A salary deduction problem can feel small at first—₱300 for a uniform, ₱1,000 for a “cash bond,” a sudden deduction for alleged damage, or a final pay reduced without explanation—but these amounts often matter a lot to workers. Under Philippine labor law, employers cannot simply deduct from wages whenever they want. If your employer made unauthorized salary deductions, refused to explain deductions, deducted alleged losses without due process, or withheld part of your final pay, you can file a Request for Assistance with DOLE through the Single Entry Approach, commonly called SEnA, so the issue can be conciliated before it becomes a full labor case.
What Counts as a Salary Deduction Issue?
A salary deduction issue happens when an employer subtracts money from your wages, benefits, commission, incentives, or final pay and the deduction is not clearly allowed by law, regulation, contract, or a valid written authorization.
Common examples include:
- “Cash bond” deductions for missing inventory, breakage, tools, cash shortages, or company property
- Uniform, ID, training, medical, or equipment deductions not clearly authorized
- Deductions for alleged damage without investigation or proof
- Salary deductions for being late or absent that are computed incorrectly
- Deductions from final pay for loans, advances, or company property without a proper breakdown
- Deductions for penalties, fines, “bond,” or “damages” imposed under a company policy
- Withholding the whole salary or final pay until the employee signs a quitclaim
- Deducting SSS, PhilHealth, or Pag-IBIG contributions but failing to remit them
A lawful deduction is not automatically illegal just because it reduces take-home pay. For example, taxes and mandatory government contributions are normally allowed. The issue is whether the deduction has a valid legal basis, whether the employee gave proper written authorization when required, and whether the employer followed due process before charging the worker for alleged loss or damage.
Legal Basis: Your Rights Against Illegal Salary Deductions
The main law is the Labor Code of the Philippines, Presidential Decree No. 442, as amended. Article 113 states that an employer may not make deductions from an employee’s wages except in limited situations, such as insurance premiums with the worker’s consent, union dues where check-off is recognized or authorized in writing, or deductions authorized by law or by regulations issued by the Secretary of Labor and Employment. (Lawphil)
The Labor Code also protects the employee’s freedom to use wages. Article 112 prohibits an employer from interfering with how an employee disposes of wages, including forcing employees to buy goods or use a store or service chosen by the employer. Article 116 makes it unlawful to withhold wages or induce a worker to give up part of wages through force, stealth, intimidation, threat, or similar means without the worker’s consent. (Natlex)
For cash bonds and deductions for alleged loss or damage, Articles 114 and 115 are especially important. Article 114 generally prohibits employers from requiring deposits for loss or damage to tools, materials, or equipment, except in recognized trades or when allowed by appropriate rules. Article 115 adds that no deduction from deposits may be made unless the employee has been heard and responsibility is clearly shown. (Natlex)
The Civil Code also supports wage protection. Article 1706 says withholding wages, except for a debt due, shall not be made by the employer, and Article 1708 says a laborer’s wages are generally not subject to execution or attachment except for debts incurred for food, shelter, clothing, and medical attendance. (Lawphil) Article 22 of the Civil Code also reflects the principle against unjust enrichment: a person who receives something at another’s expense without legal ground must return it. (Lawphil)
The Supreme Court has applied these principles in real workplace disputes. In Dentech Manufacturing Corporation v. NLRC, G.R. No. 81477, April 19, 1989, the Court upheld the refund of a cash bond because the employer failed to show legal authority to require it under Article 114 of the Labor Code. (Lawphil)
When Is a Salary Deduction Allowed?
A deduction is usually safer for the employer if it falls under one of these categories:
| Type of deduction | Usually allowed? | Practical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Withholding tax | Yes | Must be properly computed and reflected in payroll records. |
| SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG employee share | Yes | Deduction must be remitted to the proper agency. |
| Union dues or agency fees | Yes, if legally authorized | Check-off usually requires legal basis or written authorization. |
| Company loan or salary advance | Yes, if clearly documented | Best supported by signed loan or advance form and payroll deduction authority. |
| Insurance premium | Yes, if with employee consent | Must match Article 113 conditions. |
| Loss or damage to company property | Only under strict conditions | Employer must show responsibility, give the employee a chance to explain, and deduct only a fair and lawful amount. |
| Cash bond | Often questionable | Validity depends on industry practice, DOLE rules, reasonableness, and due process. |
| Penalty for mistakes or poor performance | Usually risky | Employers cannot simply fine workers unless the deduction is clearly lawful. |
| Uniform, ID, medical, training, tools | Depends | The employer must show legal basis or valid written authorization. |
A common mistake is assuming that a signed contract or handbook automatically makes every deduction valid. A company policy cannot override the Labor Code. Even if the employee signed a document, the deduction may still be questioned if it is contrary to law, vague, excessive, forced, or unsupported by proof.
What Is SEnA and Why You Usually Start There
SEnA, or the Single Entry Approach, is DOLE’s front-line conciliation-mediation process for labor and employment issues. It is designed to be speedy, impartial, inexpensive, and accessible, and it aims to settle disputes before they become full-blown labor cases. DOLE’s ARMS portal states that SEnA was introduced through Department Order No. 107-10, institutionalized by Republic Act No. 10396 in 2013, and is currently governed by Department Order No. 249, series of 2025, which provides a 30-day mandatory conciliation-mediation period for labor and employment issues. (DOLE ARMS)
Instead of immediately filing a formal complaint with a Labor Arbiter, a worker usually files a Request for Assistance, or RFA. A neutral Single Entry Assistance Desk Officer, called a SEADO, then helps the worker and employer discuss possible settlement.
For salary deduction issues, SEnA is useful because many cases can be resolved through:
- Refund of illegal deductions
- Release of withheld salary or final pay
- Correction of payroll computation
- Issuance of payslips, breakdowns, or employment records
- Agreement on a payment schedule
- Referral to the proper DOLE, NLRC, NCMB, or other office if settlement fails
Where to File a DOLE Complaint for Salary Deduction Issues
You may file through DOLE ARMS, the DOLE Assistance for Request Management System. DOLE ARMS allows clients to submit an RFA electronically and is used by SEAD officers during conciliation-mediation. (DOLE ARMS)
You may also file onsite at the appropriate DOLE Regional, Provincial, Field, or District Office. DOLE ARMS and NCMB materials also indicate that RFAs may be handled through DOLE Regional Offices, NCMB offices, and NLRC Regional Arbitration Branches, depending on the implementing office and the nature of the concern. (DOLE ARMS)
As a practical rule, file where the workplace or employer is located, or use the online system if you are far away, abroad, recently resigned, or unable to visit the office personally.
Who Can File the Request for Assistance?
An RFA may be filed by an aggrieved worker, including a kasambahay, a group of workers, a union, a workers’ association or federation, an overseas Filipino worker, or even an employer. If the worker is absent or incapacitated, an immediate family member with a Special Power of Attorney may file. If the worker has died, legitimate heirs may file. (NCMB)
For Filipinos abroad or foreign workers who cannot appear personally, the practical concern is authority. If someone in the Philippines will file or attend on your behalf, prepare a clear SPA. If the SPA is signed abroad, it is commonly acknowledged before a Philippine Embassy or Consulate, which can notarize private documents such as special powers of attorney. (Philippine Embassy) If a foreign notarized document will be used in the Philippines, check whether apostille or consular authentication is needed based on where it was executed.
Step-by-Step: How to File a DOLE Complaint for Salary Deduction Issues
1. Identify the exact deduction and amount
Before filing, write down the deduction clearly. Avoid vague statements like “illegal deduction sa sahod.” Be specific.
Prepare a short table for yourself:
| Pay period | Gross pay | Deduction label | Amount deducted | Reason given by employer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 1–15, 2026 | ₱12,000 | Cash bond | ₱1,000 | “Company policy” |
| May 16–31, 2026 | ₱12,000 | Damaged item | ₱2,500 | “Lost scanner” |
| Final pay | ₱18,000 | Uniform/tools | ₱3,000 | No explanation |
This helps the SEADO quickly understand the issue.
2. Gather documents and screenshots
You do not need a perfect file before starting, but evidence makes the RFA stronger. Useful documents include:
- Payslips showing the deductions
- Payroll account screenshots or bank credit history
- Employment contract, appointment letter, or job offer
- Company handbook or policy on deductions, cash bond, uniforms, or tools
- Written authorization forms, if any
- Text, Messenger, Viber, WhatsApp, email, or HR messages about the deduction
- Notice to explain, incident report, investigation record, or memo
- Resignation letter, clearance form, final pay computation, or quitclaim draft
- SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, or BIR records if the deduction involved contributions or taxes
- Valid ID
- For representatives: SPA and IDs of worker and representative
Take screenshots showing the date, sender, and full message thread. Rename files clearly, such as Payslip_May15_cashbond.jpg or HR_message_damage_deduction.pdf.
3. Compute what you are claiming
State the exact amount you want refunded or released. If you are unsure, provide the best estimate and explain why.
Example:
“I am requesting refund of unauthorized salary deductions totaling ₱8,500, consisting of ₱1,000 cash bond deducted for five pay periods and ₱3,500 deducted from my final pay for alleged damaged equipment without investigation or proof.”
If the deduction also affected your 13th month pay, overtime, commission, or final pay, mention that separately.
4. File the Request for Assistance online or onsite
Through DOLE ARMS, you will provide personal information, employer information, employment details, the issue or claim, and the relief you are asking for. The ARMS terms state that information collected includes personal data, employment details, employer details, specific issues or claims, and the relief prayed for. (DOLE ARMS)
For the issue, choose the closest category available, such as money claims, unpaid wages, final pay, or labor standards concern. In the narrative, keep it factual and chronological.
A clear narrative can look like this:
“I worked as a cashier for ABC Store from January 10, 2025 to April 30, 2026. Starting February 2026, the company deducted ₱1,000 per payday as ‘cash bond.’ I did not sign a payroll deduction authorization except my employment contract, which only says the company may deduct losses. On April 20, 2026, HR also deducted ₱4,000 for alleged inventory shortage without giving me an incident report or chance to explain. I am requesting refund of ₱10,000 total deductions and a written breakdown of my final pay.”
5. Wait for notice and attend the SEnA conference
After filing, DOLE or the handling office will notify the parties. The conciliation-mediation period is generally 30 calendar days under the current SEnA framework. (DOLE ARMS)
Conferences may be onsite, online, or by another mode allowed by the office handling the RFA. Be ready to explain:
- When the deduction started
- Whether you signed any authorization
- Whether the employer gave a written explanation
- Whether you were investigated or asked to explain
- How much was deducted
- What remedy you are asking for
Stay calm and focus on documents. The SEADO is not there to act as your personal lawyer or the employer’s lawyer. The role is to help both sides explore settlement.
6. Put any settlement in writing
If the employer agrees to refund the deduction or release final pay, insist on clear terms:
- Exact amount
- Payment date
- Payment method
- Whether tax or government contributions are involved
- Documents to be issued, such as payslip, final pay computation, certificate of employment, or proof of remittance
- Consequence if payment is not made
Avoid signing a broad quitclaim unless the amounts are correct and you understand what claims you are waiving. A settlement should not hide the computation.
7. If no settlement is reached, ask where the case should be referred
If SEnA fails, the matter may be referred to the proper office depending on the nature and amount of the claim. Some simple money claims may fall under the DOLE Regional Director’s authority, while larger claims, illegal dismissal with money claims, or more complex disputes may go to the NLRC.
Under Article 129 of the Labor Code, the DOLE Regional Director or authorized hearing officer may hear and decide certain claims for recovery of wages and other monetary benefits arising from employer-employee relations, provided there is no reinstatement claim and the aggregate money claim of each employee does not exceed ₱5,000. (Lawphil) Claims exceeding ₱5,000 or involving reinstatement commonly go to the Labor Arbiter under NLRC jurisdiction. (Labor Law PH Library)
Practical Timelines
| Stage | Usual timeline | What can delay it |
|---|---|---|
| Preparing documents | 1–7 days | Missing payslips, no final pay computation, scattered screenshots |
| Filing RFA online | Same day if complete | Wrong employer details, poor internet, unclear issue |
| Notice to employer | Varies by office | Incorrect address, inactive email or phone number |
| SEnA conciliation-mediation | Generally within 30 calendar days | Employer non-appearance, need for additional computation, multiple workers |
| Settlement payment | Same day to several weeks | Employer cash flow, installment terms, need for payroll approval |
| Referral if unresolved | After SEnA termination | Jurisdiction questions, incomplete documents |
Money claims arising from employer-employee relations generally prescribe in three years from the time the cause of action accrued under Article 306 of the Labor Code. (Labor Law PH Library) Do not wait too long, especially if the deductions happened over many pay periods.
Common Salary Deduction Scenarios
Cash bond deducted every payday
Cash bonds are one of the most common issues. Employers sometimes deduct a fixed amount every payday for “shortages,” “damage,” “breakage,” “inventory,” “tools,” or “accountability.” This is not automatically valid. The employer should be able to show legal basis, recognized practice where applicable, clear authorization, proper accounting, and compliance with Articles 114 and 115.
If the cash bond was never returned after resignation, ask for refund and accounting. In Dentech, the Supreme Court upheld refund of a cash bond where the employer failed to show authority to require it. (Lawphil)
Deduction for lost or damaged company property
An employer should not simply deduct because something was lost. The worker should be informed of the charge, given a reasonable chance to explain, and clearly shown to be responsible. The amount should not exceed the actual loss or damage.
Useful evidence includes incident reports, inventory logs, CCTV references, turnover records, and messages showing who had custody of the item.
Uniform, ID, training, or medical deductions
These deductions depend on the facts. If the employer required the item mainly for business operations, the worker can question why the cost was charged to wages. If the employee signed a deduction authorization, check if it was specific, voluntary, and not contrary to law.
A vague clause saying “the company may deduct any amount from salary” is weaker than a specific written authorization identifying the item, amount, schedule, and reason.
Deduction from final pay
Final pay disputes often involve alleged loans, unreturned property, cash advances, or damages. Ask for a written final pay computation. If the employer refuses to release final pay unless you sign a quitclaim, raise that fact in the RFA.
A final pay deduction is easier to evaluate when you compare:
- Last unpaid salary
- Pro-rated 13th month pay
- Unused leave conversion, if company policy or contract allows it
- Commissions or incentives already earned
- Authorized deductions, loans, or advances
- Questionable deductions for penalties, damage, tools, or bond
Government contributions deducted but not remitted
If SSS, PhilHealth, or Pag-IBIG amounts were deducted but not remitted, the issue has two parts: the wage deduction concern and the non-remittance concern. Bring payroll proof and contribution records. DOLE may help with the labor component, while the relevant agency may handle contribution enforcement.
What to Say During the DOLE Conference
A worker’s strongest presentation is short, organized, and evidence-based.
Use this structure:
- “I was employed as ___ from ___ to ___.”
- “My salary was ___ per day/month/pay period.”
- “The employer deducted ___ for ___ on these dates.”
- “I did not authorize it / I was not investigated / I was not given a breakdown.”
- “The total amount is ___.”
- “I am requesting ___.”
Avoid exaggeration. If you are unsure about a date, say “approximately” and explain what document can confirm it. If the employer has a valid deduction for a loan or cash advance, separate that from the disputed deductions. This helps you appear fair and credible.
Special Notes for Kasambahays, Agency Workers, and Foreign Employees
Kasambahays may file an RFA. DOLE ARMS specifically includes kasambahays among those who may file. (DOLE ARMS) For domestic workers, salary deductions for damage, advances, or placement-related charges should be examined carefully because kasambahays are often in a weaker bargaining position.
Agency workers should identify both the agency and the principal company where they worked. If the deduction was imposed by the agency but the principal controlled the work conditions, provide both sets of details. This helps DOLE determine the proper parties.
Foreign employees working in the Philippines should prepare passport or ACR details, work permit or employment documents if available, contract, payslips, and communications. The fact that the worker is foreign does not automatically remove Philippine labor protections for work performed in the Philippines. The main practical issue is proving the employment relationship and identifying the Philippine employer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I file a DOLE complaint online for salary deductions?
Yes. You can file a Request for Assistance through DOLE ARMS, which allows electronic submission of RFAs and checking of RFA status. (DOLE ARMS) You may also file onsite at the appropriate DOLE office.
Is every salary deduction illegal?
No. Taxes, SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, lawful union dues, properly documented loans, and other deductions authorized by law or valid written authorization may be allowed. The problem is unauthorized, unexplained, excessive, forced, or unsupported deductions.
Can my employer deduct for damaged equipment?
Only under strict conditions. The employer should show that the deduction is legally allowed, that you were responsible for the loss or damage, that you were given a chance to explain, and that the amount is fair and supported by proof. Article 115 requires that responsibility be clearly shown before deduction from deposits. (Natlex)
Can my employer deduct a cash bond every payday?
Cash bonds are often questionable. Article 114 generally prohibits deposits for loss or damage except in recognized or authorized situations. If the employer cannot justify the bond or refuses to return it, you may include refund of the cash bond in your RFA. (Natlex)
What if I signed a contract allowing deductions?
A signed contract helps the employer, but it does not automatically make the deduction valid. The authorization should be specific, lawful, and not contrary to the Labor Code. A broad waiver or blanket deduction clause can still be challenged.
Can I file if I already resigned?
Yes. Salary deduction and final pay issues often arise after resignation. Keep your resignation letter, clearance papers, final pay computation, and messages from HR.
How much can I claim?
Claim the actual amount deducted or withheld, plus any other wage-related amount affected by the deduction. Prepare a simple computation per pay period. If the exact amount is unknown because the employer has the payroll records, state your estimate and request a proper accounting.
What happens if the employer does not attend SEnA?
The handling office may reset, contact the employer again, terminate the SEnA proceedings, or refer the matter to the proper office depending on the circumstances. Keep copies of notices and proof that you attended.
Do I need a lawyer to file with DOLE?
For the RFA stage, many workers file on their own. The process is designed to be accessible and less technical than litigation. A lawyer or authorized representative may be helpful if the amount is large, several workers are involved, the employer raises complex defenses, or the case may proceed to the NLRC.
Can I still file if the deduction happened more than three years ago?
Pure money claims arising from employment generally must be filed within three years from accrual under Article 306 of the Labor Code. (Labor Law PH Library) If some deductions are older and some are recent, list all deductions and dates so the proper office can determine which claims may still be recoverable.
Key Takeaways
- Employers cannot freely deduct from salary; wage deductions are allowed only when authorized by law, regulation, or valid consent.
- For loss, damage, tools, equipment, or cash bonds, the employer must satisfy stricter requirements and cannot skip due process.
- Start with a DOLE Request for Assistance through SEnA, usually through DOLE ARMS or the proper DOLE office.
- Prepare payslips, payroll screenshots, contracts, HR messages, final pay computations, and a clear table of deductions.
- The SEnA process generally focuses on settlement within a 30-day conciliation-mediation period.
- If settlement fails, the matter may be referred to the DOLE Regional Director, NLRC, or another proper office depending on the claim.
- Money claims generally prescribe in three years, so file as soon as the deduction becomes clear.