Pay Calculation for Work on Good Friday in the Philippines
A comprehensive legal guide for employers, HR practitioners, union representatives, and workers
1. Legal Foundations
Source of the Rule | Key Provision for Good Friday |
---|---|
Article 94, Labor Code (as renumbered by R.A. 10151) | Employees are entitled to holiday pay for any “regular holiday,” whether or not they work, provided they are present—or on leave with pay—on the work-day immediately preceding the holiday. |
Republic Act 9492 (2007) | Enumerates national regular holidays. Good Friday is explicitly listed. |
Presidential Proclamation (issued annually) | Re-publishes the year’s holiday calendar, normally reaffirming Maundy Thursday and Good Friday as regular holidays. |
DOLE Handbook on Workers’ Statutory Monetary Benefits (latest edition) | Consolidates implementing rules: coverage, exemptions, and computation templates for regular-holiday pay. |
Omnibus Rules Implementing the Labor Code, Book III, Rule IV | Defines “basic wage,” overtime premium, night-shift differential, and rest-day premium used in the formulas below. |
Important: The Constitution allows Congress to create and the President to fix holidays, but the method of computing pay is set by the Labor Code and its implementing rules, not by yearly proclamations.
2. Who Is Covered—and Who Is Not
Covered | Exempt under Art. 82 & 94* |
---|---|
Rank-and-file employees—regular, probationary, contractual, casual, and fixed-term—whether paid daily, piece-rate, commission, or “pakyaw.” | Managerial employees, field personnel without fixed work hours, family members dependent on the employer, and domestic workers (kasambahay).* |
Employees paid on a monthly basis (they already receive all 12 regular holidays in their salary). | Government employees (Civil Service rules apply); workers in retail/service establishments employing <10 data-preserve-html-node="true" regular workers. |
Apprentices & learners if compensated by the day/wage. | NOTE: Domestic workers now enjoy holiday rest days under R.A. 10361, but paid holiday premium remains discretionary unless stipulated in the contract/CBU. |
*Employers may voluntarily extend holiday-pay benefits beyond what the law requires (many do so to stay competitive).
3. Core Pay Rules on Good Friday
The DOLE publishes the same set of multipliers every year. Absent a new statute, they remain unchanged:
| Scenario | Multiplier | How to Read It | |---|---| | a. Not working (but entitled) | 100 % of the daily wage | “Holiday Pay.” | | b. Working on Good Friday | 200 % (double pay) | First 8 hours. | | c. Overtime on Good Friday | 200 % × 30 % = 260 % | Each hour beyond 8. | | d. Good Friday falls on the employee’s scheduled rest day, and employee works | 200 % + 30 % of 200 % = 260 % for the first 8 hours | Rest-day premium built in. | | e. Overtime on (d) | 260 % × 30 % = 338 % per overtime hour | Rest-day + holiday + overtime. | | f. Night-shift differential (10 % of hourly basic) | Apply on top of (b)–(e) | Work between 10 p.m.–6 a.m. |
Tip: DOLE memoranda state “30 % of the applicable rate” for overtime or rest-day work; applicable rate means the rate already inclusive of the 200 % holiday premium.
4. Practical Computation Examples
Assume Juan is a rank-and-file employee on a ₱610.00 daily basic wage in NCR (includes current COLA).
Case | Hours | Formula | Pay |
---|---|---|---|
1. Absent on Holy Wednesday (day before Good Friday) | 0 | No entitlement (“no work, no pay”) | ₱ 0 |
2. Did not work but was present on Holy Wednesday | 0 | ₱610 × 100 % | ₱ 610 |
3. Worked 8 h on Good Friday | 8 | ₱610 × 200 % | ₱ 1,220 |
4. Worked 10 h on Good Friday | 8 + 2 OT | (₱610 × 200 %) + (₱610 ÷ 8 × 200 % × 30 % × 2 h) | ₱1,220 + ₱229 = ₱ 1,449 |
5. Good Friday was also his scheduled rest day; he worked 10 h | 8 + 2 OT | (₱610 × 260 %) + (₱610 ÷ 8 × 260 % × 30 % × 2 h) | ₱1,586 + ₱297 = ₱ 1,883 |
5. Special Situations & FAQs
Monthly-Paid Employees They already receive salaries “for every day of the month,” so no additional 100 % holiday pay accrues if they do not work. However, if they do work: add the 100 % premium (effectively bringing pay to 200 %).
Piece-Rate / Pakyaw Workers Use the “equivalent daily rate” method (total earnings ÷ days actually worked) as the base wage. Apply the same multipliers.
Commission-Based Sales Staff Holiday pay equals the average commission earned per working day over the last 12 months, in the absence of a basic wage.
Work-From-Home on Good Friday Still counts as “work performed”; apply regular-holiday multipliers unless the employee is on straight-monthly pay and not required to log in.
Leave Without Pay on Holy Wednesday Breaks the “present-or-on-paid-leave” rule; the employee forfeits the 100 % holiday pay for Friday if they do not work Friday.
Successive Regular Holidays (Maundy Thursday + Good Friday) Presence (or leave with pay) on Holy Wednesday entitles the worker to pay for both days under the one-day preceding rule.
Taxability Holiday premium is ordinary compensation income; subject to withholding tax and SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG contributions.
Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs) CBAs or company policy may grant a higher multiplier or additional allowances (e.g., food/hazard pay for 24/7 plants) but may not go below statutory rates.
Penalties for Non-Compliance Under Article 302 (formerly 288), non-payment of holiday pay is an unlawful wage practice punishable by a fine of ₱40,000–₱400,000 and/or imprisonment of 2–4 years, plus restitution and damages.
Prescription Period Money claims for unpaid Good Friday wages must be filed within three (3) years from the date the cause of action accrued (Art. 306).
6. Compliance Checklist for Employers
- Update payroll software before Holy Week to reflect current wage rates and multipliers.
- Check attendance on the day immediately preceding Good Friday; flag absences or unpaid leave.
- Issue clear duty rosters indicating who is required to work and secure written consents if outsourcing.
- Remember night-shift differential for graveyard‐shift BPOs that remain operational.
- Document actual hours worked (especially overtime) to defend against DOLE inspections and employee complaints.
- Communicate entitlements through advisories; transparency reduces disputes.
7. Key Takeaways
- Good Friday is a regular holiday by statute—not merely by annual proclamation.
- Non-working employees who meet the presence rule receive 100 % of daily wage.
- Working employees are entitled to 200 % (or 260 % if it is also their rest day), with additional 30 % for any overtime hours.
- The presence rule (or being on paid leave) on the work-day immediately before Good Friday is crucial to holiday-pay entitlement.
- Night-shift, piece-rate, or commission arrangements do not diminish statutory multipliers; they only change the base-wage figure.
- Higher benefits granted by company policy or CBA prevail over the statutory floor but can never undercut it.
- Violations expose employers to criminal sanctions, civil liability, and reputational harm; proactive compliance is the best defense.
8. Suggested Boilerplate Policy Clause
“The Company honors all regular holidays under Article 94 of the Labor Code. Employees required to render work on Good Friday shall be paid an additional 100 % of their daily basic wage for the first eight (8) hours, and an extra 30 % of the corresponding hourly rate for work in excess thereof. When Good Friday coincides with an employee’s scheduled rest day, the premium shall be 160 % above the basic daily wage. Night-shift differential and other statutory premiums shall be computed on the adjusted rates. This clause shall be construed consistently with updates from the Department of Labor and Employment.”
By mastering these rules, employers safeguard statutory compliance, and workers secure the pay they rightfully deserve during the most solemn day of Holy Week.