kb-employment-law-lb

Category: Coding Risk: High risk ★ 3.9 · Rating 3.9/5 (8) sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal MIT

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credential_access

name: kb-employment-law-lb
description: Use when a matter involves employment law obligations, contracts, termination indemnity, NSSF contributions, or labor disputes in Lebanon. Covers the Lebanese Labor Code (Decree No. 207/1946 as amended), NSSF (Caisse Nationale de Sécurité Sociale), termination notice and indemnity formulas, serious-cause dismissal, non-compete enforceability, and the practical impact of Lebanon's economic crisis on pay obligations. Triggers on Lebanon employment contract, NSSF, termination indemnity LB, or Lebanese labor law questions.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.employment-law-LB
category: kb
practice_area: Employment Law
jurisdictions: [LB]
priority: P0
intent: [employment-law, Lebanon, NSSF, termination-indemnity, labor-code, non-compete]
related: [kb-employment-law-ksa, kb-employment-law-uae, kb-real-estate-lb, kb-family-law-lb-personal-status, draft-employment-contract]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Knowledge Pack — Lebanon Employment Law

Primary Sources

  • Labor Code — Decree No. 207 of 2 September 1946, as amended (the foundational statute covering private-sector employment).
  • Decree-Law No. 25/1976 — governs the National Social Security Fund (NSSF / Caisse Nationale de Sécurité Sociale), the main social insurance body.
  • Sector-specific decrees — certain industries (media, banking, construction) have supplementary collective agreements and decrees.
  • Council of State and Civil Service regulations — for public sector employment (separate body of law).

The Lebanese Labor Code is a civil-law code with mandatory protections that cannot be contracted away by the parties. Courts have historically interpreted it in favor of employees.

Scope of the Labor Code

Covers private-sector employees employed under a subordinate (employment) relationship. Excludes:

  • Domestic workers (governed by separate decree and largely unregulated in practice).
  • Agricultural workers (sector-specific rules).
  • Civil servants (public-law regime).
  • Senior managers with full managerial discretion (grey zone; courts assess subordination).

Working Hours

Category Standard
General (adults) Maximum 48 hours/week
Daily maximum 10 hours per day
Overtime (first additional hours) 50% premium on hourly rate
Night work / holidays 100% premium
  • Certain sectors (hospitality, healthcare) have specific sector-level rules.
  • Working hours disputes are among the most common labor court claims.

Probation Period

  • Default maximum: 3 months.
  • During probation: either party may terminate without notice or indemnity.
  • Probation must be expressly agreed in writing; absent written agreement, courts may not recognize probation status.
  • Once probation ends, full termination protections apply.

Annual Leave

Service Duration Paid Leave Entitlement
After 1 year of service Minimum 15 working days
Long tenure (sector/collective agreement may increase) Up to 20–25 days in some sectors
  • Leave payment cannot be replaced by cash during the employment (compulsory leave).
  • On contract termination, unused accrued leave must be paid out in cash.

Notice Periods (Art 50, Labor Code)

Service Duration Required Notice
Less than 3 years 1 month
3–6 years 2 months
6–12 years 3 months
More than 12 years 4 months
  • Notice applies to both employer-initiated and employee-initiated termination.
  • Notice must be in writing; can be served at any time.
  • Employer may pay wages in lieu of notice (garden leave equivalent).

Termination Indemnity (Art 50, Labor Code)

On termination (other than for serious cause), the dismissed employee is entitled to indemnity calculated as:

Service Duration Indemnity Rate
First 5 years 1 month salary per year of service
After 5 years 0.5 months salary per year thereafter

Salary base: the employee's last salary (basic + regular supplements).

Cap: the law sets a salary-tier cap; courts have applied this to reduce extremely high salaries in practice — verify current court application given Lebanon's monetary situation.

Key practical point (post-2019 financial crisis)

Lebanon's post-2019 banking and currency crisis fundamentally affected employment:

  • Contracts denominated in Lebanese Pounds (LBP) are worth a fraction of their original value.
  • USD-denominated contracts remain payable in USD (or fresh LBP equivalent at market rate) per court interpretations that evolved post-2019.
  • Labor court judgments on currency conversion have been inconsistent — case-specific advice required.
  • NSSF contributions and end-of-service fund severely impacted by banking sector collapse.

Dismissal for Serious Cause (Art 74, Labor Code)

Employer may terminate without notice or indemnity for serious cause, including:

  • Fraud, theft, or breach of trust against the employer.
  • Repeated unjustified absences despite warnings.
  • Physical violence or threats in the workplace.
  • Deliberate sabotage of the employer's business or property.
  • Disclosure of trade secrets.
  • Conviction of a crime affecting professional honor or trust.

Procedural note: while the Labor Code does not mandate a formal investigation procedure, Lebanese courts scrutinize the proportionality of serious-cause dismissals. Employers should:

  1. Document the misconduct.
  2. Notify the employee in writing of the grounds.
  3. Allow the employee an opportunity to respond before final termination.

NSSF — National Social Security Fund (Decree-Law 25/1976)

Registration

  • Employer must register with NSSF within 15 days of the employee's first day.
  • Failure to register: employer is liable for all benefits the employee would have received, plus penalties.

Coverage Branches

Branch Purpose Employer Contribution Employee Contribution
Family Allowances Monthly payments to employees with dependents ~6% of wage
Sickness and Maternity Healthcare and maternity cash benefits ~7% of wage 2% of wage
End-of-Service Indemnity Supplement to Labor Code indemnity ~8.5% of wage

Contribution rates approximate; verify current schedule with NSSF.

End-of-Service Indemnity (NSSF supplement)

  • Separate from the Labor Code Art 50 indemnity.
  • Employee receives both: the Art 50 statutory indemnity (paid by employer directly) and the NSSF end-of-service benefit (paid from the NSSF fund).
  • In practice, NSSF fund payments are severely impaired post-2019 crisis — fund has limited liquidity.

Maternity Leave

  • Female employees: minimum 70 days paid maternity leave (before and after birth).
  • Employer may not dismiss during maternity leave.
  • Breastfeeding breaks required post-maternity (1 hour/day reduced work, or combined break).

Non-Compete Clauses

  • Enforceable post-employment if:
    • Reasonable in scope (specific role/industry, not entire professional career)
    • Reasonable in territory (linked to employer's actual geographic presence)
    • Reasonable in duration (courts often limit to 1–2 years)
  • Courts will narrow excessively broad non-compete clauses rather than void them entirely.
  • Consideration is not required in Lebanese law for a valid non-compete (as part of employment contract).
  • Trade secret obligations survive employment without a separate clause (implied in Lebanese contract law).

Foreign Workers

  • Require a work permit issued by the Ministry of Labor (MOL) and a residence permit from the General Security Directorate (Sûreté Générale).
  • Sectoral restrictions: certain professions (engineering, medicine, law, pharmacy) require specific local registration.
  • Palestinian and Syrian nationals face additional restrictions under separate legal framework.
  • Employer (sponsor) bears responsibility for valid, current work permit — failure exposes both employer and employee to penalties.
  • Work permit validity linked to employment; on termination, employee must leave or change sponsor within permit validity period.

Key Practical Notes

  1. Currency: always specify the currency of remuneration in the contract (USD, EUR, or LBP). Post-2019, USD clauses are vigorously contested if parties attempt to pay in LBP at official rates.
  2. NSSF impairment: advise clients that NSSF end-of-service benefits may not be fully recoverable in the near term; direct employer indemnity remains the primary protection.
  3. Court system: Lebanese labor courts are specialized; proceedings are relatively accessible but can be protracted.
  4. Collective agreements: certain sectors (banking, press, hotels) have active collective agreements that improve minimum entitlements — always check sector applicability.

Caveats & Currency

Lebanon's labor law operates under severe macroeconomic stress. Court interpretations of currency obligations, NSSF fund recovery, and minimum wage levels (which are periodically reset but inadequate relative to inflation) change rapidly. Verify the current minimum wage (set by ministerial decree) and current NSSF contribution schedule. Post-2019 labor court jurisprudence on FX obligations requires case-specific research.

  • [[kb-employment-law-ksa]]
  • [[kb-employment-law-uae]]
  • [[kb-real-estate-lb]]
  • [[kb-family-law-lb-personal-status]]
  • [[draft-employment-contract]]