is often expected to produce payroll records, payslips, and proof of payment.
Employers are legally required to keep employment records. A bare denial that holiday pay is due may be insufficient if the employer cannot produce credible payroll evidence.
Employees, however, should still present enough facts to identify the holidays involved, the period covered, the applicable wage, and whether work was performed.
XXXV. Prescriptive Period
Money claims arising from employer-employee relations generally prescribe after three years from the time the cause of action accrued.
Thus, claims for unpaid holiday pay are generally recoverable for a period of up to three years prior to the filing of the complaint.
For example, if a complaint is filed on May 9, 2026, the claim may generally cover unpaid holiday pay from May 9, 2023 onward, subject to the facts and applicable rules.
Claims older than three years may be barred by prescription.
XXXVI. Where to File a Complaint
Holiday pay nonpayment may be brought before the appropriate labor authorities.
The available route may depend on the amount claimed, whether reinstatement is involved, and the nature of the dispute.
Common avenues include:
DOLE Regional Office, especially for labor standards complaints and inspections.
Single Entry Approach, known as SEnA, which is a mandatory conciliation-mediation mechanism for many labor disputes.
National Labor Relations Commission, particularly where the claim involves larger monetary claims, illegal dismissal, or other issues within labor arbiter jurisdiction.
Voluntary arbitration, if the dispute arises under a collective bargaining agreement and falls within grievance machinery.
The proper forum depends on the facts.
XXXVII. DOLE Inspection and Compliance
The Department of Labor and Employment has authority to inspect establishments and require compliance with labor standards, including holiday pay.
A labor inspector may examine payroll records, employment records, attendance records, and other documents. If violations are found, DOLE may issue compliance orders.
Employers may be required to pay deficiencies not only to the complainant but to all affected employees discovered during inspection, depending on the scope of inspection and findings.
XXXVIII. SEnA: Single Entry Approach
SEnA is a conciliation-mediation mechanism designed to provide a speedy, inexpensive, and non-litigious settlement of labor issues.
In holiday pay nonpayment disputes, SEnA may result in:
- Payment of unpaid holiday pay
- Settlement of wage differentials
- Clarification of payroll computation
- Agreement on future compliance
- Execution of settlement documents
A settlement must be voluntary and should not result in waiver of rights for unconscionably low consideration. Quitclaims are generally viewed with caution if the amount paid is unreasonable compared with the claim.
XXXIX. NLRC Claims
If the holiday pay claim is part of a broader labor case, such as illegal dismissal, constructive dismissal, nonpayment of wages, overtime, premium pay, service incentive leave, 13th month pay, or damages, the case may be filed with the NLRC through the appropriate Labor Arbiter.
The Labor Arbiter may award unpaid holiday pay, wage differentials, attorney’s fees, and other monetary awards if justified.
XL. Attorney’s Fees
In labor cases, attorney’s fees may be awarded when the employee is compelled to litigate or incur expenses to recover wages or benefits legally due.
Attorney’s fees are often awarded as a percentage of the monetary award, subject to applicable rules and the discretion of the tribunal.
XLI. Quitclaims and Waivers
Employers sometimes require employees to sign quitclaims, waivers, releases, or settlement documents stating that all wages and benefits have been paid.
A quitclaim is not automatically invalid. However, it may be disregarded if:
- The consideration is grossly inadequate
- The employee was pressured or misled
- The waiver is contrary to law or public policy
- The document is ambiguous
- The employee did not knowingly and voluntarily waive the claim
- The amount paid does not reasonably cover the legal entitlement
Employees cannot be forced to waive statutory benefits without adequate consideration.
XLII. Payroll Practices That May Indicate Underpayment
Red flags include:
Payslips showing only “basic pay” for a holiday worked.
No separate line for holiday premium despite holiday work.
The same pay regardless of ordinary day, rest day, special day, or regular holiday work.
Cash payments without payslips.
Deductions for regular holidays not worked.
Holiday work recorded as “regular duty.”
Monthly salary deductions for holidays.
“Offsetting” holiday pay with future rest days.
Payroll formulas not disclosed to employees.
Company policy stating that only regular employees receive holiday pay.
XLIII. Can an Employer Substitute a Day Off for Holiday Pay?
As a general rule, statutory holiday pay cannot simply be replaced by a day off if the law requires payment.
A company may grant compensatory time off as an additional benefit or as part of an agreed arrangement, but it cannot use it to defeat mandatory holiday pay unless a lawful rule or valid arrangement permits the specific treatment.
Employees who worked on regular holidays are generally entitled to the monetary premium required by law.
XLIV. Can an Employer Require Work on a Holiday?
An employer may require employees to work on holidays, especially in industries where operations must continue, subject to labor laws, contracts, safety rules, and management prerogative.
However, requiring work on a holiday triggers the obligation to pay the correct holiday rate. Management prerogative does not include the right to ignore statutory pay standards.
XLV. Can an Employee Refuse Holiday Work?
Whether an employee may refuse holiday work depends on the employment contract, company policy, nature of business, operational necessity, scheduling rules, and whether the order is lawful and reasonable.
However, even when holiday work is validly required, the employer must pay the proper holiday compensation.
XLVI. Holiday Pay During Leave
If an employee is on leave with pay on the workday immediately preceding a regular holiday, the employee may still be entitled to holiday pay.
If the employee is on leave without pay, entitlement may depend on the applicable rule, company policy, or whether the employee worked or was on paid leave on the relevant preceding workday.
Maternity leave, paternity leave, solo parent leave, service incentive leave, vacation leave, sick leave, and other paid leaves may interact with holiday pay depending on timing and rules.
XLVII. Holiday Pay During Suspension
If an employee is under preventive suspension, disciplinary suspension, floating status, temporary layoff, or authorized work suspension, entitlement to holiday pay may depend on whether the employee remains employed, whether the suspension is paid or unpaid, and the applicable labor rules.
If the employee is not paid for the period and did not work the preceding workday, the employer may dispute holiday pay. But if the suspension is later found illegal, monetary consequences may include wage and benefit restoration.
XLVIII. Holiday Pay During Floating Status or Temporary Off-Detail
Employees placed on floating status may raise claims if the arrangement is used to avoid wages and benefits. Holiday pay entitlement during floating status depends on the employment relationship, payment status, and legality of the temporary off-detail arrangement.
In security, manpower, and contracting industries, holiday pay issues may arise when employees are between assignments but remain employed.
XLIX. Holiday Pay and Work Suspension Due to Calamity
If work is suspended due to typhoons, floods, earthquakes, volcanic activity, power interruptions, or government orders, entitlement to pay depends on whether the day is a regular holiday, special day, ordinary workday, company policy, and applicable wage advisories.
If the date is a regular holiday and the employee is covered, holiday pay rules may still apply. If it is an ordinary day with work suspension, “no work, no pay” may apply unless company policy or law provides otherwise.
L. Holiday Pay and Flexible Work Arrangements
Flexible work arrangements do not eliminate holiday pay rights.
Employees under compressed workweek, telecommuting, shifting schedules, skeletal workforce, reduced workdays, or work-from-home arrangements may still be entitled to holiday pay if covered.
The computation may require identifying:
- The employee’s daily wage equivalent
- The scheduled workday immediately before the holiday
- Whether work was performed on the holiday
- Whether the day was a regular holiday, special day, or rest day
- Whether overtime or night work occurred
LI. Holiday Pay and Work From Home
Remote work does not remove holiday pay rights. If an employee works from home on a regular holiday, the employee is working on a regular holiday and should be paid accordingly, if covered.
The employer should record remote work hours accurately. Chat logs, login records, project management tools, VPN logs, task submissions, and email timestamps may become evidence.
LII. Holiday Pay for Employees on Shifting Schedules
In 24/7 operations, holiday pay computation may become complicated when shifts cross midnight.
For example, an employee may start work before a holiday and end work during the holiday, or start during the holiday and end the next day. Employers should determine which hours fall within the holiday period and apply the appropriate premium.
The holiday generally runs from 12:00 a.m. to 11:59 p.m. of the declared date, unless a specific rule or advisory provides otherwise.
LIII. Holiday Pay and Compressed Workweek
Under a compressed workweek, employees work fewer days but longer hours per day. Holiday pay computation should follow the approved or valid compressed workweek arrangement.
If a holiday falls on a compressed workday, the daily wage equivalent and hours scheduled must be examined. The arrangement must not reduce statutory benefits below legal minimums.
LIV. Holiday Pay in Contracting and Subcontracting
In legitimate contracting arrangements, the contractor or subcontractor is generally the employer responsible for paying wages and benefits, including holiday pay.
However, the principal may become solidarily liable in certain cases for unpaid wages and labor standards benefits of the contractor’s employees.
If the arrangement is labor-only contracting or otherwise unlawful, the principal may be treated as the employer.
Employees of agencies, manpower providers, security agencies, janitorial contractors, and service contractors should not be deprived of holiday pay simply because they are deployed to a client.
LV. Holiday Pay and Labor-Only Contracting
Labor-only contracting may exist when the contractor lacks substantial capital or investment and the workers supplied perform activities directly related to the principal’s business, with the principal exercising control over the work.
If labor-only contracting is found, the principal may be deemed the employer and may be liable for statutory benefits, including holiday pay.
This is significant in holiday pay claims because principals sometimes blame contractors, while contractors claim the principal did not fund holiday premiums. Workers are not supposed to lose statutory benefits because of arrangements between business entities.
LVI. Holiday Pay and Minimum Wage
Holiday pay is computed based on the applicable wage. Employers must comply with minimum wage orders.
If the employee is underpaid on the basic wage, holiday pay computed from that underpaid wage will also be deficient.
For example, if the legal daily minimum wage is ₱610 but the employer pays only ₱500, the holiday pay deficiency is not limited to the holiday premium. It may also include basic wage differentials.
LVII. Holiday Pay and Wage Orders
Regional wage boards issue wage orders setting minimum wages by region, sector, and classification. Holiday pay must be computed using the applicable wage rate.
Employers operating in different regions must apply the correct regional wage rate. A Manila-based payroll office cannot automatically apply one rate to employees working in another region if a different wage order applies.
LVIII. Holiday Pay and Allowances
Whether allowances are included in the holiday pay base depends on the nature of the allowance.
Generally, holiday pay is based on the employee’s regular daily wage. Certain allowances may be excluded if they are not part of wage, such as genuine reimbursements or facilities properly treated under law. But allowances that are integrated into wage or regularly given as part of compensation may raise issues.
Employers should not disguise wages as allowances to reduce holiday pay.
LIX. Holiday Pay and Service Charges
For covered establishments distributing service charges, service charge shares are generally separate from statutory holiday pay.
An employer cannot use service charge distributions as a substitute for holiday pay. Service charges belong to employees under the applicable rules and cannot be used to offset statutory wage obligations unless lawfully allowed.
LX. Holiday Pay and Tips
Tips voluntarily given by customers generally do not replace the employer’s obligation to pay holiday pay.
An employer cannot say that employees already earned enough tips during a holiday and therefore holiday pay is unnecessary.
LXI. Deductions from Holiday Pay
Employers may not make unlawful deductions from holiday pay.
Deductions may be allowed only when authorized by law, regulations, or valid written authorization for legitimate purposes. Examples include lawful withholding taxes, SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG contributions, or authorized deductions.
Unexplained deductions, cash bond deductions, penalties, shortages, breakages, or uniform deductions may be unlawful depending on the facts.
LXII. Holiday Pay and Payroll Records
Employers should maintain payroll records showing:
- Employee name
- Rate of pay
- Days worked
- Hours worked
- Holidays paid
- Premium rates applied
- Overtime hours
- Night shift hours
- Deductions
- Net pay
- Employee acknowledgment or proof of payment
A compliant payroll system should distinguish ordinary days, rest days, regular holidays, special non-working days, overtime, night shift differential, and combinations of these.
LXIII. Sample Computations
Assume daily wage of ₱610 and hourly rate of ₱76.25.
1. Unworked regular holiday
₱610 × 100% = ₱610
2. Worked regular holiday, first eight hours
₱610 × 200% = ₱1,220
3. Worked regular holiday with 2 overtime hours
First eight hours: ₱610 × 200% = ₱1,220 Holiday hourly rate: ₱76.25 × 200% = ₱152.50 Overtime rate: ₱152.50 × 130% = ₱198.25 Two overtime hours: ₱198.25 × 2 = ₱396.50 Total: ₱1,616.50
4. Worked regular holiday falling on rest day
₱610 × 260% = ₱1,586
5. Worked special non-working day
₱610 × 130% = ₱793
6. Worked special non-working day falling on rest day
₱610 × 150% = ₱915
7. Worked double regular holiday
₱610 × 300% = ₱1,830
LXIV. Common Employer Mistakes
Employers commonly make these mistakes:
Assuming monthly-paid employees never receive holiday pay.
Assuming probationary employees are not entitled to holiday pay.
Treating all holidays as “no work, no pay.”
Confusing regular holidays with special non-working days.
Failing to pay holiday premiums for remote workers.
Ignoring overtime premiums on holidays.
Not applying rest day rates when applicable.
Treating agency workers as outside the protection of labor standards.
Misclassifying employees as independent contractors.
Failing to keep payroll records.
Assuming employees must complain immediately or lose the claim.
Using job titles to avoid coverage.
Giving time off instead of paying required premiums.
Excluding holiday pay from final pay.
Making employees sign quitclaims without proper payment.
LXV. Common Employee Mistakes
Employees also commonly make mistakes, such as:
Assuming every holiday is paid even if it is only a special non-working day.
Failing to distinguish regular holidays from special days.
Not keeping payslips or schedules.
Waiting beyond the prescriptive period.
Signing quitclaims without checking computations.
Assuming verbal promises are enough without evidence.
Not identifying the exact dates claimed.
Confusing gross pay with net pay.
Ignoring whether the monthly salary already includes holiday pay.
Failing to account for absences before holidays.
A strong claim should identify the dates, applicable holiday classification, wage rate, hours worked, amount paid, and amount still due.
LXVI. Final Pay and Holiday Pay
Upon separation from employment, unpaid holiday pay should be included in final pay if legally due.
Final pay may include:
- Unpaid salary
- Pro-rated 13th month pay
- Unused leave conversions, if applicable
- Salary differentials
- Holiday pay
- Overtime pay
- Premium pay
- Night shift differential
- Other benefits due under law, contract, CBA, or company policy
An employer cannot avoid holiday pay liability simply because the employee has resigned, been terminated, or completed a project.
LXVII. Retaliation for Claiming Holiday Pay
Employees have the right to assert labor standards claims. Retaliation, harassment, demotion, forced resignation, reduction of hours, blacklisting, or termination because an employee complained about unpaid holiday pay may give rise to additional legal claims.
If the employer dismisses an employee for asserting labor rights, the case may involve illegal dismissal, unfair labor practice in union contexts, damages, or other remedies depending on the facts.
LXVIII. Remedies for Holiday Pay Nonpayment
Possible remedies include:
Payment of unpaid holiday pay.
Payment of wage differentials.
Payment of overtime, premium pay, and night shift differential connected to holiday work.
Attorney’s fees, where justified.
Legal interest, where awarded.
Compliance orders from DOLE.
Monetary awards from the NLRC.
Reinstatement or damages, if the nonpayment is connected to illegal dismissal or retaliation.
The remedy depends on the forum and the specific claims.
LXIX. Employer Compliance Checklist
Employers should:
Identify all regular holidays and special non-working days each year.
Update payroll systems based on presidential proclamations and wage advisories.
Classify employees correctly.
Review monthly salary structures.
Maintain accurate attendance and payroll records.
Pay correct holiday rates.
Apply overtime, rest day, and night shift rules properly.
Include agency or contractor workers in compliance audits where relevant.
Train payroll and HR personnel.
Issue clear payslips.
Avoid unlawful waivers.
Conduct periodic labor standards audits.
LXX. Employee Claim Checklist
Employees should prepare:
Employment start and end dates.
Position and actual duties.
Wage rate.
Work schedule.
List of regular holidays involved.
List of special days involved, if any.
Whether work was performed.
Number of hours worked.
Whether the day was also a rest day.
Payslips and proof of payment.
Attendance records or screenshots.
Computation of amount paid versus amount legally due.
Company policy, contract, or CBA provisions.
Names of witnesses, if needed.
Proof of complaints or employer responses.
LXXI. Simplified Legal Analysis Framework
A holiday pay nonpayment issue can be analyzed through these questions:
Was there an employer-employee relationship?
Is the worker covered or excluded?
Was the date a regular holiday or special non-working day?
Did the employee work or not work?
If the employee did not work, was the employee present or on paid leave on the preceding workday?
If the employee worked, how many hours were worked?
Did the holiday fall on a rest day?
Was there overtime?
Was there night shift work?
What was the applicable daily wage?
What amount was actually paid?
What amount should have been paid?
Is the claim within the three-year prescriptive period?
What forum has jurisdiction?
LXXII. Conclusion
Holiday pay nonpayment in the Philippines is a labor standards issue involving statutory rights, payroll computation, employee classification, and evidentiary proof. The most important distinction is between regular holidays, where covered employees may be paid even if no work is performed, and special non-working days, where the general rule is no work, no pay unless a more favorable rule applies.
When work is performed on a holiday, the employer must apply the correct premium rates, including overtime, rest day, and night shift differentials where applicable. Employers must not use job titles, contractual labels, payroll shortcuts, or compensatory time off to avoid statutory obligations.
For employees, the strength of a claim depends on clear dates, correct classification of holidays, proof of work or entitlement, wage rate, payroll records, and timely filing. For employers, compliance requires accurate classification, transparent payroll systems, and faithful application of Philippine labor standards.