I prepared a publish-ready draft below. I grounded the legal points on the Labor Code wage-deduction provisions, Supreme Court rulings on clearance/accountabilities and illegal deductions, DOLE final-pay guidance, and SEnA filing rules. Key sources used: Labor Code provisions on wage deductions, deposits for loss/damage, withholding of wages, and retaliation; Supreme Court rulings in Milan v. NLRC and Lusabia v. Super K Drug Corporation; DOLE/SEnA guidance on filing Requests for Assistance. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Company Charges Against Employees in the Philippines: What Employers Can and Cannot Deduct
Meta Title: Company Charges Against Employees in the Philippines: Legal Rules on Salary Deductions Meta Description: Can a company charge an employee for damaged property, cash shortages, uniforms, training costs, or unreturned equipment? Here is a practical guide under Philippine labor law. Suggested URL Slug: company-charges-against-employees-philippines
Can a Company Charge an Employee in the Philippines?
Yes, but only in limited situations and only if the charge is lawful, properly proven, and not imposed through an illegal salary deduction.
In the Philippines, employers cannot simply deduct money from an employee’s salary because the company believes the employee caused a loss, broke equipment, failed to hit a quota, resigned early, or still has a pending clearance. Wages are strongly protected under Philippine labor law. The general rule is simple: an employee must receive the wages due to them, and deductions are allowed only when the law permits them.
This issue usually comes up in very practical situations:
An employee accidentally damages a laptop or company phone. A cashier has a shortage. A rider loses company equipment. A restaurant deducts for broken plates. A company withholds final pay because the employee has not returned a headset. An employer charges for uniforms, training, tools, or a so-called “cash bond.”
Not all of these charges are automatically illegal. But not all of them are legal either. The answer depends on the reason for the charge, the employee’s fault, the company policy, whether there was due process, and whether the deduction is authorized by law.
The General Rule: Employers Cannot Make Arbitrary Salary Deductions
Under Philippine labor law, an employer cannot make deductions from an employee’s wages at will. Deductions are generally allowed only when they fall under legally recognized categories, such as deductions authorized by law, deductions with proper employee authorization where the law allows it, or deductions connected to a proven accountability that is legally chargeable to the employee.
This means the company cannot use payroll as a shortcut to punish employees.
For example, a deduction is questionable if the company says:
“We lost inventory, so everyone in the branch will be charged.”
“You broke the item, so we will deduct it from your next salary.”
“You resigned, so we will charge your training cost automatically.”
“Your final pay will not be released until you sign our quitclaim.”
“You must pay for the missing item even if we have not investigated.”
The law does not allow the employer to simply declare a debt and collect it from salary without proper basis.
When Are Company Charges Usually Legal?
A company charge is more likely to be legal if all of the following are present:
First, there is a real and specific loss. The company must identify what was lost or damaged, how much it is worth, and when the incident happened.
Second, the employee is actually responsible. The employer must be able to show that the loss was caused by the employee’s fault, negligence, willful act, or breach of duty. Mere suspicion is not enough.
Third, the employee was given a chance to explain. If the company is charging the employee for loss or damage, the employee should be heard before the amount is deducted or collected.
Fourth, the amount is reasonable and supported. The charge should not be inflated. If a used laptop is damaged, the employee should not automatically be charged the price of a brand-new laptop unless there is a valid reason.
Fifth, the deduction is allowed by law, regulation, contract, or a valid company policy that does not violate labor standards.
If these elements are missing, the charge may be treated as an illegal deduction, unlawful withholding of wages, or an invalid penalty.
Can an Employer Charge an Employee for Damaged Company Property?
Sometimes, yes. But the employer must prove responsibility.
If an employee intentionally damages company property, steals company property, or is clearly negligent, the employer may have a basis to discipline the employee and recover the loss. But the company still needs evidence. It cannot simply assume that the employee is liable because the property was assigned to them.
For example, an employee assigned a company laptop may be liable if the evidence shows that the laptop was damaged because the employee carelessly left it in the rain. But if the laptop stopped working because of normal wear and tear, factory defect, or a technical issue not caused by the employee, charging the employee would be questionable.
The same applies to vehicles, mobile phones, tools, headsets, tablets, inventory, and other company property. Assignment of property does not automatically mean the employee becomes an insurer of that property. The employee may be accountable, but liability still depends on fault, negligence, policy, and proof.
Can a Company Deduct for Cash Shortages?
Cash shortages are common in retail, restaurants, gas stations, pharmacies, convenience stores, and cashiering roles. Employers often ask: “Can we deduct shortages from the cashier’s salary?”
The safest legal answer is: not automatically.
A cashier or employee handling funds may be held accountable if the shortage is proven and the employee is responsible under a valid policy. But the company should still investigate. It should determine whether the shortage was caused by the employee, another worker, a system error, a pricing error, a voided transaction, theft by a third person, or a management control issue.
Blanket deductions are risky. For example, if a store has a missing amount and the employer divides the shortage among all staff without proving who caused it, the deduction may be illegal.
If the company wants to impose accountability for shortages, it should have clear written cash-handling rules, proper turnover procedures, audit trails, CCTV or transaction records when available, and a fair opportunity for the employee to explain.
Can Employers Deduct for Broken Items, Lost Inventory, or Customer Complaints?
This depends on proof and policy.
In many workplaces, employers deduct for broken plates, missing stocks, spoiled items, returned orders, incorrect deliveries, or customer refunds. These deductions are legally dangerous when they are automatic.
Business losses are generally part of business risk. An employer cannot shift ordinary business losses to employees just because the company wants to protect its profit. The company must show that the loss was caused by the employee’s fault or negligence.
For example:
If a waiter accidentally breaks one glass during normal work, charging the full price may be unreasonable depending on the circumstances.
If a warehouse worker knowingly violates handling procedures and destroys goods, a charge may be more defensible.
If inventory is missing but several employees had access and there is no proof of who caused the loss, charging one employee or all employees is risky.
If a customer refuses to pay because of a company system problem, it should not automatically be deducted from the employee.
The key question is always: Was the employee actually at fault, and can the employer prove it?
Are Cash Bonds Legal in the Philippines?
Cash bonds are sensitive under Philippine labor law.
A “cash bond” is usually money deducted from salary or collected from an employee to answer for possible future losses, damage, shortages, or unreturned property. This often happens in security agencies, retail stores, logistics companies, sales roles, and cash-handling jobs.
The law restricts this practice. Employers generally cannot require deposits for loss or damage to tools, materials, or equipment supplied by the employer, except in recognized or legally allowed situations. Even when deposits are allowed, the employer cannot deduct from them unless the employee has been heard and the employee’s responsibility is clearly shown.
This is important: a company cannot simply say, “We have a cash bond policy,” and then keep the money without proof.
If the employee resigns or is terminated and there is no proven accountability, the cash bond or deposit should generally be returned. If the employer refuses to return it, the employee may include it in a money claim.
Can a Company Charge Employees for Uniforms?
It depends on the nature of the uniform, the company policy, and whether the charge effectively reduces wages below what the employee is legally entitled to receive.
If the uniform is required by the employer for the company’s branding, operations, hygiene, or safety standards, charging the employee may be legally questionable, especially if the deduction is imposed without clear authorization or if it reduces the employee’s take-home pay improperly.
A company may have more room to charge for extra uniforms, replacement uniforms lost through the employee’s fault, or optional items, but it should still be reasonable and properly documented.
The employer should not disguise business costs as employee charges. If the uniform is necessary for the job and controlled by the employer, the safer practice is for the company to shoulder the cost or provide a lawful and transparent policy.
Can a Company Charge for PPE, Tools, or Equipment?
If the equipment is required for the employee to safely perform work, the employer should be very careful about charging employees for it.
Personal protective equipment, safety gear, required tools, and work equipment are often part of the employer’s obligation to provide a safe and lawful workplace. Charging employees for required safety equipment may create labor standards and occupational safety issues.
However, if the employee loses or intentionally damages company-issued equipment, the employer may investigate and seek reimbursement if responsibility is proven. Again, the issue is not whether the item belongs to the company. The issue is whether the employee is legally responsible for the loss or damage.
Can an Employer Deduct from Final Pay?
An employer may require clearance before releasing final pay. Clearance procedures are recognized because the employer has a legitimate interest in recovering company property and settling accountabilities.
But clearance should not be used as a tool to delay payment indefinitely or pressure an employee to waive valid claims.
Final pay generally includes unpaid salary, pro-rated 13th month pay, unused leave conversions if applicable, separation pay if due, retirement pay if due, tax refunds if applicable, and return of cash bonds or deposits if due. If there are valid accountabilities, the company may withhold or deduct only what is properly connected to those accountabilities.
For example, if the employee has not returned a company laptop, the employer may have a basis to hold the corresponding value or require return of the laptop before releasing the full amount. But if the only issue is that HR has not routed the clearance internally, the employee should not be made to wait without a valid reason.
A good rule of thumb is this: clearance may protect the employer from real accountabilities, but it should not become a blanket excuse to hold everything.
Can a Company Charge Training Costs if the Employee Resigns?
Training bonds or training cost agreements are common, especially where the employer pays for expensive certification, overseas training, specialized courses, or professional development.
These agreements are not automatically illegal. But they must be reasonable.
A training bond is more defensible when:
The training was real and valuable.
The cost was actually shouldered by the employer.
The employee knowingly agreed to the bond.
The lock-in period is reasonable.
The amount decreases over time or is proportionate.
The agreement is not used to prevent the employee from resigning.
A training bond becomes questionable when it is excessive, vague, punitive, or designed to trap the employee. For example, charging a huge amount for ordinary onboarding or basic company orientation may be unreasonable. Ordinary training needed to teach an employee how to do the job is usually part of the employer’s business cost.
Can an Employer Fine an Employee as a Penalty?
Employers should be careful with “fines.”
Company rules may impose disciplinary sanctions, such as written warnings, suspension, demotion in proper cases, or dismissal for just cause after due process. But monetary fines deducted from salary are highly sensitive because they affect wages.
If the “fine” is really a wage deduction for the employer’s benefit, it may be illegal unless authorized by law or clearly supported by a valid legal basis. Employers should not invent penalties like:
₱500 for being late ₱1,000 for failing to attend a meeting Salary deduction for not reaching quota Deduction for not joining a company event Deduction for minor mistakes without proof of loss
Tardiness and absences are different. The employer generally does not have to pay for time not worked, subject to wage and company policy rules. But a separate penalty deducted from earned wages is another matter.
What If the Employee Signed an Authorization?
Employee authorization helps, but it does not automatically make every deduction legal.
If an employee freely signs a clear and lawful authorization for a valid deduction, that may support the employer’s position. But consent obtained through pressure, threat, intimidation, or fear of dismissal may be challenged. Also, an employee cannot validly waive certain labor standards protections if the waiver is contrary to law or public policy.
For example, a payroll deduction authorization signed as part of a legitimate salary loan is different from a forced authorization making employees pay for unexplained inventory losses.
The more the deduction looks like a forced waiver of wages, the more legally risky it becomes.
What Should Employees Do if the Company Makes Illegal Deductions?
If you are an employee and your salary or final pay was deducted, start by asking for a written breakdown. Do not rely only on verbal explanations.
You should request:
A copy of the payslip showing the deduction A written explanation of the charge The company policy relied upon The computation of the amount The incident report, audit, or basis for liability A copy of any authorization you allegedly signed A status update on your clearance or final pay
If the deduction is for damage, shortage, or loss, ask when you were investigated and what evidence shows that you were responsible.
Keep copies of payslips, screenshots, messages, HR emails, clearance forms, resignation letters, notices, incident reports, and any acknowledgment receipts for returned property.
If the employer refuses to explain or return the amount, you may file a Request for Assistance through the Single Entry Approach, commonly called SEnA, with the appropriate DOLE office or labor agency. SEnA is meant to provide a faster, less expensive conciliation process before a full labor case develops.
What Should Employers Do Before Charging an Employee?
Employers should not treat deductions as an automatic payroll function. A proper process is safer and fairer.
Before charging an employee, the company should:
Identify the specific loss or damage.
Check whether the employee is actually responsible.
Review the employment contract, handbook, accountability form, and relevant policy.
Give the employee written notice or at least a fair opportunity to explain.
Document the investigation.
Compute the amount reasonably.
Avoid deducting from wages unless the deduction is legally allowed.
Get clear written authorization where required and appropriate.
Do not use threats, intimidation, or forced quitclaims.
Return cash bonds and deposits when there is no proven accountability.
For final pay, employers should process clearance promptly and communicate any specific pending accountability. If only one item is disputed, the employer should consider releasing the undisputed portion instead of holding everything.
Common Examples
Broken Company Laptop
If the laptop was damaged because of normal wear and tear, the employee should not be charged. If the employee negligently caused the damage, the employer may seek reimbursement after proper investigation.
Lost Headset or Phone
If the item was issued to the employee and not returned, the company may require return or charge the reasonable value, especially during clearance. The value should be fair and supported.
Cashier Shortage
The company should investigate first. A shortage does not automatically mean the cashier stole or mishandled funds. If the cashier is responsible under a valid policy and the evidence supports it, a charge may be possible.
Missing Inventory
A blanket deduction from all employees is risky. The employer must prove responsibility. Ordinary inventory shrinkage is usually a business risk unless employee fault is shown.
Uniform Deduction
This depends on the policy and circumstances. Required uniforms should not be used as a way to unlawfully reduce wages. Replacement of lost items may be treated differently if the employee is at fault.
Training Bond
A reasonable training bond for expensive specialized training may be valid. A penalty for ordinary onboarding or an excessive lock-in amount may be challengeable.
Unreturned Company Property and Final Pay
The employer may require clearance and may withhold amounts connected to real accountabilities, but should not delay final pay without a valid reason or use clearance to pressure the employee into giving up lawful claims.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my employer deduct damaged property from my salary without telling me?
No. If the deduction is for loss or damage, you should be informed of the basis and given a chance to explain. The employer should be able to prove your responsibility.
Can my employer charge me even if the damage was accidental?
Possibly, but not always. Accidents can happen without negligence. The employer must show that you were at fault or that you violated a duty or company policy.
Can the company deduct from all employees for missing items?
This is risky and may be illegal if there is no proof that each employee is responsible. Group deductions for unexplained losses are often vulnerable to challenge.
Can my final pay be held because I have not completed clearance?
Clearance is a recognized procedure, especially for return of company property. But it should be handled reasonably. If there is no real accountability, clearance should not be used to delay final pay indefinitely.
Can the company refuse to return my cash bond?
If there is no proven accountability, the cash bond or deposit should generally be returned. If the company claims a deduction from the bond, it should show the basis and prove responsibility.
Can I file a DOLE complaint for illegal deductions?
Yes. Employees may seek assistance through SEnA or the appropriate DOLE/NLRC process depending on the nature of the claim, whether employment is ongoing, the amount involved, and whether there are related issues such as illegal dismissal.
Bottom Line
A company in the Philippines may charge an employee only when there is a valid legal and factual basis. The employer must prove the loss, prove the employee’s responsibility, follow a fair process, and avoid unlawful wage deductions.
Employees are not automatically liable for every business loss, broken item, customer complaint, or missing inventory. Employers have the right to protect company property, but employees also have the right to receive their wages without arbitrary deductions.
When in doubt, ask for the written basis, the computation, and the evidence. A lawful charge should be transparent, documented, reasonable, and fair.
For citation placement in a live article, I’d add source footnotes around the sections on wage deductions, deposits/cash bonds, clearance/final pay, and SEnA filing.