If your employer gave you a computation sheet and the amount looks too low, the first thing to check is why your employment ended. In the Philippines, separation pay is not computed the same way for all terminations. Redundancy, retrenchment, closure, disease, resignation, retirement, end of contract, and illegal dismissal can lead to very different results. This guide explains how to check your separation pay step by step, what documents to ask for, what common mistakes to watch for, and where to go if the company refuses to correct the computation.
What Separation Pay Means in the Philippines
Separation pay is money paid to an employee whose employment ends under certain legally recognized situations. It is different from “final pay,” “last pay,” or “back pay.”
In everyday HR practice, people often use these terms interchangeably, but legally they are not the same:
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Separation pay | A specific benefit due in certain terminations, usually authorized causes under the Labor Code, company policy, CBA, or illegal dismissal cases where reinstatement is no longer practical. |
| Final pay / last pay / back pay | The total amount still owed to the employee upon separation, which may include unpaid salary, pro-rated 13th month pay, unused leave conversion, cash bond return, tax refund, and separation pay if applicable. |
| 13th month pay | A separate statutory benefit under Presidential Decree No. 851, usually computed as total basic salary earned during the year divided by 12. |
| Retirement pay | A separate benefit for employees who retire under Article 302 of the Labor Code, company plan, CBA, or retirement agreement. |
So when checking if your separation pay was computed correctly, do not only look at the total final pay. Ask: What portion is separation pay? What formula did the employer use? What ground for termination did they apply?
Legal Basis: When Separation Pay Is Required
The main legal basis is Articles 298 and 299 of the Labor Code of the Philippines, as implemented by DOLE rules. DOLE Department Order No. 147-15 states that authorized-cause termination requires written notice to both the employee and the proper DOLE Regional Office at least 30 days before the effectivity of termination, and it also provides the separation pay rates for labor-saving devices, redundancy, retrenchment, closure not due to serious losses, and disease. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Separation Pay Rates Under Articles 298 and 299
| Ground for termination | Legal separation pay |
|---|---|
| Installation of labor-saving devices | At least 1 month pay, or 1 month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher |
| Redundancy | At least 1 month pay, or 1 month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher |
| Retrenchment to prevent losses | At least 1 month pay, or ½ month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher |
| Closure or cessation of business not due to serious business losses | At least 1 month pay, or ½ month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher |
| Closure due to serious business losses or financial reverses | No statutory separation pay, if the serious losses are proven |
| Disease under Article 299 | At least 1 month salary, or ½ month salary for every year of service, whichever is higher |
For all these computations, a fraction of at least 6 months of service is counted as 1 whole year. DOLE Department Order No. 147-15 expressly applies this rounding rule to the statutory separation pay formulas. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Step-by-Step Guide to Checking Your Separation Pay Computation
1. Identify the official reason for your termination
Start with the termination notice, not the payslip.
Look for the stated ground:
- Redundancy
- Retrenchment
- Closure
- Disease
- Installation of labor-saving device
- Retirement
- Resignation
- End of project or fixed-term contract
- Just cause dismissal
- Mutual separation agreement
- Illegal dismissal settlement or NLRC award
This matters because the formula depends on the ground.
For example:
- If the notice says redundancy, the usual statutory formula is 1 month pay per year of service, or 1 month pay minimum, whichever is higher.
- If the notice says retrenchment, the statutory formula is usually ½ month pay per year of service, or 1 month pay minimum, whichever is higher.
- If the notice says closure due to serious business losses, the employer may claim that no separation pay is required, but the losses must be real, serious, and supported by evidence.
A common underpayment happens when a company labels a termination as “cost-cutting” or “restructuring” but uses the lower retrenchment formula even though the documents actually show redundancy.
2. Check if the employer used the correct formula
Use this quick rule:
| If the reason is... | First computation | Compare with | Pay the higher amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Redundancy / labor-saving device | 1 month pay × years of service | 1 month pay | Higher amount |
| Retrenchment / closure not due to serious losses / disease | ½ month pay × years of service | 1 month pay | Higher amount |
3. Count your years of service correctly
Count from your date of hiring up to the effectivity date of termination.
Include:
- Probationary period before regularization
- Time as a regular employee
- Continuous service even if your job title changed
- Periods covered by company-recognized service continuity
- Service under a predecessor company if there was a valid transfer, merger, or assumption of obligations
Then apply the 6-month rounding rule:
| Actual service | Years counted for separation pay |
|---|---|
| 1 year and 5 months | 1 year |
| 1 year and 6 months | 2 years |
| 4 years and 5 months | 4 years |
| 4 years and 6 months | 5 years |
| 9 years and 11 months | 10 years |
If HR counted only your years after regularization, check your contract and payslips. Many employees lose money because their probationary months were incorrectly excluded.
4. Use the correct salary base
For monthly-paid employees, start with the latest monthly salary rate at the time of separation.
For daily-paid employees, convert the latest daily wage into a monthly equivalent using the applicable company payroll divisor or wage structure. In practice, HR may use a divisor based on whether the employee works 5 days, 6 days, or follows another regular schedule. Ask the company to show the divisor used.
Check whether the employer excluded amounts that are actually part of your regular pay. Depending on the facts, these may include:
- Cost-of-living allowance integrated into wage
- Regular fixed allowance treated as part of salary
- Guaranteed monthly allowance
- Commissions that are part of regular wage, depending on the compensation structure
- Salary increases already effective before separation
Be careful with allowances. Not every allowance is automatically included. Reimbursable items, representation expenses, transportation reimbursements, and one-off discretionary bonuses are usually treated differently from regular wage components.
5. Compute the amount yourself
Example 1: Redundancy
Employee details:
- Monthly salary: ₱30,000
- Length of service: 4 years and 7 months
- Ground: Redundancy
Because 4 years and 7 months is counted as 5 years:
₱30,000 × 5 years = ₱150,000
Compare with the minimum of 1 month pay:
₱30,000
The higher amount is ₱150,000.
Example 2: Retrenchment
Employee details:
- Monthly salary: ₱30,000
- Length of service: 4 years and 7 months
- Ground: Retrenchment
Counted service: 5 years
₱30,000 × ½ × 5 years = ₱75,000
Compare with the minimum of 1 month pay:
₱30,000
The higher amount is ₱75,000.
Example 3: Closure not due to serious losses
Employee details:
- Monthly salary: ₱25,000
- Length of service: 1 year and 4 months
- Ground: Closure not due to serious losses
Counted service: 1 year
₱25,000 × ½ × 1 year = ₱12,500
Compare with 1 month pay:
₱25,000
The higher amount is ₱25,000.
Example 4: Disease
Employee details:
- Monthly salary: ₱40,000
- Length of service: 6 years and 6 months
- Ground: Disease under Article 299
Counted service: 7 years
₱40,000 × ½ × 7 years = ₱140,000
Compare with 1 month salary:
₱40,000
The higher amount is ₱140,000.
For disease termination, the employer must satisfy the legal requirements, including certification by a competent public health authority that the disease is incurable within 6 months even with proper medical treatment, and that continued employment is prohibited by law or prejudicial to the employee’s health or co-employees’ health. DOLE Department Order No. 147-15 lists these requirements. (Supreme Court E-Library)
What Should Be Included in Your Final Pay
Even if the separation pay itself is correct, your final pay may still be incomplete.
Check whether your final pay includes:
| Item | What to check |
|---|---|
| Unpaid salary | Salary earned up to the last working day or termination date |
| Separation pay | Correct formula based on legal ground |
| Pro-rated 13th month pay | Basic salary earned during the calendar year divided by 12 |
| Unused service incentive leave | Usually 5 days per year for covered employees under the Labor Code, unless already used or more favorable leave benefits apply |
| Unused vacation/sick leave | Only if convertible under company policy, employment contract, or CBA |
| Cash bond or deposit | Should be returned unless there is a valid, documented accountability |
| Tax refund or excess withholding | Check BIR Form 2316 and payroll records |
| Other contractual benefits | Signing bonus clawback, completion bonus, CBA benefits, gratuity, or company separation package if applicable |
DOLE Labor Advisory No. 06-20 treats final pay as the total wages and monetary benefits due to the employee regardless of the cause of separation, and DOLE has reminded employers that final pay and certificates of employment must be released on time. (Department of Labor and Employment)
Is Separation Pay Taxable in the Philippines?
Statutory separation pay due to causes beyond the employee’s control is generally excluded from gross income and exempt from withholding tax under Section 32(B)(6)(b) of the National Internal Revenue Code, as implemented by BIR rules. BIR Revenue Memorandum Order No. 26-11 states that qualifying separation benefits are not included in gross income, are exempt from income tax, and should not be subjected to withholding tax. (Supreme Court E-Library)
This usually covers separation due to:
- Redundancy
- Retrenchment
- Closure
- Disease
- Death
- Other causes beyond the employee’s control
But tax treatment can become complicated when the payment is not statutory separation pay, such as:
- Voluntary resignation pay
- Purely negotiated ex-gratia payment
- Mutual separation agreement not based on an authorized cause
- Additional taxable benefits packaged together with separation pay
If tax was deducted, ask for:
- Final pay computation
- BIR Form 2316
- Breakdown of taxable and non-taxable items
- Basis for withholding
- Any BIR Certificate of Tax Exemption or supporting application, if applicable
A common mistake is for employers to withhold tax from the entire final pay without separating tax-exempt statutory separation pay from taxable salary, leave conversion, bonuses, or other compensation.
Common Reasons Separation Pay Is Computed Incorrectly
The wrong legal ground was used
This is the biggest issue.
A company may call the separation “retrenchment” to use the lower ½ month formula, but the documents may actually show redundancy: abolished position, reorganization, duplication of roles, or streamlining.
Redundancy requires good faith, fair and reasonable selection criteria, and adequate proof such as a new staffing pattern, feasibility study, job descriptions, or management approval of restructuring. DOLE Department Order No. 147-15 lists these standards. (Supreme Court E-Library)
The company did not count the 6-month fraction
If you worked 3 years and 6 months, the law treats that as 4 years for separation pay computation.
If HR rounded it down to 3 years, the computation may be short.
The company counted only regular employment
Some employers start counting from the date of regularization instead of the date of hiring. That can be wrong if your service was continuous.
Example:
- Hired: January 1, 2020
- Regularized: July 1, 2020
- Terminated: January 15, 2026
Service should usually be counted from January 1, 2020, not July 1, 2020, if employment was continuous.
The company excluded regular wage components
If your monthly pay includes a fixed allowance treated as part of salary, check whether HR excluded it. The answer depends on the nature of the allowance, how it appears in the payslip, and whether it is integrated into wage.
The company deducted accountabilities without proof
Employers may require clearance, but deductions should be tied to actual, documented obligations.
The Civil Code, Republic Act No. 386, Article 1706 states that withholding of wages should not be made except for a debt due. (Lawphil) The Supreme Court in Milan v. NLRC / Solid Mills, Inc., G.R. No. 202961, recognized that clearance procedures may be used to address employee accountabilities incurred by reason of employment, but this should not become a blanket excuse to delay or reduce final pay without basis. (Supreme Court E-Library)
The company made you sign a quitclaim too early
A quitclaim is a document where an employee confirms receipt of payment and waives further claims. It is not automatically invalid, but it can be questioned if:
- The amount paid was unconscionably low
- The employee was pressured or misled
- The employee did not understand the computation
- The waiver covered benefits that were clearly unpaid
- The settlement was not voluntary
Before signing, compare the computation against the legal formula and your actual records.
Documents to Ask For Before You Agree With the Computation
Ask HR for copies of the documents used to compute your final pay.
| Document | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Notice of termination | Shows the legal ground and effective date |
| DOLE notice or proof of filing | Required for authorized-cause termination |
| Final pay computation sheet | Shows the formula and breakdown |
| Payslips for the last 6–12 months | Helps verify salary base, allowances, deductions, and cash bonds |
| Employment contract and appointment letter | Shows start date, salary, benefits, and status |
| Regularization letter | Helps compare hiring date vs. regularization date |
| Company policy or employee handbook | May provide better benefits than the law |
| CBA, if unionized | May provide higher separation pay |
| Clearance form | Shows alleged accountabilities |
| BIR Form 2316 | Helps verify tax treatment |
| Certificate of employment | Confirms dates and position |
If you are abroad, you may authorize a representative through a Special Power of Attorney (SPA). If executed outside the Philippines, the SPA may need consular acknowledgment or an apostille, depending on the country where it is signed.
What to Do If the Computation Is Wrong
1. Make your own computation first
Prepare a simple comparison:
| Item | Employer computation | Your computation | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salary base | ₱___ | ₱___ | ₱___ |
| Years counted | ___ | ___ | ___ |
| Formula used | ___ | ___ | ___ |
| Separation pay | ₱___ | ₱___ | ₱___ |
| Pro-rated 13th month | ₱___ | ₱___ | ₱___ |
| Leave conversion | ₱___ | ₱___ | ₱___ |
| Cash bond / deductions | ₱___ | ₱___ | ₱___ |
This makes your complaint easier to understand and harder to dismiss.
2. Send a written request for recomputation
Email HR or the company’s authorized representative. Keep the tone factual.
Include:
- Your full name and position
- Date hired
- Date of separation
- Ground stated in the notice
- Amount paid or offered
- Specific discrepancy
- Documents requested
- Your own computation
Avoid vague messages like “my back pay is wrong.” Say exactly why it is wrong.
3. File a Request for Assistance under SEnA
If the company does not respond or refuses to correct the amount, the usual first step is the Single Entry Approach (SEnA) before DOLE, NLRC, or the appropriate labor agency.
SEnA is a mandatory conciliation-mediation process intended to resolve labor issues quickly before they become full-blown cases. The SEnA rules describe a 30-calendar-day conciliation-mediation period and provide for referral to the proper agency if the issue remains unsettled. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Bring or upload:
- Valid ID
- Termination notice
- Final pay computation
- Payslips
- Contract or appointment letter
- Proof of date hired
- Proof of payment received, if any
- Your recomputation
- Email exchanges with HR
- Quitclaim or release, if already signed
4. File the proper labor case if unresolved
If SEnA fails, the case may be referred to the proper office, often the NLRC Regional Arbitration Branch for money claims or illegal dismissal issues.
For ordinary money claims arising from the employment relationship, the general prescriptive period is 3 years from the time the cause of action accrued under the Labor Code’s money claims rule. The Supreme Court has applied this rule to unpaid retirement or separation benefits as money claims arising from employment. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Do not wait until the documents are lost, the company closes, or witnesses become unavailable.
Special Situations
If you resigned voluntarily
As a rule, voluntary resignation does not entitle an employee to statutory separation pay.
You may still receive separation-related money if it is provided by:
- Company policy
- Employment contract
- CBA
- Retirement plan
- Mutual separation agreement
- Established company practice
But if the “resignation” was forced, pressured, or made because working conditions became unbearable, the issue may be constructive dismissal, not simple resignation.
If you were terminated for just cause
Employees validly dismissed for just causes under Article 297, such as serious misconduct, willful disobedience, gross and habitual neglect, fraud, breach of trust, or commission of a crime against the employer or its representative, are generally not entitled to statutory separation pay.
However, they are still entitled to final pay items already earned, such as unpaid salary and applicable pro-rated 13th month pay.
If the company closed due to serious losses
Closure due to serious business losses may result in no statutory separation pay, but the employer must be able to prove the losses. A bare statement like “the company is losing money” is not enough in a contested case.
Useful documents may include audited financial statements, board resolutions, notices to DOLE, closure documents, and proof that the closure was made in good faith.
If you are a foreign employee in the Philippines
A foreign employee working for a Philippine employer is generally protected by Philippine labor standards while employed in the Philippines. Your nationality does not automatically remove your right to statutory benefits.
Practical issues for foreigners include:
- Work visa and Alien Employment Permit status
- Whether the contract has a foreign choice-of-law clause
- Whether salary is partly paid offshore
- Whether the employer is a Philippine entity or foreign entity
- Whether the work was performed in the Philippines
- Need for apostilled or authenticated documents if you are already outside the Philippines
If you are outside the Philippines, keep copies of payslips, employment records, company emails, and bank credits. These are often more useful than verbal assurances.
If you are a remote worker or contractor
Separation pay usually depends on whether you are legally an employee, not merely an independent contractor.
Labels are not controlling. A contract may call someone a “consultant,” but if the company controls the means and methods of work, imposes schedules, supervises performance, and treats the person like an employee, there may be an employment relationship.
This matters because statutory separation pay under the Labor Code applies to employees, not true independent contractors.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my separation pay computation is correct?
Check four things: the legal ground for termination, your latest salary base, your total years of service, and whether the correct formula was used. Redundancy and labor-saving devices generally use 1 month pay per year of service. Retrenchment, closure not due to serious losses, and disease generally use ½ month pay per year of service, but never less than 1 month pay.
Is separation pay based on basic salary or gross pay?
It usually starts with the latest salary rate. The difficult question is whether allowances or commissions form part of salary or wage. Fixed, regular, integrated wage components may be treated differently from reimbursements, discretionary bonuses, or temporary allowances. Check your payslips, contract, and company policy.
Do I get separation pay if I resigned?
Usually, no. Voluntary resignation does not normally create a right to statutory separation pay. You may still receive it if your contract, company policy, CBA, retirement plan, or separation agreement grants it. If you were forced to resign, the issue may be constructive dismissal.
Can my employer deduct company property or loans from my separation pay?
Only if there is a valid and documented accountability. Clearance procedures are recognized, but they should not be used as a vague excuse to withhold everything. Ask for an itemized list of deductions and supporting documents.
When should final pay be released in the Philippines?
DOLE Labor Advisory No. 06-20 provides guidance on timely release of final pay and issuance of certificates of employment. In practice, employees usually expect final pay within 30 days from separation unless a more favorable company policy, agreement, or special circumstance applies. (Department of Labor and Employment)
Is separation pay taxable?
Separation pay due to causes beyond the employee’s control, such as redundancy, retrenchment, closure, disease, death, or disability, is generally exempt from income tax and withholding tax under Section 32(B)(6)(b) of the Tax Code, as reflected in BIR rules. Other payments packaged with final pay may still be taxable. (Supreme Court E-Library)
What if HR used the retrenchment formula but my notice says redundancy?
That is a red flag. Redundancy generally uses the higher formula of 1 month pay per year of service, while retrenchment generally uses ½ month pay per year of service, subject to the 1 month minimum. Ask HR to explain the inconsistency in writing.
Can I still question the computation after signing a quitclaim?
Possibly, depending on the facts. A quitclaim may be challenged if the payment was very low, the waiver was not voluntary, the employee was misled, or legally due benefits were clearly unpaid. Keep a copy of the quitclaim, proof of payment, and computation sheet.
Where do I file a complaint for underpaid separation pay?
The usual first step is SEnA through DOLE, NLRC, or the appropriate labor office. If unresolved, the matter may be referred to the proper office, often the NLRC Regional Arbitration Branch, depending on the claims.
Key Takeaways
- The correct separation pay formula depends mainly on the reason for termination.
- Redundancy and labor-saving devices usually require 1 month pay per year of service, or 1 month pay minimum, whichever is higher.
- Retrenchment, closure not due to serious losses, and disease usually require ½ month pay per year of service, or 1 month pay minimum, whichever is higher.
- A service fraction of at least 6 months counts as 1 whole year.
- Final pay is broader than separation pay and may include unpaid salary, pro-rated 13th month pay, leave conversion, tax refund, and cash bond return.
- Statutory separation pay for causes beyond the employee’s control is generally tax-exempt, but other final pay components may be taxable.
- Do not rely only on HR’s total figure. Ask for the formula, salary base, years counted, deductions, and legal ground.
- If the company refuses to correct an underpayment, prepare your documents and use SEnA or the proper labor forum before the claim becomes stale.