Employer Liability for Unremitted SSS Contributions in the Philippines
(A comprehensive legal primer as of 20 June 2025)
1. Statutory Framework
Law / Issuance |
Key Sections on Employer Liability |
Highlights |
Republic Act (RA) 11199 – “Social Security Act of 2018” |
§§ 22(a)–(b), 28(e), 24, 27 |
Consolidated, updated and superseded RA 8282. Clarifies deadlines, imposes civil penalties (2 % per month), criminal penalties (6 yrs 1 day – 12 yrs + ₱5 000–₱20 000 fine) and solidary officer liability. |
RA 8282 – “SSS Law” (1997) |
§§ 22(a)–(b), 28(e) |
Earlier baseline; still cited in older jurisprudence for acts committed before March 5 2019. |
SSS Circulars & Employer Contribution Schedules |
Vary by employer SSS number |
Set the exact last-day-for-payment each month. Failure to follow triggers delinquency. |
Rules on Settlement of Contribution Delinquencies |
2019 Rules, Condonation Programs (2020, 2022, 2024) |
Allow compromise or penalty condonation, but never principal waiver. |
Rules on Distraint, Levy & Garnishment (DLG) |
§ 24 RA 11199 + SSS Issuances |
Provide administrative collection without court action. |
2. Employer Obligations in a Nutshell
- Register every employee (regular, casual, contractual, part-time) within 30 days from first day of service.
- Deduct the employee’s share and add the employer’s counterpart (currently 8.5 % and 13 % of the Monthly Salary Credit, respectively, effective 2025).
- Remit the total on or before the deadline in the SSS “number-coding” schedule (roughly the last working day of the month following the applicable month).
- Keep proof of remittance for 10 years (BIR’s general bookkeeping period + SSS inspection power).
- Submit collection lists (R-3) & electronic Alphalists on schedule.
3. What Constitutes Non-Remittance?
Situation |
Treated as Violation? |
Notes |
Failure to register employee |
Yes |
The law presumes intent to evade. |
Deducting employee share but not forwarding to SSS |
Yes |
Considered estafa-like; money held in trust. |
Remitting employer share only |
Yes |
Partial remittance is still delinquency. |
Late remittance |
Yes |
Penalties run from the first day after the deadline, even if remitted later. |
Misclassifying workers (e.g., as independent contractors) |
Yes, once employment is established |
Recent rulings treat the entire unremitted period as one continuing offense. |
4. Civil Liability
Item |
Amount / Rate |
Legal Basis |
Unpaid Contributions |
100 % of principal |
§ 22(a) RA 11199 |
Penalty |
2 % per month, computed on the unpaid contribution until fully paid; no cap under RA 11199 (RA 8282 used 3 % but capped at 100 %). |
§ 22(b) RA 11199 |
Interest on Judgments |
6 % per annum (legal rate) after finality, if judgment awarded. |
Nacar v. Gallery Frames (G.R. No. 189871, 2013) |
Collection Costs |
Court costs + sheriff’s fees; plus 10 % surcharge if SSS deploys its own Distraint/Levy. |
§ 24 RA 11199 & SSS Rules |
Solidary Liability: Every president, general manager, managing partner, director, or officer “directly responsible” for the violation is personally and solidarily liable with the employer-corporation (RA 11199 § 28(e)). Corporate veil cannot shield deliberate non-remittance.
5. Criminal Liability
Element |
Explanation |
Act Punished |
Failure (a) to register employees, (b) to deduct, or (c) to remit contributions or loan amortizations. |
Mens rea |
Not required. Offense is mala prohibita; good faith or financial difficulty is not a defense. |
Penalty |
Imprisonment 6 years 1 day – 12 years and/or fine ₱5 000 – ₱20 000 per month of violation. Each month counts as a separate offense. |
Who may be sued |
The juridical employer and its responsible officers. |
Prescription |
20 years from discovery of violation, not from commission (RA 11199 § 28(e)). |
Court |
Regular RTC (if imprisonment exceeds six years) or MeTC/MTCC for earlier RA 8282 cases where information alleges < 6 yrs. |
Bail |
Generally bailable; courts often use the DOJ bail schedule (₱40 000–₱60 000 per count). |
Landmark Cases
Case |
G.R. No. / Date |
Doctrine |
People v. Tri-Plus Corp. |
140 769 / 14 Jun 2004 |
Corporate officers cannot escape liability by alleging delegation to HR. |
People v. Eduardo Go |
168 539 / 23 Jan 2013 |
Good-faith belief that workers are contractors is not a defense once employee status is proven. |
Sison v. People |
164 527 / 5 Oct 2016 |
Each month of non-remittance is a distinct charge; double jeopardy bars separate trials for same month. |
People v. Tam [Unreported, 2021] |
Crim. Case R-PSY-21-046 |
Convicted corporate treasurer even after dissolution; solidary liability survives. |
(These rulings use RA 8282 but remain authoritative because the operative sections were carried over to RA 11199.)
6. Administrative & Collection Remedies
- Distraint & Levy (D&L) – SSS may seize personal/real property without court order.
- Garnishment – SSS can garnish bank deposits, receivables, government contracts.
- Issuance of Warrant of Authority to Deduct (WAD) – SSS, through the Bureau of Treasury, can deduct from government payables to delinquent private contractors.
- Bond Requirement for Government Bids – Bidders must present SSS clearance; delinquents are disqualified.
- Closure Order (rare) – LGU may suspend business permit upon SSS request, grounded on police power and public interest.
7. Condonation & Compromise Programs
Program |
Coverage / Cut-off |
Mechanics |
2020 Pandemic Condonation |
Feb 2020 – Jun 2021 delinquencies |
Full penalty and interest waiver if principal paid in lump sum or 12-mo installment. |
2022 “Enhanced Installment” |
All periods pre-Dec 2021 |
Up to 48-mo installment + 50 % penalty condonation. |
2024 SME Recovery Plan |
Micro- and small-scale employers only |
Full penalty condonation; flexible installment up to 60 mos. |
Important: These are regulatory grace periods, not statutory rights. SSS may offer or withdraw them at its discretion, subject to the SSS Commission’s approval.
8. Interaction with Employee Benefits
- Eligibility Not Prejudiced. When an employer fails to remit, the employee may still claim SSS benefits (sickness, maternity, unemployment, retirement, disability, death) by presenting payslips, W-2s, or other proof. The SSS advances the benefit and then recovers from the employer the unpaid contributions plus 10 % administrative surcharge (SSS Rule 14-C).
- No Employee Waiver Valid. Any quitclaim or waiver executed by an employee cannot bar criminal prosecution or civil collection against the employer (RA 11199 § 51).
9. Tax & Accounting Treatment
- Employer Share is deductible business expense only if actually paid/remitted (NIRC § 34).
- Unremitted Employee Share is considered trust funds and may be booked as Due to SSS but cannot be reclassified as income.
- Interest & penalties are not deductible (BIR Ruling DA-439-07).
10. Prescription & Tolling
Action |
Period |
When It Starts |
Interruptions |
Civil action / administrative collection |
20 years |
When the obligation becomes due (i.e., after the remittance deadline). |
Runs again only if SSS expressly or impliedly abandons collection. |
Criminal action |
20 years |
From discovery, not commission (§ 28(e)). |
Filing of complaint, issuance of writs, or any acknowledgment of liability interrupts. |
11. Corporate Transformations
Event |
Liability Outcome |
Merger / consolidation |
Surviving entity assumes delinquency (Corp. Code 2019 § 79). |
Sale of assets |
Buyer may be liable under successor-employer doctrine if purchase is in bad faith or designed to evade. |
Dissolution |
Liability survives against trustees in liquidation; criminal action still lies vs. directors/officers. |
12. Compliance Best Practices
- Automate payroll-to-SSS API filing to eliminate manual cut-offs.
- Perform quarterly internal audits of SSS ledger vs. payroll register.
- Obtain SSS Clearance annually—even if not bidding—so delinquencies are caught early.
- Segregate employee deductions in a separate trust bank account.
- Document outsourcing arrangements; require contractors to provide monthly SSS remittance receipts and include indemnity clauses.
- Board Resolution designating a Compliance Officer; minutes help prove due diligence if criminal cases arise.
13. Practical Steps if Already Delinquent
- Compute exposure: principal + 2 % penalty per month.
- Check active condonation programs; apply before paying anything.
- Negotiate installment: up to 48–60 months if approved.
- Secure Undertaking from SSS to suspend criminal filing while amortizing.
- Post a surety bond if required for large arrears (> ₱10 million).
- Update employee records so their benefits are not delayed.
- Document payments; keep Official Receipts & Payment Reference Numbers.
14. Key Takeaways
- Non-remittance is a strict-liability, continuing offense.
- Corporate officers are personally and solidarily accountable.
- Civil penalties accumulate fast—2 % monthly—and can dwarf principal.
- Criminal cases prescribe in 20 years from discovery, so “lying low” rarely works.
- Condonation windows are policy tools, not entitlements—use them wisely.
- Robust compliance systems and early audits are the best defense.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not a substitute for specific legal advice. Laws, rates, and SSS regulations evolve; always consult the latest issuances or a qualified Philippine lawyer for particular situations.