Payroll Management: Why Getting It Right Matters More Than You Think
- 5 days ago
- 1 min read
Payroll seems simple enough on the surface — pay your people on time, deduct the right amounts, and everyone's happy. But in practice, payroll is one of the most compliance-sensitive areas of running a business in Thailand.
What Thai Payroll Compliance Involves
As an employer in Thailand, your payroll responsibilities include: withholding Personal Income Tax (PIT) from employee salaries and remitting it monthly, contributing to the Social Security Fund (SSF) for all eligible employees, maintaining accurate employee records, and issuing annual income statements (50 Tawi) by January each year.
The Cost of Getting It Wrong
Payroll errors aren't just embarrassing — they're expensive. Incorrect tax withholding can trigger penalties from the Revenue Department. Failing to register employees with the Social Security Office within 30 days of hiring is a violation that carries fines. And if employees discover payroll errors, trust erodes quickly.
The Social Security Fund: What You Need to Know
Both employers and employees contribute 5% of salary to the Social Security Fund (capped at 750 baht per month each). This covers employees for healthcare, disability, maternity, and unemployment benefits. Staying current with SSF contributions is both a legal requirement and a mark of being a responsible employer.
The Smart Solution
For most small businesses, outsourcing payroll to a professional accounting firm is the most reliable and cost-effective approach. It ensures compliance, reduces administrative burden, and gives your employees confidence that they're being paid correctly and fairly every single time.
Ready to get started? Reach out to us today — we'd love to help.
Line: @acweissor | Email: info@acweissor.com
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