I. Introduction
A Certificate of Employment, commonly called a COE, is one of the most frequently requested employment documents in the Philippines. It is used by employees and former employees for new job applications, visa applications, loan applications, government transactions, background checks, and proof of work history.
Despite its practical importance, disputes often arise when employers delay, refuse, or attach improper conditions to its release. In the Philippine labor context, the issuance of a Certificate of Employment is not merely a matter of company courtesy. It is a recognized employee right under labor regulations, and refusal or unreasonable delay may become the subject of a complaint before the Department of Labor and Employment, or DOLE.
This article discusses the legal basis, coverage, contents, procedure, limitations, employer obligations, employee remedies, and DOLE complaint process relating to Certificates of Employment in the Philippines.
II. What Is a Certificate of Employment?
A Certificate of Employment is a written document issued by an employer confirming that a person is or was employed by the company.
In general, it certifies:
- the employee’s name;
- the employee’s position or positions held;
- the inclusive dates of employment;
- sometimes, the nature of work performed; and
- sometimes, compensation details, if requested and appropriate.
A COE is not the same as:
- a clearance;
- a recommendation letter;
- a character reference;
- a quitclaim;
- a final pay computation;
- a separation agreement;
- a notice of termination;
- an employment contract; or
- a service record, though it may serve a similar practical purpose.
Its primary function is proof of employment, not proof of good conduct, eligibility for rehire, or full settlement of employment obligations.
III. Legal Basis for Issuance of Certificate of Employment
The main regulatory basis is found in the rules issued by the Department of Labor and Employment concerning final pay and employment certificates.
Under Philippine labor standards, an employee who requests a Certificate of Employment is entitled to receive one from the employer within the period prescribed by regulation.
The rule generally provides that a Certificate of Employment shall be issued by the employer within three days from the time of request by the employee.
This rule applies whether the employee is currently employed or already separated from employment, provided the request is made by the employee or former employee.
IV. Who May Request a Certificate of Employment?
A COE may be requested by:
1. Current employees
An employee who is still working for the company may request a COE for legitimate purposes such as loan applications, visa processing, rental applications, school requirements, professional licensing, or other personal transactions.
2. Resigned employees
A former employee who voluntarily resigned may request a COE even if the resignation was recent or even if final pay has not yet been released.
3. Terminated employees
An employee whose employment was terminated, whether for authorized cause or just cause, may still request a COE. The employer cannot refuse issuance merely because the employee was dismissed.
4. End-of-contract employees
Project employees, fixed-term employees, seasonal employees, probationary employees, casual employees, or contractual employees may request a COE reflecting their actual employment period and position.
5. Employees with pending disputes
An employee with a pending labor dispute, administrative case, civil claim, or criminal complaint is still entitled to a COE. The employer should not use the COE as leverage in the dispute.
V. Is the Employer Required to Issue a Certificate of Employment?
Yes. In the Philippine employment setting, the employer is required to issue a Certificate of Employment upon request.
The obligation is generally ministerial. This means that once the employee requests the certificate, the employer should issue it within the required period, provided the certificate states only truthful employment information.
The employer may not validly refuse the issuance simply because:
- the employee has not completed clearance;
- company property has not yet been returned;
- final pay has not yet been processed;
- the employee resigned without rendering the full notice period;
- the employee was terminated for cause;
- the employee has a pending administrative case;
- the employee filed a DOLE complaint;
- the employer is angry with the employee;
- the employee did not sign a quitclaim;
- the employee refuses to waive claims; or
- the employee intends to use the COE for another job.
A COE is not a reward for good behavior. It is documentation of a fact: that employment existed.
VI. When Must the Certificate of Employment Be Released?
The commonly applied DOLE rule is that the employer should issue the Certificate of Employment within three days from the time of request.
The request may be made:
- in writing;
- by email;
- through HR portal;
- by company form;
- through official communication channels; or
- by any method reasonably accepted by the employer.
For evidence purposes, the employee should make the request in a way that can be documented, such as email, text message, HR ticket, or written letter received by the company.
VII. Does the Three-Day Period Mean Calendar Days or Working Days?
The regulation commonly states “three days” from request. In practice, employers often treat this as three working days, especially if HR processing is involved. However, to avoid disputes, employers should release the COE as soon as reasonably possible and should not use internal processing delays as an excuse for unreasonable non-issuance.
If the request is urgent, the employee should state the deadline and purpose. While the employer is still bound by the regulatory period, clear communication helps establish urgency and good faith.
VIII. What Should a Certificate of Employment Contain?
A COE should generally contain the following:
1. Employee’s full name
The name should match the company’s records and, when possible, the employee’s government ID or employment contract.
2. Position or job title
The certificate should state the position held by the employee. If the employee held multiple positions, the COE may state the last position or include a summary of positions held.
3. Inclusive dates of employment
This is one of the most important parts. It should indicate when employment started and, if already separated, when it ended.
Example:
This is to certify that Juan Dela Cruz was employed by ABC Corporation as Accounting Assistant from 15 March 2021 to 30 June 2024.
4. Employment status, if appropriate
The COE may state whether the employee was regular, probationary, project-based, seasonal, contractual, fixed-term, or part-time, if this is relevant and accurate.
5. Nature of work, if requested
Some employees need a COE for visa, immigration, professional licensing, or overseas employment purposes. In those cases, the COE may include a brief description of duties.
6. Compensation, if requested
Salary information is not always included by default. It may be included if requested by the employee and if company policy allows release of compensation details.
7. Purpose clause
Some companies include a phrase such as:
This certification is issued upon the request of the employee for whatever legal purpose it may serve.
or
This certification is issued upon request for employment purposes.
8. Signature and company details
The COE should be signed by an authorized representative, typically HR, the employer, manager, or company officer. It should include the company name, address, contact details, and date of issuance.
IX. What Should Not Be Improperly Included in a COE?
A COE should be accurate, neutral, and limited to employment facts unless the employee requests more detail.
Employers should avoid inserting unnecessary negative statements such as:
- “terminated for misconduct”;
- “resigned while under investigation”;
- “not eligible for rehire”;
- “has pending accountability”;
- “did not complete clearance”;
- “with unpaid company loan”;
- “filed a labor complaint against the company”; or
- “issued only subject to settlement of obligations.”
A COE is not supposed to be used to punish, shame, blacklist, or prejudice the employee. If the employer wants to disclose sensitive employment history, it must consider truthfulness, relevance, data privacy, good faith, and potential liability for malicious or excessive disclosure.
X. Can the Employer State the Reason for Separation?
Generally, the reason for separation does not need to be included in the COE unless requested by the employee or required for a specific lawful purpose.
If the employee requests a neutral COE, the employer should ordinarily limit the contents to position and employment dates.
If the reason for separation is included, it must be accurate and not misleading. The employer should be careful because improper statements may expose the company to claims involving defamation, bad faith, unfair labor practice in extreme cases, or violation of data privacy principles.
XI. Is Clearance Required Before Issuance of COE?
No. As a general rule, clearance should not be a condition for the issuance of a Certificate of Employment.
Clearance is usually an internal process used to determine whether the employee has returned company property, settled cash advances, completed accountabilities, or obtained sign-offs from departments.
A COE is different. It merely certifies employment. The employer may separately process clearance and final pay, but it should not withhold the COE just because clearance is pending.
The proper approach is:
- issue the COE within the required period;
- continue processing clearance separately;
- process final pay in accordance with applicable rules;
- pursue legitimate accountabilities through lawful means, if any.
XII. Is Final Pay Required Before Issuance of COE?
No. The issuance of COE is separate from final pay.
Final pay may include unpaid salary, pro-rated 13th month pay, unused leave conversion if applicable, tax refund if any, separation pay if legally due, and other amounts under contract, policy, or law.
The COE should not be withheld because final pay is still being computed.
Similarly, the employee does not have to waive claims, sign a quitclaim, or accept the employer’s computation before receiving a COE.
XIII. Can an Employer Refuse to Issue a COE Because the Employee Resigned Without Notice?
Generally, no.
Even if an employee failed to render the required notice period, the employer should still issue a COE reflecting the actual dates of employment.
The employer may have separate remedies if the employee’s failure to render notice caused legally recoverable damage. However, the employer cannot use the COE as a form of punishment.
XIV. Can an Employer Refuse Because the Employee Was Dismissed for Cause?
No.
A dismissal for just cause does not erase the fact that employment existed. The employee may still request a COE showing the period of employment and position held.
The employer may issue a neutral COE without discussing the cause of termination.
XV. Can a Probationary Employee Request a COE?
Yes.
A probationary employee who worked for the company may request a COE. The certificate may indicate the actual period of employment and position. It should not be denied simply because the employee did not become regular.
XVI. Can a Project-Based, Seasonal, or Fixed-Term Employee Request a COE?
Yes.
Any employee who rendered service may request a COE. For project-based employment, the certificate may state the project assignment and the period covered, if accurate. For seasonal employment, it may state the season or period worked.
XVII. Can an Independent Contractor Demand a COE?
This depends on the relationship.
A true independent contractor is not an employee, so a company may refuse to issue a “Certificate of Employment” if no employment relationship existed. However, the company may issue a Certificate of Engagement, Certificate of Service, or similar document confirming the contractual engagement.
If the person was treated as an independent contractor but the facts show employer control and an employment relationship, the person may assert employee status before the proper forum. In that case, the issue may go beyond COE issuance and involve labor-only contracting, misclassification, illegal dismissal, unpaid benefits, or other labor claims.
XVIII. Can a Company Issue a “Certificate of Engagement” Instead of a COE?
Yes, if the person was genuinely not an employee.
A Certificate of Engagement may be appropriate for consultants, freelancers, independent contractors, or service providers. But if the person was actually an employee under the control test and other indicators of employment, merely labeling the document as “engagement” does not defeat labor rights.
The substance of the relationship prevails over the label.
XIX. Data Privacy Considerations
A COE involves personal information. Employers must process and disclose employment information in accordance with the Data Privacy Act and general privacy principles.
Important principles include:
1. Legitimate purpose
The COE should be issued for a lawful purpose requested by the employee.
2. Proportionality
The certificate should contain only information necessary for the purpose.
3. Accuracy
The employer must ensure that the information is correct and updated.
4. Security
The employer should release the COE through secure channels and avoid disclosing it to unauthorized persons.
5. Consent and authorization
If a third party requests verification, the employer should generally require authorization from the employee before releasing employment details.
XX. COE and Background Checks
Prospective employers often conduct background checks and may ask previous employers to verify employment. A COE helps the applicant prove prior work experience.
However, former employers should be cautious in giving background information. They should limit disclosures to verified employment facts unless the employee authorized further disclosure or the disclosure is otherwise lawful.
Malicious, excessive, false, or damaging statements may lead to liability.
XXI. COE for Visa, Immigration, and Overseas Employment Purposes
For visa or immigration purposes, a COE may need additional details, such as:
- employee’s position;
- employment period;
- salary;
- job description;
- regularity of employment;
- approved leave;
- company contact details;
- company registration details;
- signatory’s name and title.
Employers are not generally required to tailor every certificate to foreign embassy formats, but they should reasonably accommodate legitimate requests when the requested information is accurate and not confidential beyond the employee’s own data.
XXII. COE for Loan Applications
Banks, lending institutions, and financing companies may require a COE with compensation details. If the employee requests salary information, the employer may issue a COE with compensation or a separate compensation certificate.
Employers should ensure salary information is released only to the employee or with the employee’s authorization.
XXIII. COE for Current Employees
Current employees sometimes fear that asking for a COE will make the employer suspect resignation. Legally, a current employee may request a COE for many reasons unrelated to resignation.
Employers should not treat a COE request as resignation unless the employee clearly communicates an intent to resign.
A COE request alone is not a resignation.
XXIV. COE and Resignation
When an employee resigns, the employer should process the resignation, clearance, final pay, and COE separately.
A resigned employee may request a COE immediately after separation or even before the last working day, although the employer may issue the certificate after confirming the final employment date.
A common wording is:
This is to certify that [Name] is employed with [Company] as [Position] from [Start Date] until [End Date].
If the employee is still employed at the time of issuance, the wording may be:
This is to certify that [Name] is currently employed with [Company] as [Position] since [Start Date].
XXV. COE and Illegal Dismissal Cases
A dismissed employee may request a COE even while contesting the dismissal.
Issuance of a COE does not necessarily mean the employee accepts the dismissal as valid. It merely confirms the employment record.
Likewise, requesting or receiving a COE does not automatically waive the right to file an illegal dismissal complaint.
Waiver of labor claims generally requires a clear, voluntary, knowing, and reasonable quitclaim or settlement. A COE is not, by itself, a waiver.
XXVI. Employer Defenses and Limitations
Although employers are generally required to issue a COE, certain reasonable limitations may exist.
1. The employer may refuse false information
An employee cannot compel an employer to certify false facts. For example, the employer cannot be forced to state a higher position, longer employment period, or salary that is not true.
2. The employer may verify identity
The employer may require reasonable identity verification before releasing the document.
3. The employer may use standard format
The employer may use its standard COE template, provided it contains the required employment information and is not misleading.
4. The employer may decline unnecessary confidential details
The employer may refuse to include information that is confidential, inaccurate, irrelevant, or not supported by records.
5. The employer may issue factual wording only
The employer is not required to praise the employee or issue a recommendation. A COE is not a character endorsement.
XXVII. Common Employer Violations
Common problematic practices include:
- refusing to issue a COE unless clearance is completed;
- requiring the employee to sign a quitclaim first;
- delaying release for weeks or months;
- charging unreasonable fees;
- refusing because the employee filed a complaint;
- issuing a COE with damaging unnecessary remarks;
- issuing a false or incomplete COE;
- refusing to issue to terminated employees;
- refusing to issue to probationary or project employees;
- ignoring written requests;
- requiring personal appearance when remote issuance is reasonable;
- using the COE to pressure settlement of claims.
XXVIII. Remedies of the Employee
An employee whose COE is refused or delayed may take several steps.
1. Send a written request
The employee should first make a clear written request.
The request should include:
- full name;
- position;
- employment dates, if known;
- requested document;
- purpose, if necessary;
- preferred mode of release;
- contact details;
- date of request.
2. Follow up in writing
If there is no response within three days, the employee should follow up and refer to the employer’s obligation to issue a COE upon request.
3. Preserve evidence
The employee should keep copies of:
- request emails;
- text messages;
- HR tickets;
- resignation acceptance;
- payslips;
- ID;
- employment contract;
- company communications;
- proof of follow-up;
- proof of refusal.
4. File a complaint with DOLE
If the employer still refuses or delays, the employee may seek assistance from DOLE.
XXIX. DOLE Complaints Relating to COE
A complaint for non-issuance or delayed issuance of COE may be brought to the Department of Labor and Employment, usually through the appropriate regional office or field office.
The complaint may be handled through DOLE’s labor standards assistance mechanisms, including conciliation or mandatory conference processes, depending on the nature of the complaint and the applicable office procedure.
The complaint may be combined with other labor standards issues, such as:
- unpaid wages;
- unpaid final pay;
- unpaid 13th month pay;
- service incentive leave pay;
- non-release of employment records;
- illegal deductions;
- holiday pay issues;
- overtime pay issues;
- separation pay, if legally due;
- other labor standards violations.
However, if the dispute involves illegal dismissal, reinstatement, backwages, damages, or claims requiring adjudication beyond DOLE’s visitorial or enforcement authority, the matter may fall under the jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Commission, or NLRC.
XXX. DOLE Versus NLRC: Where Should the Employee Go?
The proper forum depends on the nature of the claim.
DOLE may be appropriate for:
- non-issuance of COE;
- delayed final pay;
- unpaid labor standards benefits;
- underpayment of wages;
- non-payment of 13th month pay;
- service incentive leave pay;
- other labor standards issues within DOLE’s authority.
NLRC may be appropriate for:
- illegal dismissal;
- reinstatement;
- full backwages;
- separation pay as relief for illegal dismissal;
- damages arising from dismissal;
- claims involving employer-employee disputes requiring compulsory arbitration;
- monetary claims exceeding jurisdictional thresholds or involving issues not suitable for DOLE summary enforcement.
A COE issue by itself is usually simpler and may be brought to DOLE. If it is connected to termination disputes, the employee may need to consider whether the broader case belongs before the NLRC.
XXXI. The Single Entry Approach, or SEnA
Many labor disputes in the Philippines pass through the Single Entry Approach, commonly called SEnA.
SEnA is a mandatory conciliation-mediation mechanism designed to provide a speedy, inexpensive, and non-adversarial settlement process for labor issues.
For COE disputes, SEnA may result in the employer agreeing to issue the certificate within a specified date. If the issue includes final pay or other benefits, those may also be discussed.
The goal is settlement, not immediate litigation.
XXXII. What Happens During a DOLE Conference?
In a typical DOLE assistance or conference setting:
- the employee files a request for assistance or complaint;
- DOLE notifies the employer;
- the parties attend a conference, physically or virtually;
- the employee states the issue;
- the employer responds;
- the DOLE officer facilitates compliance or settlement;
- if settled, the agreement may be recorded;
- if unresolved, the matter may be referred to the appropriate office or forum.
For a COE issue, the practical resolution is usually straightforward: the employer issues the COE.
XXXIII. Documents Needed for a DOLE Complaint
An employee should prepare:
- valid ID;
- written COE request;
- proof of request sent to employer;
- proof of employment;
- payslips;
- employment contract;
- company ID;
- resignation letter or termination notice, if any;
- employer’s refusal or non-response;
- emails or messages with HR;
- company address and contact details;
- name of HR officer or manager.
Even if the employee lacks complete documents, DOLE may still receive the complaint if the basic employment relationship and issue can be stated.
XXXIV. Can DOLE Order the Employer to Issue a COE?
DOLE may direct or facilitate compliance with labor standards obligations, including the issuance of employment documents required by labor regulations.
In many cases, the employer complies during the conference because the duty is clear and the burden of issuing a factual COE is minimal.
If the employer refuses despite DOLE intervention, the matter may lead to further enforcement action, referral, or additional proceedings depending on the circumstances.
XXXV. Possible Consequences for Employer Refusal
An employer that refuses to issue a COE may face:
- DOLE complaint;
- mandatory conference;
- adverse compliance findings;
- administrative inconvenience;
- possible labor standards enforcement;
- reputational harm;
- use of refusal as evidence of bad faith in related labor cases;
- possible separate claims if the refusal caused damage and was malicious or unlawful.
While the main remedy is often issuance rather than large monetary recovery, refusal can worsen the employer’s position in broader employment disputes.
XXXVI. Can an Employee Claim Damages for Non-Issuance of COE?
Possibly, but damages are not automatic.
To recover damages, the employee would generally need to prove:
- the employer had a duty to issue the COE;
- the employee requested it;
- the employer refused, delayed, or acted in bad faith;
- the employee suffered actual damage;
- the damage was caused by the refusal or delay.
Examples might include loss of a job opportunity, visa denial, loan denial, or reputational harm. However, proving damages can be difficult. The usual and more immediate remedy is to compel or facilitate issuance.
XXXVII. Can an Employer Charge a Fee for a COE?
Ordinarily, a COE should be issued without unreasonable cost. If the employer charges for notarization, courier, duplicate copies, or special processing, the charge should be reasonable, disclosed, and not used to obstruct the employee’s right.
A basic COE should not be treated as a paid privilege.
XXXVIII. Electronic COEs
A COE may be issued electronically, especially where company policy allows digital documents, electronic signatures, or HR portal certifications.
An electronic COE may be acceptable if it:
- clearly identifies the employer;
- contains accurate employment information;
- is signed or authenticated by an authorized representative;
- can be verified if necessary;
- is not easily alterable without detection.
For embassies, banks, or government agencies, physical signed copies may still be required depending on the receiving institution’s rules.
XXXIX. Notarization of COE
A COE does not always need to be notarized. However, notarization may be requested for certain transactions, such as visa applications, foreign employment, legal proceedings, or official documentation.
The employer is generally not always required to notarize unless company policy, receiving institution requirements, or agreement provides otherwise. Still, reasonable cooperation is advisable where the request is legitimate.
XL. Difference Between COE and Recommendation Letter
A COE confirms employment facts.
A recommendation letter gives an opinion on the employee’s performance, character, skills, or suitability.
An employer may be required to issue a COE, but it is generally not required to issue a favorable recommendation letter.
An employer may decline to recommend an employee, but it should still issue a factual COE.
XLI. Difference Between COE and Clearance
A clearance confirms that the employee has completed internal exit obligations.
A COE confirms that the employee worked for the employer.
The two should not be confused. The employer may withhold clearance if accountabilities remain unresolved, but the employer should not withhold the COE on that ground.
XLII. Difference Between COE and Final Pay
Final pay is the amount due to an employee after separation.
A COE is an employment certificate.
The employer should release both in accordance with applicable rules, but one should not be used to block the other.
XLIII. Difference Between COE and Quitclaim
A quitclaim is a document where an employee acknowledges receipt of amounts and may waive further claims, subject to legal standards.
A COE is merely proof of employment.
Requiring an employee to sign a quitclaim before issuing a COE is improper because it uses a mandatory employment document as leverage.
XLIV. Sample Employee Request for COE
Subject: Request for Certificate of Employment
Dear HR,
I respectfully request the issuance of my Certificate of Employment indicating my position and inclusive dates of employment with the company.
Kindly release the certificate within the period provided under applicable labor regulations.
Name: [Employee Name] Position: [Position] Department: [Department] Employment Period: [Start Date] to [End Date, if separated] Purpose: [Purpose, optional]
Thank you.
Respectfully, [Employee Name]
XLV. Sample Follow-Up Before Filing DOLE Complaint
Subject: Follow-Up on Request for Certificate of Employment
Dear HR,
I am following up on my request for a Certificate of Employment sent on [date]. As of today, I have not yet received the requested certificate.
May I respectfully request its release as soon as possible, considering that employees are entitled to receive a Certificate of Employment upon request within the period provided by labor regulations.
Thank you.
Respectfully, [Employee Name]
XLVI. Sample Neutral COE Format
CERTIFICATE OF EMPLOYMENT
This is to certify that [Employee Name] was employed with [Company Name] as [Position] from [Start Date] to [End Date].
This certification is issued upon the request of the above-named individual for whatever lawful purpose it may serve.
Issued this [date] at [place].
[Authorized Signatory] [Position] [Company Name] [Company Address] [Contact Details]
XLVII. Sample COE for Current Employee
CERTIFICATE OF EMPLOYMENT
This is to certify that [Employee Name] is currently employed with [Company Name] as [Position] since [Start Date].
This certification is issued upon request for whatever lawful purpose it may serve.
Issued this [date] at [place].
[Authorized Signatory] [Position] [Company Name]
XLVIII. Sample COE With Compensation
CERTIFICATE OF EMPLOYMENT AND COMPENSATION
This is to certify that [Employee Name] is employed with [Company Name] as [Position] since [Start Date].
Based on company records, the employee receives a gross monthly compensation of PHP [amount].
This certification is issued upon the request of the employee for [purpose].
Issued this [date] at [place].
[Authorized Signatory] [Position] [Company Name]
XLIX. Employer Best Practices
Employers should adopt a clear COE policy that includes:
- standard request procedure;
- authorized signatories;
- standard processing period;
- template formats;
- rules on salary disclosure;
- rules on third-party verification;
- electronic issuance process;
- data privacy safeguards;
- separation from clearance and final pay;
- escalation process for urgent requests.
A compliant employer should issue a factual, neutral COE promptly and avoid unnecessary disputes.
L. Employee Best Practices
Employees should:
- request the COE in writing;
- be specific about needed details;
- state if salary, job description, or employment status must be included;
- give reasonable format requirements if for visa or bank purposes;
- keep proof of request;
- avoid hostile language in the first request;
- follow up after the required period;
- file with DOLE if the employer refuses or ignores the request.
LI. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Am I entitled to a COE even if I was terminated?
Yes. Termination does not remove your right to a certificate confirming your employment.
2. Can my employer require clearance first?
Generally, no. Clearance and COE are separate.
3. Can my employer refuse because I have company property?
The employer may pursue return of company property separately, but it should not withhold the COE.
4. Can my employer refuse because I filed a complaint?
No. Refusing a COE because an employee filed a complaint may be evidence of bad faith or retaliation.
5. Can I demand that the COE say I performed well?
No. A COE is not a recommendation letter. The employer must certify true employment facts, not favorable opinions.
6. Can I demand a specific job title?
Only if the requested title is accurate and supported by records.
7. Can the employer include that I was dismissed?
The employer should generally avoid unnecessary negative details unless there is a lawful, relevant, and accurate reason to include them, or the employee requests a more detailed certificate.
8. Is a scanned COE valid?
It may be valid for many purposes, but some institutions require an original signed copy.
9. Can I file a DOLE complaint online?
DOLE has used online and regional filing mechanisms, but procedures may vary by region and over time. The employee should check the appropriate DOLE regional or field office procedure.
10. Can I file both COE and final pay complaints?
Yes, if both issues exist. COE issuance and final pay are separate obligations but may be raised together in a request for assistance.
LII. Practical Legal Analysis
The legal policy behind mandatory COE issuance is straightforward: employment history belongs to the factual life record of the worker. An employer should not be allowed to obstruct an employee’s future livelihood by refusing to confirm past employment.
In the Philippines, employment is often a gateway to financial credit, migration, new work, housing, and professional advancement. A delayed COE may prevent an employee from accepting a new job, completing a visa application, obtaining a bank loan, or proving work experience.
This is why the law treats the COE as a basic employment document rather than a discretionary favor.
At the same time, the employer is not required to falsify records or give a glowing endorsement. The correct balance is a neutral, truthful, timely certificate.
LIII. Key Principles
The core principles are:
- A COE must be issued upon employee request.
- The usual period is three days from request.
- The COE should state truthful employment facts.
- Clearance is not a valid precondition.
- Final pay is not a valid precondition.
- A quitclaim is not a valid precondition.
- Terminated employees may still request a COE.
- Probationary, project, seasonal, and fixed-term employees may request a COE.
- Independent contractors may receive a certificate of engagement instead, unless they are actually employees.
- DOLE may assist when an employer refuses or delays issuance.
- The COE should not contain unnecessary prejudicial statements.
- Data privacy rules apply to employment information.
LIV. Conclusion
In the Philippine labor context, a Certificate of Employment is a fundamental employment document. It confirms the reality of work performed and supports the worker’s ability to move forward after or during employment.
Employers should issue it promptly, truthfully, and without imposing improper conditions. Employees should request it in writing, preserve proof, and seek DOLE assistance when the employer refuses or delays.
The proper legal view is simple: a COE is not a favor, not a settlement tool, not a clearance reward, and not a character endorsement. It is a factual certification of employment that every employee is entitled to receive upon request.