Grounds
A termination must be mutually agreed by the employer and employee, and upon the grounds outlined below, as well as following the industrial relations dispute settlement procedure. The procedure starts from serving a mandatory termination notice within 14 business days prior to the termination (7 business days if the employee is still in probationary period). The termination notice is not required if the termination is due to an urgent reason.
If the employee does not agree with the termination, he/she should convey his/her written objection to the employer no later than 7 business days upon receipt of the notice.
If the termination dispute arises, the subsequent settlement procedure will be: bipartite, if no settlement is reached, the dispute goes to tripartite negotiations (the most common method is mediation conducted in the local manpower office) and, if no mutual agreement is reached, a lawsuit can be filed to the Industrial Relations Court (IRC) and the court proceedings should be attended until a court ruling is handed down. An appeal to the Supreme Court is possibly submitted. Unless a termination is mutually agreed, a final and binding court ruling should be obtained for a valid termination.
- Termination without cause (ie, where dismissal cannot be avoided, such as in the case of a merger, an acquisition, a reorganization of the company, the employer taking efficiency measures with or without closing down the company (ie due to losses it has suffered or to prevent losses), force majeure, the employer being under a delay of payment process or bankruptcy of the employer; note that the employer still must show grounds for termination).
- Termination with cause (eg, where the employee breaches the employment contract, company regulations or collective labor agreement and commits gross misconduct (termination due to urgent reasons), or other reasons for the termination of the employment relationship that may be stated in the employment agreement, company regulations or collective labor agreement).
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Where the employee has been unable to work for over 6 months due to legal proceedings brought against them, either for a crime that causes the company to suffer a loss or otherwise; however, if the court finds the employee not at fault, the employer must re-employ the employee.
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Where the employee has been absent from work for 5 or more consecutive working days without providing reasons or evidence, and 2 written notices have been given.
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Where the employee has a prolonged sickness for 12 consecutive months.
- The employee has submitted an application to terminate the employment relationship due to the faults of the employer.
- Retirement.
- The employee passes away.
- Voluntarily resignation.
Employees subject to termination laws
All employees are subject to termination provisions under the Manpower Law.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
Termination cannot be on the basis of the following circumstances: a worker being absent due to illness according to a physician's statement for a period of not more than 12 months; a worker having a permanent disability or being ill due to a work accident or due to the employment relationship where, according to a physician’s statement, the recovery period cannot be determined; a worker being unable to carry out work due to the fulfillment of state duties; a worker performing their religious rituals; a worker getting married; a female worker being pregnant, in delivery, experiencing a miscarriage or breastfeeding her baby; a worker having a blood relationship and/or a marital relationship with another worker within a single company; a worker having reported the employer to the authorities alleging criminal activity by the employer; or a worker forming, becoming a member and/or the manager of a union, or carrying out activities of the union outside working hours, or during working hours with consent from the employer or based on the provisions of an employment agreement, company regulations or a collective agreement.
If the employer purports to terminate an employee's employment under any of the circumstances above, such termination is void by law, and the employer must continue to employ such employee.
Third-party approval for termination/termination documents
In addition to serving a notice to the employee and if the employee rejects the termination in writing, employers generally must first undergo the industrial relationship termination procedure which starts from having bipartite meeting(s) with the employees, followed with tripartite negotiations (which can be through mediation, conciliation, or arbitration procedures, but mediation is commonly opted by the disputing parties) if bipartite meetings fail to arrive at an agreement. If mutual agreement is not reached in tripartite negotiations, a lawsuit should be filed to the IRC. Employers should obtain a favorable decision on the termination of employment from the IRC or the Supreme Court if the IRC ruling is appealed to the Supreme Court (depending on the type of dispute which can be appealed).
Exceptions to the above apply if a FTC expires, the termination of employment occurs during the probation period of the worker (save for the mandatory termination notice, and as long as the probation period is specifically provided in writing and the termination procedure is expressly agreed in employment agreement, company regulations or collective labor agreement – although it is now subject to uncertainty due to Job Creation Law), due to the worker's voluntary resignation without pressure or intimidation from the employer, due to a mutually agreed termination or due to the worker reaching retirement age.
There is no applicable pension age for private sector employers. Currently, 58 years is the minimum age to obtain pension security from BPJS Ketenagakerjaan. However, a company may set a different retirement age to apply within the company under the employment agreement, company regulations or collective labor agreement (eg, 55 years).
Mass layoff rules
No specific definition of redundancy or layoff. Employers seeking to make employees redundant should ensure that they provide valid evidence as grounds for the redundancy. Employers must attempt to negotiate a proposed termination with an employee or relevant labor union, as all dismissals on redundancy grounds must follow industrial relations dispute settlement procedures if not mutually agreed. A consultation process must be completed before notice of termination is given to employees. Where a redundancy occurs, the employer must pay the employee severance pay, service pay (if applicable) and compensation pay.
Notice
Although employment cannot be terminated unilaterally through notice, the Indonesian manpower laws and regulations recognizes the concept of a notice period for termination particularly for permanent employees. A notice of termination must be drawn up in writing specifying the grounds for termination and compensation payable (eg severance package) to the terminated employee. It must be delivered officially and properly by employer to the employee no later than 14 business days prior to the termination.
If the termination is conducted in the probationary period 7 business days’ notice prior to the termination is required. No compensation is payable to a terminated employee during the probationary period.
A termination notice is not required if the termination is due to an urgent reason.
Written notice does not negate the legal requirement to perform the termination procedures as explained under "Third-party approval for termination/termination documents" if the termination is not mutually agreed.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
Payment in lieu of notice is not a recognized concept under the Manpower Law but if agreed by the employee and employer, it may be given in addition to the statutory termination package.
Employers may require employees to serve a period of garden leave in a form of suspension pending the outcome of industrial relations dispute settlement proceedings. During such period, employees are still entitled to their salary and usual entitlements.
Severance
The Manpower Law provides a single severance package formula which applies to most grounds for termination of permanent employees. The Manpower Law provides the following single severance package formula that applies to every lawful termination of employment:
- Standard severance pay: 1 month's salary for every year of service, up to 9 months' salary.
- Service appreciation pay: 2 months' salary for the first 3 years of service, followed by an additional month's salary for every 3 years of service thereafter, up to a maximum of 10 months' salary for 24 years of service.
- Compensation: to cover annual leave that has not expired or been taken, relocation expenses (to return the employee and their family to the place from which they were recruited, if applicable).
- Other benefits under the employment agreement, company regulations or collective labor agreement, if applicable.
If the termination is without cause or there is termination on retirement, the employee is entitled to the severance pay amount plus the standard service appreciation pay (if applicable) and compensation. If contested, a termination without cause may result in reinstatement.