In Philippine labor law, holiday pay is a statutory benefit tied to specific legal holidays. The basic rule is simple: when a covered employee does not work on a regular holiday, the employee is generally entitled to 100% of the daily wage, subject to the Labor Code, implementing rules, and lawful company policies. But disputes often arise over when that entitlement may be lost, withheld, reduced, or denied. That is where the subject of holiday pay forfeiture becomes important.
“Holiday pay forfeiture” is not usually phrased in the law as a broad employer right to cancel holiday pay at will. In the Philippine setting, the question is narrower and more technical:
- When does the law itself deny holiday pay?
- When may absence, leave status, pay scheme, or exclusion from coverage defeat the claim?
- When is a company rule on forfeiture valid, and when is it illegal?
- How do regular holidays differ from special non-working days?
- What happens when the employee works on the holiday, is on leave, resigns, is dismissed, or is paid by results?
This article explains the topic in depth from a Philippine legal perspective.
I. Legal Foundation of Holiday Pay in the Philippines
Holiday pay in the Philippines is principally governed by:
- the Labor Code of the Philippines,
- the Omnibus Rules Implementing the Labor Code,
- Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) issuances,
- and, where applicable, collective bargaining agreements, employment contracts, and company policies that grant benefits more favorable than the legal minimum.
Holiday pay rules must also be read together with annual presidential proclamations declaring holidays and DOLE pay rules issued for each calendar year.
A crucial distinction must be made at the outset:
1. Regular holidays
These are holidays for which covered employees are generally entitled to holiday pay even if they do not work, provided the legal conditions are met.
2. Special non-working days
These do not follow the same holiday pay rule. The usual principle is “no work, no pay”, unless a favorable company practice, policy, or CBA provides otherwise. If the employee works, premium pay rules apply.
Because of this distinction, many supposed “forfeiture” issues are actually cases where the day involved is not a regular holiday at all, but only a special non-working day.
II. What “Forfeiture” Means in Practice
In Philippine labor practice, “forfeiture of holiday pay” can refer to any of the following:
- Complete loss of entitlement to holiday pay for a day that would otherwise be payable.
- Disallowance of a claim because the employee is outside the statutory coverage.
- Loss of pay for a regular holiday due to absence on the workday immediately preceding the holiday, where the rules require presence or paid leave.
- Reduction or non-payment because the employee is paid by results and does not meet the conditions for entitlement under the rules.
- Non-entitlement because the day is a special day, not a regular holiday.
- Invalid company forfeiture rule that the employer tries to enforce but which labor law does not recognize.
The central legal point is this: holiday pay may be denied only on grounds recognized by law, valid regulations, or lawful contractual arrangements more favorable to labor. Employers cannot invent forfeiture rules contrary to statute.
III. Employees Covered by Holiday Pay Rules
Before discussing forfeiture, one must determine whether the employee is entitled to holiday pay at all.
As a general rule, holiday pay applies to covered rank-and-file employees, but there are important exclusions.
Employees commonly excluded from holiday pay coverage
Under the implementing rules, holiday pay provisions generally do not apply to certain categories, such as:
- employees of the government and of government-owned or controlled corporations not governed by the Labor Code in this respect,
- managerial employees, if excluded under the applicable rules,
- officers or members of the managerial staff under the legal test,
- domestic helpers or persons in the personal service of another,
- workers who are paid by results in certain circumstances,
- and workers in retail and service establishments regularly employing less than a stated number of workers, under the older rule structure as traditionally discussed in labor law.
Because the statutory and regulatory language is technical, disputes often center not on “forfeiture” in the ordinary sense but on coverage. If a worker is legally excluded, there is no holiday pay to forfeit.
Important caution
An employer cannot merely label someone “managerial” to defeat holiday pay claims. Philippine law uses a functional test, not just job titles. A supervisor or lead employee may still be entitled if the legal criteria for managerial or managerial staff exclusion are not truly met.
IV. The Core Rule on Regular Holiday Pay
For a covered employee, the standard rule is:
- If the employee does not work on a regular holiday, the employee is entitled to 100% of the daily wage.
- If the employee works on a regular holiday, the employee is entitled to higher pay required by law.
But this entitlement is often conditioned by the rule on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday.
V. The Most Important Forfeiture Rule: Absence on the Workday Immediately Preceding the Holiday
This is the classic Philippine rule on holiday pay forfeiture.
General principle
An employee is generally entitled to holiday pay for a regular holiday if the employee is present or is on leave with pay on the workday immediately preceding the holiday.
Effect of absence
If the employee is absent without pay on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday, holiday pay may be denied.
This is the most recognized legal basis for forfeiture.
Rationale
The rule is designed to prevent employees from deliberately absenting themselves right before a holiday and still claiming the holiday benefit.
Example
If Monday is a regular holiday and the employee is absent without pay on Saturday, where Saturday is the scheduled workday immediately preceding Monday, the employer may deny holiday pay for Monday.
If the absence is with pay
If the employee is on:
- approved vacation leave with pay,
- sick leave with pay,
- or another form of authorized paid leave,
the absence does not ordinarily cause forfeiture.
If the employee is present
If the employee worked on the preceding workday, the holiday pay is generally preserved.
VI. What Counts as the “Workday Immediately Preceding”?
This is a frequent source of confusion.
The law refers to the scheduled workday immediately preceding the regular holiday, not necessarily the calendar day before it.
Example 1: Sunday rest day, Monday holiday
If the employee’s last scheduled workday before Monday is Saturday, then Saturday is the relevant preceding workday.
Example 2: Employee works Tuesday to Saturday
If the regular holiday falls on Monday, the workday immediately preceding may still be Saturday, because Sunday and Monday are not scheduled workdays.
Example 3: Shifting schedules
The relevant day is the employee’s actual scheduled workday immediately before the holiday.
This matters because an employer cannot validly deny holiday pay by pointing to absence on a day that is not the employee’s actual preceding workday.
VII. Two Successive Regular Holidays
Philippine labor rules recognize a special situation when two regular holidays fall on successive days.
General effect
For the first regular holiday, the normal rule applies.
For the second regular holiday, entitlement may still exist even if the employee does not work on that day, provided the employee:
- worked on the day immediately preceding the first holiday, or
- was on leave with pay on that day.
This prevents unreasonable forfeiture merely because the holidays are consecutive.
Illustration
If Thursday and Friday are both regular holidays, and the employee was present on Wednesday, the employee may generally claim both holiday pays, subject to coverage and other lawful conditions.
VIII. Absence on the Holiday Itself
If the employee does not work on a regular holiday, holiday pay is ordinarily still due, because that is the essence of holiday pay.
So the real forfeiture issue is usually not absence on the holiday itself, but absence on the preceding workday without pay.
However, if the employee is not in a pay status recognized by law, or is otherwise excluded from coverage, the claim may still fail.
IX. Paid Leave vs. Unpaid Leave
Paid leave
If the employee is on approved leave with pay on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday, holiday pay is generally not forfeited.
Unpaid leave
If the employee is on leave without pay on the preceding workday, the holiday pay may generally be denied.
This distinction is critical in payroll administration.
Common dispute
Some employers treat any absence as disqualifying. That is too broad. The legal distinction is between:
- presence,
- leave with pay,
- and absence or leave without pay.
Only the last category usually triggers forfeiture.
X. Sick Leave, Vacation Leave, and Other Authorized Leave
Sick leave with pay
No forfeiture, as a rule.
Vacation leave with pay
No forfeiture, as a rule.
Maternity-related, paternity, parental, or other statutory leaves
These require careful treatment depending on the pay structure and applicable law, but an employer should be cautious before denying holiday pay merely because the employee was on a legally protected leave. The key issue is whether the employee was in a paid leave status or otherwise in a legally protected pay status under the applicable scheme.
Unauthorized absence
This is where forfeiture is most likely valid.
XI. Rest Day Before the Holiday
A rest day is not the same as an absence without pay.
If the day before the holiday is the employee’s rest day, that does not by itself forfeit holiday pay. The relevant inquiry is the workday immediately preceding the holiday.
Example
If Sunday is the employee’s rest day and Monday is a regular holiday, the employer should look to Saturday. If the employee worked on Saturday or was on paid leave on Saturday, holiday pay for Monday is generally preserved.
XII. Tardiness and Undertime Before the Holiday
The law speaks primarily in terms of absence, not mere tardiness or undertime.
As a rule, mere lateness on the preceding day should not automatically cause total forfeiture of holiday pay unless:
- the lateness amounted to an actual unpaid absence under payroll rules,
- or a lawful and reasonable policy treats the day as unpaid due to failure to render the minimum required hours, consistent with labor standards.
Even then, any employer rule imposing total forfeiture for minor tardiness would be vulnerable to challenge as unreasonable and contrary to the protective nature of labor law.
XIII. AWOL and Unauthorized Absences
If an employee is absent without leave on the workday immediately preceding a regular holiday, the employer typically has the strongest basis to deny holiday pay for that holiday.
If the employee has gone on AWOL and is effectively not in active service, claims for holiday pay during that period may also fail, depending on the facts and payroll status.
However, the employer should still apply the law precisely. Not every disputed absence justifies automatic blanket forfeiture of all holiday-related pay.
XIV. Holiday Pay During Suspension
This depends on the nature of the suspension.
Preventive suspension
Preventive suspension is not disciplinary by itself. Whether holiday pay is due during the period requires examining:
- whether the employee remained in a pay status,
- whether the suspension exceeded legal limits,
- and whether the suspension was later found unjustified.
Disciplinary suspension
Where the employee is validly serving suspension without pay, holiday pay for a regular holiday falling within that unpaid suspension period may be denied, because the employee is not in a paid work status recognized for entitlement.
This is less a “forfeiture penalty” and more a consequence of unpaid suspension status.
XV. Holiday Pay During Strikes, Lockouts, and Work Stoppages
When no employer-employee work is being performed because of a strike, lockout, temporary closure, or work stoppage, entitlement to holiday pay depends heavily on whether employees are considered in pay status under the law and the facts of the dispute.
A blanket statement is unsafe. The controlling questions include:
- Are employees still considered employed but not working?
- Is the stoppage employer-caused?
- Is there a return-to-work order?
- Is backwages liability later imposed?
In these cases, the holiday pay issue is often tied to broader questions of wages, reinstatement, and backwages.
XVI. Employees Paid by Results, Piece-Rate, Task Basis, or Commission
This is one of the more technical areas.
Not all workers paid by results are automatically excluded from labor standards benefits. But holiday pay entitlement depends on how the rules classify the worker and whether the employee falls within an excluded category or is otherwise entitled under the regulations.
Possible forfeiture or non-entitlement scenarios
A piece-rate or task-paid worker may be denied holiday pay if:
- the worker falls under an excluded class under the implementing rules, or
- the compensation arrangement places the worker outside holiday pay coverage under the law.
Important nuance
The employer cannot simply say “commission ka, so no holiday pay.” The actual legal classification matters. Many compensation systems are mixed, and a worker may still be entitled depending on the structure.
XVII. Monthly-Paid Employees vs. Daily-Paid Employees
This distinction has long been important in Philippine labor standards.
Monthly-paid employees
Traditionally, monthly-paid employees are considered as already paid for all days in the month, including unworked regular holidays, if the monthly salary structure already accounts for them.
In such case, the issue is often not whether holiday pay is forfeited, but whether it has already been integrated into the monthly wage.
Daily-paid employees
Daily-paid employees are usually the ones for whom holiday pay must be specifically determined and shown.
Common dispute
Some employers wrongly deny holiday pay to daily-paid workers by invoking rules more applicable to monthly-paid salary structures.
XVIII. Special Non-Working Days: No “Holiday Pay Forfeiture” in the Usual Sense
A major source of confusion is the treatment of special non-working days.
For special non-working days, the general rule is:
- No work, no pay, unless there is a favorable company policy, practice, or CBA.
- If the employee works, the employee gets the required premium.
So when an employee does not receive pay for a special non-working day despite not working, that is usually not forfeiture. It is simply the ordinary legal rule.
Why this matters
Many payroll complaints arise from employees assuming all holidays are treated alike. They are not.
A regular holiday can generate holiday pay even without work. A special non-working day generally does not.
XIX. Special Working Days
When a day is declared a special working day, there is generally no holiday premium and no holiday pay unless a contract, policy, or CBA grants one.
Again, this is not forfeiture; it is non-entitlement under the nature of the day.
XX. Company Policies on Forfeiture: When Valid, When Invalid
Employers often maintain attendance rules tied to holiday pay. These must be examined carefully.
Valid company rules
A company rule is generally valid if it:
- mirrors the Labor Code and implementing rules,
- requires presence or paid leave on the workday immediately preceding a regular holiday,
- and does not reduce the statutory minimum.
Invalid company rules
A company policy is likely invalid if it:
- requires presence for several days before the holiday when the law requires only the immediately preceding workday,
- disqualifies employees for being late by a few minutes,
- denies holiday pay despite paid leave on the preceding workday,
- denies holiday pay for regular holidays by treating them like special days,
- or imposes blanket forfeiture inconsistent with the Labor Code.
Principle
Employer rules may supplement the law, but they may not defeat minimum labor standards.
XXI. More Favorable Benefits Cannot Usually Be Withdrawn Arbitrarily
If a company has a long-standing practice of granting holiday pay beyond the legal minimum, a separate principle may arise: non-diminution of benefits.
Relevance to forfeiture
Suppose a company has always paid employees for special non-working days even when no work was performed, or has long ignored disqualifying absences and still paid regular holiday pay. If that practice has ripened into a company benefit, the employer may not be free to withdraw it unilaterally.
Conditions
Not every past payment becomes a binding practice. The rule on non-diminution generally looks at whether the benefit was:
- consistent and deliberate,
- long continued,
- and not given by mistake.
Thus, a supposed “forfeiture rule” introduced later might be challenged if it unlawfully reduces an established benefit.
XXII. Collective Bargaining Agreements and Contractual Benefits
A CBA or employment contract may provide benefits better than the minimum law.
Examples:
- holiday pay for special non-working days,
- holiday pay regardless of prior absence,
- double pay for holidays beyond the statutory minimum,
- or broader coverage for excluded classes.
Where such favorable provisions exist, the employer must follow them. A contractual forfeiture rule that cuts below the legal floor would be void; a rule operating within a more generous benefit scheme would depend on the exact wording and labor law limits.
XXIII. Effect of Resignation, Separation, or Dismissal
If employment already ended before the holiday
The employee is generally not entitled to holiday pay for a holiday occurring after separation.
If the employee worked or was in valid employment status before the holiday
Entitlement depends on whether the employee was still an employee on the holiday and met the applicable rule on the preceding workday.
Wrongful dismissal cases
If an employee was illegally dismissed and later awarded backwages, holiday pay issues may be subsumed within or affect the backwages computation, depending on how the award is framed.
XXIV. Holiday Pay and Probationary Employees
Probationary employees are generally entitled to holiday pay if they are otherwise covered employees. Probationary status alone is not a lawful ground for forfeiture.
An employer cannot deny holiday pay just because the employee has not yet been regularized.
XXV. Part-Time Employees
Part-time employees are not automatically excluded from holiday pay coverage. The entitlement depends on coverage, wage arrangement, and the day’s relation to the employee’s schedule.
If a regular holiday falls on a day the part-time employee is scheduled to work and the legal conditions are met, holiday pay issues arise in essentially the same way.
Blanket denial based solely on part-time status is suspect.
XXVI. Field Personnel and Similar Categories
Whether field personnel are entitled depends on the statutory definition and whether their work time and performance are supervised in a way that brings them within or outside labor standards coverage.
Again, labels are not decisive. Misclassification is common in disputes involving holiday pay denial.
XXVII. Work Performed on a Regular Holiday and the Idea of “Forfeiture”
When an employee works on a regular holiday, the issue usually shifts from forfeiture of basic holiday pay to the correct premium computation.
A covered employee who works on a regular holiday is generally entitled to at least:
- the pay for the holiday itself,
- plus additional compensation required by law for work performed on that day.
If the holiday also falls on the employee’s rest day, an additional premium usually applies.
In this context, “forfeiture” arguments by employers are weak unless there is a genuine legal exclusion or payroll-status issue. Once work is actually rendered on a regular holiday, the statutory premium rules become mandatory.
XXVIII. Holiday Falling on Rest Day
If a regular holiday falls on the employee’s rest day:
- a covered employee who does not work is still generally entitled to the regular holiday pay, subject to the legal conditions for entitlement;
- if the employee works, enhanced premium rules apply.
The fact that the holiday is also a rest day does not automatically defeat holiday pay. It affects computation.
XXIX. Double Holiday Situations
Occasionally, two holidays may coincide. The applicable pay consequence depends on the exact kind of days involved and the current DOLE rules or guidance for that year.
In general, a regular holiday carries different consequences from a special non-working day, and simultaneous declarations can create special pay computations. In practice, payroll should follow the DOLE pay rules issued for the year in question.
Without current-year issuances, the safest legal approach is to distinguish carefully between:
- regular + regular,
- regular + special non-working,
- and holiday + rest day combinations.
XXX. Can Employers Impose “No Work, No Pay” on Regular Holidays?
As a rule, not for covered employees on regular holidays, because the essence of regular holiday pay is that the employee gets paid even without work, subject to the lawful conditions already discussed.
Thus, a company rule saying “no work, no pay on all holidays” is legally defective if it includes regular holidays and applies to covered employees.
XXXI. Payroll Errors vs. Lawful Forfeiture
Not every non-payment is a valid forfeiture. Common unlawful payroll practices include:
- classifying a regular holiday as a special day,
- ignoring approved paid leave on the preceding workday,
- treating the employee as excluded without factual basis,
- failing to pay holiday premium for actual work rendered,
- or applying an internal policy stricter than labor law.
When these occur, the employee may claim wage differentials, holiday pay, premium pay, and in some cases attorney’s fees or administrative relief.
XXXII. Burden of Proof in Holiday Pay Disputes
In labor standards controversies, employers are expected to keep payroll and attendance records. If the employer claims a lawful ground for denying holiday pay, it should be able to show:
- the employee’s classification,
- attendance on the relevant preceding workday,
- leave status,
- payroll basis,
- and the exact holiday classification.
Poor recordkeeping often weakens the employer’s defense.
XXXIII. Remedies for Wrongful Forfeiture
If holiday pay is unlawfully denied, the employee may pursue remedies through:
- internal grievance mechanisms,
- DOLE assistance mechanisms,
- labor inspection,
- or the proper labor adjudicatory process, depending on the claim and amount involved.
The possible relief may include:
- unpaid holiday pay,
- premium pay differentials,
- backwages where relevant,
- and other monetary claims allowed by law.
Prescription rules on money claims must also be considered.
XXXIV. Practical Scenarios
Scenario 1: Absent without pay on Saturday, Monday is a regular holiday
If Saturday is the employee’s scheduled workday immediately preceding Monday, holiday pay for Monday may be validly denied.
Scenario 2: On approved vacation leave with pay before the holiday
No forfeiture, generally.
Scenario 3: Sunday is rest day, Monday is regular holiday
Sunday does not disqualify the employee. Look to the actual preceding workday.
Scenario 4: Employee did not work on a special non-working day
Usually no pay, unless company policy or CBA says otherwise. This is not holiday pay forfeiture in the regular holiday sense.
Scenario 5: Company rule says any absence within the week before the holiday cancels holiday pay
Likely invalid if it goes beyond the statutory rule.
Scenario 6: Employee is probationary
Still generally entitled if otherwise covered.
Scenario 7: Employee is on unpaid suspension during the holiday
Holiday pay may be denied because the employee is not in paid status.
Scenario 8: Employee worked on the regular holiday
The employer must pay the lawful premium; ordinary forfeiture arguments usually do not apply.
XXXV. Key Misconceptions
Misconception 1: Any absence before a holiday causes forfeiture
Not any absence. The relevant absence is usually on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday, and paid leave is different from unpaid absence.
Misconception 2: All holidays are payable even if not worked
False. That is generally true only for regular holidays, not all special days.
Misconception 3: Employers may create any attendance rule they want
False. Company policy cannot go below statutory labor standards.
Misconception 4: Monthly-paid employees never have holiday pay issues
False. The issue may be integration into salary and correct computation, not total non-entitlement.
Misconception 5: Calling someone managerial automatically defeats the claim
False. Legal classification depends on actual functions.
XXXVI. Compliance Guidance for Employers
A legally sound Philippine payroll practice should:
- distinguish regular holidays from special days,
- identify covered and excluded employees correctly,
- verify the employee’s status on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday,
- treat paid leave differently from unpaid absence,
- compute premiums correctly for work on holidays and rest days,
- and avoid overbroad forfeiture policies.
Any company handbook provision on holiday pay should be reviewed against the Labor Code and implementing rules.
XXXVII. Guidance for Employees
An employee contesting a holiday pay deduction should check:
- Was the day a regular holiday or only a special day?
- Was the employee covered by holiday pay rules?
- Was the employee present or on paid leave on the workday immediately preceding the holiday?
- Did the employer misclassify the employee as managerial or excluded?
- Did the employee actually work on the holiday and receive the proper premium?
- Is there a company policy or CBA granting a better benefit?
These questions usually determine whether the non-payment is lawful or an illegal forfeiture.
XXXVIII. Bottom Line
Under Philippine labor law, holiday pay forfeiture is the exception, not the rule. For covered employees, the main recognized ground for losing regular holiday pay is absence without pay on the workday immediately preceding the regular holiday, subject to special rules such as successive regular holidays and the treatment of paid leave.
Beyond that, many supposed forfeiture cases are actually one of four things:
- the employee is legally excluded from coverage,
- the day involved is only a special non-working day,
- the employee is in an unpaid status such as unpaid leave or valid suspension,
- or the employer is applying an invalid policy that unlawfully reduces labor standards.
The safest legal summary is this:
- Regular holiday pay for covered employees cannot be withheld arbitrarily.
- Absence on the immediately preceding workday without pay is the classic lawful ground for denial.
- Paid leave generally preserves entitlement.
- Special days follow different rules.
- Company forfeiture policies are valid only if they conform to labor law and do not diminish benefits.
In Philippine practice, the legality of holiday pay forfeiture always turns on three questions: What kind of holiday is involved? Is the employee covered? What was the employee’s pay and attendance status on the immediately preceding workday? Those three questions resolve most disputes.