Indonesia
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- Capital City
Jakarta
- Currency
Indonesian rupiah (Rp, IDR)
- Languages
Indonesian
- Population size
267,670,543
Employment termination
Termination process
Indonesian labour law is unique in that it places the onus on employers to go the extra mile to avoid terminating an employee by negotiating to offer better working conditions, coaching, etc.
That aside, employee contracts can be terminated if a just cause is established, such as dishonesty, negligence, fraud, work-related offences, sustained illness over the course of 12 months, or business contingencies like redundancy or insolvency.
Notice period
There is no notice stipulated notice period but employers are generally expected to provide 30-days advance notice before terminating an employee.
Severance pay
Employees are entitled to severance pay that’s proportional to their tenure with an employer as defined below:
1 months wages: Up to 1 year of employment
2 months wages: Up to 1 year, but less than 2 years of employment
3 months wages: Up to 2 years, but less than 3 years of employment
4 months wages: Up to 3 years, but less than 4 years of employment
5 months wages: Up to 4 years, but less than 5 years of employment
6 months wages: Up to 5 years, but less than 6 years of employment
7 months wages: Up to 6 years, but less than 7 years of employment
8 months wages: Up to 7 years, but less than 8 years of employment
9 months wages: 8 or more years of employment
Probation periods
Probationary periods can only be set for employees on indefinite-term contracts and cannot exceed three months.