Termination
Venezuela
Grounds
An employer may terminate an employee “with cause” based on the following grounds (within the restrictions indicated below, see “Bar against dismissal”):
- Dishonest, immoral or aggressive behavior.
- Offense or disrespect to the employer, the employer's representatives or family.
- Intentional or negligent behavior that may affect health and safety at work.
- Omissions or imprudence that seriously affects health and safety at work.
- Failure to attend work for 3 days within a month, without cause.
- Causing damage (with intent or negligence) to machinery, tools, furniture, raw materials or finished or unfinished products.
- Disclosure of industrial or trade secrets.
- Serious breach of labor-related obligations.
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Abandonment of work, including the sudden and unjustified exit from the workplace without permission; refusal to perform duties that are part of the job of the employee, unless the duties represent an imminent and grave danger to the life or health of the employee; and unjustified absence of the employee in charge of machinery or an activity that could disrupt other activities of the business.
Job Stability
All employees, except for top-level and management, are entitled to job stability, which means they cannot be dismissed without cause.
If an employer intends to terminate an employee “for cause,” it must notify the competent labor courts and indicate the grounds for dismissal with 5 working days from termination. If the employer fails to notify the courts, the dismissal will be considered “without cause”.
Employees may challenge the dismissal with the courts but lose the right to re-instatement if they do not oppose the dismissal within 10 days of the termination of employment.
In addition, the following employees are afforded special protections against dismissal, meaning they can only be dismissed with cause and prior authorization from the Labor Inspectorate:
- Pregnant women, from the beginning of the pregnancy, up to 2 years after birth
- Fathers, from the beginning of the pregnancy, for up to 2 years after birth
- Parents adopting children under the age of 3, for up to 2 years from the adoption
- Parents of a disabled or sick child
- Employees during suspension of the labor relationship
- Employees outsourced through unlawful outsourcing arrangements
- Trade union representatives and
- Health and safety representatives.
Employers should consider, however, that this protection and procedure is temporally superseded by the current general bar against dismissal that is in place (see “Bar against dismissal”).
Bar against dismissal
There is currently a general bar against dismissal or labor freezes in Venezuela which prevents employers from terminating employees on indefinite-term contracts without cause and without obtaining prior authorization from the Labor Ministry. The labor freeze applies to all employees except those holding top-level management positions and seasonal or temporary employees.
Only in the most extreme cases of misconduct or insubordination does the Labor Ministry grant authorization for dismissal. Therefore, employers tend to seek mutual agreement with employees to terminate the labor relationship.
Although labor freezes are intended to be temporary, the president has been extending them continuously since April 2002. The last extension was ordered by Executive Decree No. 4,753 published in the Official Gazette No. 6,723 on December 20, 2022. It has a duration of two years until December 31, 2024.
Third-party approval for termination
See above, under “Bar against dismissal."
Mass layoff rules
Mass layoffs occur when dismissals take place within a 3-month period, in the following numbers:
- At least 10 percent of employees in companies with more than 100 employees.
- 20 percent of employees in companies with more than 50 employees.
- 10 employees in companies with less than 50 employees.
When a mass layoff takes place, the Labor Ministry has the authority to suspend collective redundancies to ensure employment. Mass layoffs requirements do not apply to job reductions that are the result of voluntary departures of employees following enhanced termination offers. The requirements only apply to job reductions that are implemented unilaterally by employers.
Employers must initiate an administrative procedure for termination of its workforce before the Labor Ministry. The petition must set forth the economic or technical reasons that underpin the termination of workforce and provide certain supporting documentation. Once the petition is filed, a negotiation committee is set up. The negotiation committee is composed of 1 representative appointed by the workers’ union, 1 representative appointed by the employer and the labor inspector who chairs the committee and acts as a mediator. The negotiation committee may seek an agreement on the number of workers to be terminated, the timeframe for such terminations and the termination payments that will be provided to departing workers. Instead of the workforce termination, the negotiation committee may agree on alternative measures that avoid the job cuts.
This procedure is rarely used in Venezuela and most terminations are the result of a negotiation process with no government involvement.
Notice
N/A. None required.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
N/A
Severance
Employees are entitled to severance payments upon termination of employment regardless of the reason for termination. To ensure payment, employers must make quarterly deposits throughout the employment relationship equivalent to 15 days of pay, into a bank trust or by means of its accounting. This amounts to 60 days of pay per year, based on the salary earned at the time of each deposit, plus 2 additional days per year of seniority, up to 90 days in total.
The accumulated severance deposited or accrued generates interest at a special rate determined by the Venezuelan Central Bank for severance. This must be deposited or accrued on a yearly basis. If requested by the employee, the interest must be paid annually to the employee.
Upon termination, the employee is entitled to receive, whichever amount is greater, (i) the total amount deposited or (ii) the equivalent of 1 month’s salary at the time of termination multiplied by the number of years worked.
The salary basis used to determine the severance payment is the employee’s “global” salary, which includes both regular and occasional payments received by the employee.
Severance should be paid within 5 days of the termination date. Any payments made to the employee using severance funds prior to termination of employment are treated as severance advances, and these can only be granted once a year, for up to 75 percent of the accrued severance amount. They must only be used for specific purposes listed by law, such as home construction, purchase or repair, payment of mortgages on housing, school tuition and medical expenses.