Namibia’s diverse economy, powered by mining, tourism, agriculture, and emerging technology, attracts businesses expanding into the country. However, setting up a business in Namibia or employing local teams requires adherence to payroll rules, including the Labor Act, social security contributions, and leave entitlements.
Compliance involves understanding specialized laws like overtime premiums and severance pay. Timely, accurate salary payments avoid MLIREC penalties, work permit issues, and disputes.
This guide covers payroll regulations, components, processes, challenges, and solutions, such as managed services, to support efficient operations.
Payroll regulations in Namibia: Legislation overview
Pay currency Namibian Dollar (NAD) | Minimum salary $1.18 per hour effective January 2025 | Working hours 45 hours per week; 9 hours daily (5-day week) or 8 hours daily (6-day week) |
Foreign employers must ensure compliance with contracts, tax withholding, and contributions when paying teams in Namibia.
Key regulatory bodies
- Ministry of Labour, Industrial Relations & Employment Creation: Regulates employment contracts, wage protection, and working conditions.
- Namibia Revenue Agency (NamRA): Administers tax compliance, including PAYE withholding and remittance.
- Social Security Commission (SSC): Manages maternity, sick leave, and death benefits via employer/employee contributions.
- Namibia Training Authority (NTA): Oversees VET levy collection and vocational training programs
Employment contracts and payroll link
- Two contract types:
- Fixed-term (1–3 years) – project-based roles.
- Permanent (unlimited-term) – ongoing employment.
- Contract type affects notice, severance, gratuity, and termination pay.
- Must specify salary, allowances, benefits, hours, leave, and termination terms.
- Probation is not legally mandated; the employer sets it in the contract.
Wage payment requirements
- Wages paid in cash or electronic transfer no later than one hour after shift end.
- Final pay is due the same day of termination.
- Minimum wage: $1.18/hour.
- No deductions for in-kind benefits (food, housing, etc.).
Penalties for non-compliance
- Late PAYE → interest charges + possible legal action.
- VET levy arrears → NTA can impose estimated penalties.
- Record-keeping failures → fines up to $260 or 12 months’ imprisonment.
- SSC/wage non-compliance → fines, business restrictions, or permit delays.
Payroll components in Namibia
Foreign companies can manage Namibian payroll remotely, but success requires understanding how to construct locally compliant compensation packages.
Salary structure
- Basic salary – basis for gratuity, SSC, and benefits.
- Allowances – housing, transport, education (not part of the statutory benefit base).
- Minimum wage: $1.18 per hour (from Jan 2025).
- Pay currency: NAD or contract-agreed alternative.
Here’s a summary of salary rules.
Component | Rule | Source |
Minimum wage | $1.18 per hour | National Wage Order 2024 |
Pay currency | NAD or agreed alternative | Employment contract |
Basic salary | Gratuity calculation base | Labour Act 2007 |
Allowances
- Housing: supports rent/mortgage, esp. in Windhoek & Swakopmund.
- Transport: offsets commuting costs across wide regions.
- Education: covers tuition for dependents.
- Not legally required; offered to remain competitive.
Leave
Proper leave calculations directly impact payroll accuracy and employee satisfaction across Namibia.
Leave type | Eligibility milestone | Duration | Paid rate | Documentation |
Annual leave | ≥6 months continuous service | 24 working days/year (pro-rated 6–12 months) | 100% | Labour Act 2007 |
Sick leave | After probation | 30 days (5-day week) / 36 days (6-day week) per 36 months | 100% (certified) | Medical certificate |
Maternity leave | ≥6 months service | 12 weeks (4 before + 8 after) | Basic wage via SSC | Medical and birth certificate |
Paternity leave | From a child’s birth | 5 working days | 100% | Birth certificate |
Compassionate leave | As occurs | Up to 5 working days | 100% | Proof certificate |
Public holidays | From hire | 12 annually | 100% or 150% if worked | Public Holidays Act 1990 |
Overtime
Namibia’s Labour Act sets clear parameters for overtime work and premium rates to protect employee welfare.
Overtime scenario | Trigger | Premium rate | Notes |
Standard overtime (daytime) | Beyond normal hours | 150% of regular hourly rate | Maximum 10 hours overtime per week unless work nature requires more |
Night work | 8:00 PM to 7:00 AM | Additional premium may apply | Shift workers may be exempt |
Weekly rest day / Public holiday | Work on designated off-day | Substitute rest day OR 150% premium | Contract defines weekly rest day |
Note:
- Standard working hours cannot exceed 45 hours weekly, with daily maximums of 9 hours (5-day week) or 8 hours (6-day week).
- Emergency healthcare workers and security officers may work up to 60 hours weekly and 12 hours daily under specific circumstances.
Social security, statutory deductions, pension contributions
What statutory deductions are made to employees in Namibia? Include SSC (0.9% each) and PAYE.
The following table summarizes mandatory contributions effective March 2025:
Contribution type | Employer contribution | Employee contribution |
Social Security (MSD Fund) | 0.9% of basic salary (max $58) | 0.9% (same cap) |
Employees’ Compensation Fund (ECF) | <1%–8% (by risk sector) | None |
VET Levy | 1% of gross payroll (if ≥$65,000 annual payroll) | None |
PAYE Income Tax | Withheld only | Progressive 0%–37% |
Total employer cost | ~1.9%–9% + VET levy | 0.9% + PAYE |
Income tax (PAYE) in Namibia
Namibia operates a Pay-As-You-Earn system where employers calculate, deduct, and remit income tax monthly by the 20th day following the month of deduction.
Annual income (USD) | Tax rate | Calculation |
Up to $6,508 | 0% | Tax-free |
$6,509–$9,762 | 18% | 18% on excess above $6,508 |
$9,763–$22,779 | 25% | $586 + 25% on excess above $9,762 |
$22,780–$35,796 | 28% | $3,840 + 28% on excess above $22,779 |
$35,797–$55,329 | 30% | $7,485 + 30% on excess above $35,796 |
$55,330–$100,903 | 32% | $13,345 + 32% on excess above $55,329 |
Above $100,903 | 37% | $27,928 + 37% on excess above $100,903 |
Medical insurance requirements
- No mandatory employer-provided insurance
- Many offer private plans
Gratuity (end-of-service benefits)
- Eligibility: ≥12 months continuous service.
- Triggers: unfair dismissal, employer insolvency/death, employee death, or incapacity.
- Formula: 1 week’s wages per completed year.
- No statutory cap.
- Part-time: proportional to regular work pattern.
- Based on the last wage before termination.
Payroll process in Namibia: Step-by-step
Following a structured payroll process ensures accuracy and compliance throughout each pay cycle.
Step 1: Gather employee data and time records
- Maintain complete employee registers: personal details, job title, start date, salary, hours, leave, and disciplinary records.
- Accurate time tracking underpins correct wage, overtime, and leave calculations. Here are time tracking methods:
Method | Setup Effort | Accuracy | Pros | Cons |
Manual timesheets | Low | Moderate | Simple, low cost | Error-prone, time-consuming |
Biometric systems | High | High | Prevents buddy punching, automated | Costly setup, maintenance required |
Cloud-based software | Moderate | High | Real-time data, integrated reports | Needs internet, subscription cost |
Step 2: Calculate gross pay and deductions
- Gross pay: Basic salary + allowances (housing, transport, etc.) + overtime (150%) + bonuses/commissions.
- Deductions:
- PAYE tax (progressive rates based on annual income).
- Employee social security: 0.9% on basic salary up to $7,170/month.
- Voluntary deductions: pension, medical aid, loans, union dues (with written consent).
- Net pay: Gross pay – total deductions.
Step 3: Submit payments to bank
- Use EFT for secure, traceable salary transfers.
- Small employers may use cash (requires strict documentation).
- Maintain transaction logs: references, dates, confirmations.
- Ensure timely payments to avoid labour law violations.
Step 4: Generate payslips and reports
- Provide clear, itemized payslips (gross pay, deductions, net pay, YTD totals).
- Payslips must be understandable and compliant with Namibian labour requirements.
- Core reporting obligations:
Report type | Purpose | Owner | Cadence |
PAYE returns | Tax compliance | NamRA | Monthly (by 20th) |
SSC returns | Social security reporting | SSC | Monthly |
VET levy return | Training fund reporting | NTA | Monthly (by 20th) |
Annual reconciliation | Year-end tax summary | NamRA | Annually |
Step 5: Submit statutory payments and returns
- Submit PAYE and payments via NamRA e-filing by the 20th of the following month.
- File SSC contributions for maternity, sick leave, and death benefits monthly.
- Employers with annual payroll ≥ $65,000 must submit VET levy returns to NTA monthly.
- Retain submission and payment records for at least five years (per Income Tax Act).
Common payroll challenges in Namibia
Even experienced employers encounter recurring obstacles when managing Namibian payroll. Here are the main challenges:
Multi-currency payroll for expatriates
- Balancing NAD-based reporting with foreign currency contracts.
- Exchange rate fluctuations complicate PAYE calculations and reporting.
- Convert all payments to NAD equivalents for statutory compliance.
Keeping up with legislative changes
- Non-compliance with new laws triggers penalties.
- Example: March 2025 SSC ceiling raised from $585 → $716/month.
- Monitor Government Gazette and update payroll systems promptly.
Manual calculation errors
- Risks: incorrect overtime, wrong tax brackets, missed ceilings.
- Automation prevents compounding errors and audit issues.
Industry-specific complexity
- Varying minimum wages: e.g., $1.22/hour (labourers) vs. $9.54/hour (security guards).
- Employer ECF rates vary (1–8%) by risk classification.
- Sophisticated systems needed to handle sector-specific variations.
Payroll processors like Multiplier automate these complexities, ensuring accurate calculations across all regulatory requirements while freeing HR teams to focus on strategic workforce initiatives.
Role of managed payroll services
“Payroll is an operational process. There’s a lot of changes, a lot of data changes that go in every single month, especially if you have people on hourly wages”
Outsourcing payroll to specialist providers offers compelling advantages for companies operating in Namibia, such as:
- Guaranteed compliance: Updates for Labour Act, NamRA, SSC, and NTA changes.
- Time savings: Automates calculations and submissions.
- Accuracy: Automated validation and error prevention.
- Scalability: Unified global payroll across countries.
- Local expertise: In-depth understanding of Namibian requirements and culture.
For companies not yet ready to establish a local entity in Namibia, an Employer of Record service offers a faster, more flexible alternative. The EOR becomes the legal employer, handling all employment contracts, payroll processing, tax compliance, benefits administration, and labour law adherence while your company directs day-to-day work activities. Learn more about payroll and EOR for global hiring or explore Namibia-specific EOR services.
Choosing the right payroll software
“Companies are under pressure to reduce costs while also growing. That’s why there’s demand for consolidated platforms and seamless integrations — tools that can automate processes and reduce errors for both admins and employees.”
Selecting appropriate payroll technology significantly impacts operational efficiency and compliance success.
- PAYE automation: Accurate bracket and return generation for NamRA.
- SSC integration: Ceiling tracking ($7,170/month), 1.8% split contributions.
- VET levy management: 1% levy for payrolls ≥ $65,000 annually.
- Leave management: Tracks annual, sick, maternity leave, and holidays.
- Overtime automation: Applies correct 150%+ premiums.
- Multi-currency support: Converts foreign pay to NAD for reporting.
- Language support: English payslips and reports.
- Audit trails: Records for compliance and audits.
- Syncs with HR, time-tracking, and accounting tools.
- Real-time dashboards for cost and compliance tracking.
- Cloud access enables remote payroll oversight.
Multiplier’s platform consistently receives strong reviews on G2 and Capterra for its comprehensive feature set, intuitive interface, and responsive support — making it a trusted choice for companies managing Namibian payroll.
How Multiplier simplifies payroll in Namibia
Multiplier’s dedicated Namibian payroll solution addresses the full spectrum of employer needs through advanced automation and local expertise.
Automated PAYE compliance
- Calculates tax per NamRA tables, applies correct brackets, and generates returns.
- Tracks YTD income and produces annual reconciliations automatically.
Comprehensive statutory management
- Automates SSC (1.8% split, $7,170 ceiling) and VET levy (1%) submissions.
- Ensures full regulatory compliance with NamRA, SSC, and NTA.
Multi-currency and allowance handling
- Pays in NAD or foreign currency with automatic conversion for reporting.
- Separates base pay and allowances accurately for benefit calculations.
Accurate gratuity and benefits
- Tracks service tenure and computes gratuity per Labour Act.
- Manages ECF contributions by industry.
Compliant reporting and payslips
- Generates detailed, itemized payslips and audit-ready reports.
- Covers PAYE, SSC, VET levy, overtime, and leave records.
Strategic HR enablement
- Reduces admin time by ~75%, enabling HR to focus on hiring, growth, and culture.
Book a demo to see how Multiplier can transform your Namibian payroll operations.
FAQs
How is PAYE calculated in Namibia?
PAYE is calculated monthly using progressive tax brackets based on total earnings.
What is the social security contribution rate in Namibia?
Both employers and employees contribute 0.9% of basic salary to SSC.
What is the minimum wage in Namibia for 2025?
The national minimum wage stands at $1.18 per hour, effective January 2025.
Do employers have to provide medical insurance in Namibia?
No, medical insurance is not mandatory, but many employers offer private plans.