A 13th-month pay released in January—or any time after December 24—is already late under Philippine labor law. An employer cannot lawfully move the payment to the following year simply because business is slow, collections are delayed, payroll is being reconciled, or management prefers a different schedule. The employee may demand payment, document the delay, seek assistance through the Department of Labor and Employment’s Single Entry Approach, and, when necessary, file a formal money claim.
The most practical response is usually to begin with a calm written demand, preserve payroll and employment records, and use DOLE’s free conciliation process before the dispute becomes a full labor case. Employees should also check whether the amount eventually paid is complete, because a delayed payment is often accompanied by an incorrect computation.
Is It Legal to Pay 13th-Month Pay the Following Year?
Generally, no.
Presidential Decree No. 851 requires covered employers to pay 13th-month pay not later than December 24 of every year. The legal deadline is not January 15, the next regular payday, the completion of an audit, or the date the employer receives payment from customers.
For example, 13th-month pay earned during calendar year 2026 must be released on or before December 24, 2026. Paying it on January 5, 2027 does not make it part of the 2027 benefit. It remains an overdue obligation for 2026.
DOLE has repeatedly emphasized that employers may not request an exemption or defer payment merely because of financial difficulty. A company’s cash-flow problem does not transfer the financial burden to its workers.
What if the employer promises a specific January payment date?
A promise to pay in January may be useful evidence that the employer acknowledges the debt, but it does not erase the violation.
Employees may choose to wait briefly when management gives a credible, written payment schedule. However, they are not legally required to accept the postponement. They may immediately raise the matter with DOLE after the December 24 deadline passes.
What if employees agreed to the delay?
An employee’s consent does not normally validate the waiver of a minimum labor standard.
Labor rights such as 13th-month pay are generally treated as statutory rights that cannot be defeated by a company memo, individual waiver, informal agreement, or vote among employees. This is especially true when employees “agreed” because they feared retaliation or loss of employment.
A voluntary settlement made with DOLE or the National Labor Relations Commission may be binding when it is reasonable, properly explained, and entered into without fraud or coercion. That is different from management unilaterally asking workers to waive or postpone a legally due benefit.
Who Is Entitled to 13th-Month Pay?
The benefit generally covers rank-and-file employees in the private sector who have worked for at least one month during the calendar year, regardless of whether they are:
- Regular, probationary, casual, project-based, seasonal, or fixed-term employees
- Paid monthly, daily, weekly, by piece, or through certain commission arrangements
- Still employed on December 24
- Resigned, retired, terminated, or separated before the end of the year
Memorandum Order No. 28, Series of 1986 removed the original salary ceiling under Presidential Decree No. 851. Thus, a rank-and-file employee does not lose the benefit merely because the employee earns a high salary.
Employees commonly excluded
The statutory rules generally do not cover:
- Government employees, who are subject to separate compensation and bonus rules
- Employees who are genuinely managerial employees
- Household workers whose benefits are governed principally by the Domestic Workers Act, although a kasambahay may have contractual or policy-based benefits
- Workers who are not legally employees, such as genuine independent contractors
- Employees of employers already providing an equivalent benefit recognized under the implementing rules
Job titles do not automatically determine coverage. Calling someone a “manager,” “consultant,” “partner,” or “freelancer” does not settle the issue. DOLE or a Labor Arbiter will look at the worker’s actual duties, level of authority, control exercised by the company, manner of payment, and the overall employment relationship.
In Dynamiq Multi-Resources, Inc. v. Janette Genon, the Supreme Court explained that once an employer-employee relationship was established, payment of the legally required 13th-month pay was justified despite the employer’s attempt to characterize the worker differently. The decision is available through the Supreme Court’s Lawphil archive.
How Much Should the Employer Pay?
The minimum statutory formula is:
Total basic salary earned during the calendar year ÷ 12
Suppose an employee received a basic salary of ₱25,000 per month from January through December:
₱25,000 × 12 = ₱300,000 ₱300,000 ÷ 12 = ₱25,000 13th-month pay
For an employee who worked only from April through December:
₱25,000 × 9 = ₱225,000 ₱225,000 ÷ 12 = ₱18,750 prorated 13th-month pay
The amount is based on the employee’s actual basic salary earned during the calendar year. Unpaid absences, a midyear salary increase, suspension without pay, or separation before year-end may change the computation.
Amounts usually excluded from “basic salary”
Unless treated as part of basic salary by contract, company policy, collective bargaining agreement, or established practice, the following are ordinarily excluded:
- Overtime pay
- Night-shift differential
- Holiday pay
- Premium pay for rest days or special days
- Cost-of-living allowance
- Cash equivalent of unused leave credits
- Profit-sharing payments
- Discretionary bonuses
- Reimbursements and genuine allowances
Commission treatment depends on the nature of the payment. A commission that is truly an incentive or productivity payment may be excluded, while compensation that is effectively part of the employee’s regular wage may require closer analysis. In Philippine Duplicators, Inc. v. NLRC, the Supreme Court held that certain sales commissions forming part of guaranteed compensation had to be considered in computing the benefit. The decision may be read in the Lawphil Supreme Court database.
Can the employer deduct advances or debts from it?
An employer should not make unauthorized deductions from 13th-month pay.
Deductions may be valid when clearly authorized by law, a court order, or a lawful and voluntary written authorization for a legitimate obligation. An employee should question deductions for alleged shortages, damaged equipment, customer nonpayment, training bonds, loans, or unliquidated cash advances when the employer provides no computation or legal basis.
What to Do When 13th-Month Pay Is Delayed
1. Confirm that the deadline has passed
The legal deadline is December 24. Check whether the amount was:
- Credited to your bank account
- Released through cash, cheque, e-wallet, or payroll card
- Included in an earlier payout
- Split into installments, with the unpaid balance still due
- Combined with another benefit under an unclear payroll description
An employer may pay one-half before the opening of the regular school year and the remaining half on or before December 24. What matters is that the full legally required amount has been paid by the deadline.
2. Calculate the amount independently
Prepare a basic computation using your payslips and payroll records.
| Information needed | Where to find it |
|---|---|
| Basic salary for each pay period | Payslips, payroll portal, employment contract |
| Dates actually worked | Attendance records, schedules, time sheets |
| Unpaid absences or leave without pay | Payslips and leave records |
| Salary increases or reductions | HR notices, contracts, payroll records |
| Amount already released | Bank statement, payroll entry, receipt |
Do not simply multiply your latest monthly salary by one month if your salary changed during the year or you did not work for all 12 months.
3. Ask HR or payroll in writing
Send a professional written inquiry through email, the company ticketing system, or a letter acknowledged by HR. State:
- That the December 24 deadline has passed
- The amount you believe is due
- Whether no payment or only partial payment was received
- A request for the company’s computation
- A reasonable, definite deadline for a written response
A written inquiry creates a record. Verbal conversations are harder to prove later.
A useful message may say:
My 13th-month pay for calendar year 2026 has not been credited as of December 26, 2026. Based on my payroll records, my estimated entitlement is ₱____. Please provide the company’s computation and confirm the date of immediate release.
Avoid signing a document stating that payment was received when no payment has actually been made.
4. Preserve evidence
Save copies outside the employer’s systems. Employees sometimes lose access to company email, payroll portals, or messaging accounts after resignation or termination.
Useful evidence includes:
- Employment contract or appointment letter
- Company identification card
- Payslips and payroll summaries
- Bank statements showing salary credits
- Daily time records or schedules
- BIR Form 2316
- Social Security System contribution records
- PhilHealth and Pag-IBIG records
- Company memoranda about delayed payment
- Emails, text messages, or chat messages from HR
- Previous 13th-month pay records
- Resignation, termination, or clearance documents
- Names of coworkers experiencing the same delay
Screenshots should show the date, sender, recipient, and surrounding conversation. Keep the original electronic files when possible.
5. File a Request for Assistance under SEnA
The Single Entry Approach, commonly called SEnA, is a mandatory conciliation-mediation process for labor disputes. It is designed to help employees and employers settle without immediately undergoing full litigation.
A Request for Assistance may generally be filed with:
- The DOLE regional, provincial, or field office
- An NLRC Single Entry Assistance Desk
- The National Conciliation and Mediation Board
- An authorized SEnA desk with jurisdiction over the workplace or parties
- The appropriate online facility, when available
The DOLE Single Entry Approach information page describes SEnA as a speedy, accessible, impartial, and inexpensive settlement procedure. Conciliation is generally intended to run for up to 30 days, although actual scheduling can vary because of notices, holidays, workload, employer availability, or requests for additional conferences.
Bring a government-issued ID and copies of your supporting documents. Filing is generally free, and a lawyer is not required.
During the conference, a SEnA desk officer may ask the employer to:
- Explain why payment was delayed
- Produce payroll and proof of payment
- Provide the computation
- Pay the employee in full
- Agree to a short, definite payment schedule
- Correct underpayments affecting multiple workers
Read any settlement carefully. It should identify the exact amount, payment dates, method of payment, and consequences of default. Do not sign a quitclaim stating that all employment claims have been settled unless the listed amount is accurate and you understand the scope of the release.
6. Consider requesting a labor inspection
Employees may also report a labor standards violation to the appropriate DOLE regional office. Under the Labor Code’s visitorial and enforcement powers, DOLE may inspect employment records and require compliance with labor standards.
Inspection can be especially useful when:
- Many employees are affected
- The employer maintains incomplete or questionable payroll records
- The business continues to operate but repeatedly delays benefits
- The company refuses to disclose computations
- The problem involves other violations, such as minimum wage, holiday pay, or service incentive leave
An inspection and an individual money claim are related but not identical processes. DOLE will determine the proper procedure based on the amount, issues raised, number of workers, existence of an employment relationship dispute, and whether reinstatement is sought.
7. File a formal labor complaint if settlement fails
If SEnA does not produce a settlement, the employee may receive a referral or endorsement for the appropriate formal proceeding.
A complaint for unpaid 13th-month pay may fall within the jurisdiction of:
- A DOLE Regional Director in certain labor standards claims, subject to the conditions and monetary limits under the Labor Code
- A Labor Arbiter of the NLRC when the case falls within the NLRC’s jurisdiction, particularly when combined with illegal dismissal, reinstatement, damages, or other claims
- Another appropriate forum when the worker’s legal status or employment arrangement presents a special jurisdictional issue
A formal complaint normally requires the parties to submit position papers and supporting evidence. The employer should produce payroll documents, receipts, vouchers, bank records, or other proof of payment.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly applied the rule that when an employer claims that wages or statutory benefits were paid, the employer bears the burden of proving payment, because payroll and payment records are ordinarily under the employer’s control. A bare statement that the employee was already paid is usually insufficient without credible records.
Can the Employee Recover Interest, Damages, or Attorney’s Fees?
The primary recovery is the unpaid or underpaid 13th-month pay.
Additional amounts depend on the facts and the relief properly requested.
Attorney’s fees
Article 111 of the Labor Code permits an award of attorney’s fees of up to 10% of the total wages recovered in cases involving unlawful withholding of wages. Courts and labor tribunals may also award attorney’s fees when the employee was forced to litigate or incur expenses to protect a lawful interest.
Attorney’s fees are not automatically added to every late payment. They must be supported by the circumstances and expressly awarded.
Legal interest
Legal interest may be imposed on a monetary award, particularly after the amount becomes final and demandable under a judgment. The exact starting date and application of interest depend on the nature of the obligation and the tribunal’s decision.
An employee should not unilaterally add an arbitrary “penalty” percentage to a demand unless there is a contractual or legal basis.
Moral and exemplary damages
Delay alone does not automatically entitle an employee to moral or exemplary damages. These generally require proof of bad faith, fraud, oppression, retaliation, or similarly wrongful conduct beyond ordinary nonpayment.
Examples that may strengthen a damages claim include falsified payroll records, threats intended to stop workers from filing complaints, deliberate discrimination against complainants, or repeated deceptive promises made to evade payment.
What If the Employer Pays in January After a Complaint Is Filed?
Payment of the principal amount may resolve the main money claim, but employees should verify:
- Whether the payment is complete
- Whether the computation used the correct basic salary
- Whether unauthorized deductions were made
- Whether other unpaid labor benefits remain
- Whether the settlement releases claims not actually paid
A late payment does not become timely merely because it was eventually made. However, once the correct amount is fully paid, the practical value of continuing a case may depend on whether there are remaining claims, requested attorney’s fees, retaliation, or a broader pattern affecting other employees.
Always obtain proof of payment. For cash, request a receipt showing the amount, date, purpose, and signatures. For bank transfers, retain the transaction record and corresponding payslip.
Special Situations That Often Cause Confusion
The employee resigned before December
A resigning employee is still entitled to a prorated 13th-month pay based on basic salary earned during that calendar year.
The benefit is usually included in final pay. Current DOLE guidance generally requires final pay to be released within 30 days from separation, unless a more favorable company policy applies. An employer should not wait until the next December to pay the prorated amount of an employee who already left.
Clearance procedures may cause practical delays, but clearance should not be used indefinitely to withhold undisputed statutory benefits.
The employee was dismissed
A dismissed employee remains entitled to the prorated benefit earned before dismissal. If the dismissal is later declared illegal, the computation of backwages may also include legally due benefits for the applicable period, subject to the final judgment.
The employer paid only half
Payment in installments is not automatically prohibited, but the entire statutory amount must be paid by December 24. A remaining balance released the following year is delayed.
The company calls it a “Christmas bonus”
A Christmas bonus and 13th-month pay are not necessarily the same.
The 13th-month pay is required by law for covered employees. A Christmas bonus is generally discretionary unless it has become enforceable through a contract, collective bargaining agreement, company policy, or a consistent and deliberate company practice.
Payroll records should clearly identify whether the amount represents statutory 13th-month pay, a separate bonus, or both.
The employer claims the worker is a freelancer
A contract label is not conclusive. A worker may still be an employee when the company controls how, when, and where the work is performed and exercises the other powers associated with employment.
Evidence such as fixed schedules, supervision, performance rules, disciplinary authority, regular payroll, company equipment, and restrictions on working for others may help establish employee status.
The worker is employed by an agency or contractor
The agency or contractor is ordinarily responsible for paying its employees’ wages and statutory benefits. Depending on the contracting arrangement and applicable labor standards rules, the principal company may also bear solidary liability for certain unpaid benefits.
The worker should identify both the agency and principal in the SEnA request when responsibility is disputed.
The employee works abroad
An overseas Filipino worker’s claim may be governed by the employment contract, the law applicable to overseas employment, and the jurisdiction of the Department of Migrant Workers or NLRC. Philippine 13th-month pay rules do not automatically apply to every foreign employer merely because the worker is Filipino.
By contrast, an employee working remotely from the Philippines for a Philippine employer will generally be assessed under Philippine labor law. A foreign company’s liability may depend on whether it employs the worker directly, operates through a Philippine entity, or has engaged a legitimate local contractor.
Retaliation After Asking for 13th-Month Pay
An employer should not dismiss, demote, harass, suspend, or discriminate against an employee merely for asserting a statutory labor right or participating in a labor standards proceeding.
Document any retaliation separately. Save warning notices, schedule changes, performance evaluations, messages, and names of witnesses. If dismissal occurs, act promptly because an illegal dismissal case involves different remedies and procedural issues from a simple money claim.
Do not resign impulsively solely because management reacts badly. A resignation may complicate the case unless the circumstances amount to constructive dismissal, meaning working conditions became so unreasonable or discriminatory that a reasonable person would feel compelled to leave.
Time Limit for Filing a Claim
Article 306 of the Labor Code, formerly Article 291, generally provides a three-year prescriptive period for money claims arising from employer-employee relations. This means a claim for unpaid 13th-month pay should be filed within three years from the time the benefit became due.
For example, 13th-month pay due on December 24, 2026 should generally be claimed no later than December 24, 2029.
Employees should not wait until the final months of the three-year period. Records may disappear, businesses may close, responsible officers may leave, and witnesses may become difficult to locate. The NLRC’s official frequently asked questions also explains that monetary benefits withheld beyond the three-year period may be barred by prescription.
A written demand is useful but should not be assumed to stop the prescriptive period in every situation. Timely filing with the proper labor office is the safer course.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an employer legally pay 13th-month pay in January?
No. For covered employees, the statutory deadline is December 24 of the year in which the benefit was earned. A January payment is late even if the employer announced it in advance.
Where can I report delayed 13th-month pay?
You may file a Request for Assistance through a DOLE regional, provincial, or field office, an NLRC SEnA desk, or another authorized Single Entry Assistance Desk. You may also ask the DOLE regional office about labor inspection or formal enforcement.
Do I need a lawyer to file a complaint?
No. Employees may file a SEnA request and a labor complaint without a private lawyer. Government officers provide procedural guidance, although they cannot act as the employee’s personal counsel.
Is there a filing fee?
SEnA assistance and the filing of ordinary labor complaints by employees are generally free. Incidental expenses may include transportation, photocopying, printing, notarization when required for a particular submission, and private legal fees if the employee hires counsel.
Can I file anonymously?
An employee may initially ask DOLE for general guidance without identifying the employer publicly. However, formal conciliation, enforcement, or adjudication normally requires enough identifying information to notify the employer and investigate the claim. Employees concerned about retaliation should tell the receiving officer immediately.
Can I file together with my coworkers?
Yes. Workers affected by the same company policy may approach DOLE together. Each employee should still prepare an individual computation because salaries, dates of employment, absences, and amounts already paid may differ.
What if the employer says there is no money?
Financial difficulty does not cancel the obligation or extend the December 24 deadline. The employer may propose a settlement schedule during conciliation, but employees are not required to waive the benefit.
Can the employer terminate me for filing a DOLE complaint?
An employer cannot lawfully dismiss an employee simply for asserting a labor right. If dismissal or other retaliation occurs, preserve evidence and raise the new violation promptly because it may support a separate illegal dismissal or unfair treatment claim.
Is 13th-month pay taxable?
Under current tax rules, 13th-month pay and other benefits are excluded from gross income up to the statutory tax-exempt ceiling, with any excess generally subject to income tax. Because the ceiling and tax guidance may be amended, employees should check the applicable Bureau of Internal Revenue rules for the year of payment.
What if I received the correct amount, but only a few days late?
The employer still missed the statutory deadline. You may report the violation, although the practical relief may be limited if the complete amount has already been paid and no other claim remains. Keep proof of the payment date in case delayed release becomes a recurring practice.
Key Takeaways
- Covered private-sector employees must receive their full 13th-month pay on or before December 24.
- An employer cannot unilaterally move the payment to January because of cash-flow problems, delayed collections, payroll processing, or internal policy.
- Compute the benefit using total basic salary earned during the calendar year divided by 12.
- Ask for the payment and computation in writing, and save payroll records, bank statements, messages, and company memoranda.
- File a free SEnA Request for Assistance with DOLE or the NLRC when the employer does not promptly correct the delay.
- Do not sign a receipt, waiver, or quitclaim stating that you were fully paid unless the amount is correct and has actually been received.
- Money claims generally prescribe after three years, so employees should not postpone formal action when the employer repeatedly fails to pay.