What end of service gratuity means in Qatar
End of service gratuity is a lump sum your employer pays you when your job ends. In Qatar it is a legal right under Article 54 of Law No. 14 of 2004. The employer must pay it once you qualify, so it is not discretionary.
The amount depends on two numbers: your last basic wage and your total length of service. The longer you stay and the higher your basic pay, the larger the gratuity. Allowances do not count toward the figure, which catches a lot of people out. More on that further down.
You will also see this payment called end of service benefits, or EOSB. The terms mean the same thing.
Who qualifies for gratuity in Qatar
You qualify once you complete one year of continuous service with the same employer. Work less than a year and no statutory gratuity is due, unless your contract grants it.
Continuous service is the key phrase. Annual leave, sick leave, and permitted absence all count toward your service. A break only breaks continuity if you were dismissed under Article 61, or you did not return to work within two months. Unpaid leave sits in the grey area. Some employers exclude long stretches of unpaid leave from the service total, which lowers the final figure, so check how your company treats it.
The rule covers all private sector workers in Qatar regardless of nationality. Qatari nationals enrolled in a pension or retirement scheme may receive that benefit instead, where it pays more than the standard gratuity.
How gratuity is calculated in Qatar
Qatar uses a flat rate of 3 weeks of basic pay for every year of service. Three weeks comes to 21 days. That rate is the legal minimum under Article 54, and it applies to every year equally.
You divide the monthly basic by 30 to get a daily wage, multiply by 21 days, then multiply by your years of service. Partial years are paid pro rata, so 3 years and 6 months counts as 3.5 years, not 3.
A worked example
Take a worker on a QAR 6,000 basic salary who stays 5 years.
The calculator above runs this exact math and shows each step, so you can check it line by line against your own contract.
The old tiered rates no longer apply
You may have seen calculators that pay more after 5 or 10 years, such as 4 weeks or 5 weeks per year. That was the old law. The current Labour Law sets a single rate of 3 weeks per year for all service. An employer can still choose to pay more by contract or company policy, but the legal floor is 21 days for every year, from your first year to your last.
Gratuity by years of service in Qatar
Here is what the statutory gratuity looks like at different lengths of service, using a QAR 6,000 basic salary as the example. The figure scales directly with your basic wage, so double the salary and you double the gratuity.
| Years of service | Days of basic pay | Gratuity on QAR 6,000 basic |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | 21 days | QAR 4,200 |
| 2 years | 42 days | QAR 8,400 |
| 3 years | 63 days | QAR 12,600 |
| 5 years | 105 days | QAR 21,000 |
| 7 years | 147 days | QAR 29,400 |
| 10 years | 210 days | QAR 42,000 |
The pattern is linear because Qatar uses one flat rate for all years. To find your own number, run your basic salary and exact dates through the calculator above.
Basic salary, not gross salary
Gratuity is calculated on your basic wage alone. Housing, transport, food, and any other allowance or bonus are left out.
This is the single biggest reason an estimate comes out wrong. Say your contract shows an all in figure of QAR 10,000, made up of QAR 6,000 basic plus QAR 4,000 in allowances. Your gratuity runs on the 6,000, not the 10,000. Using the gross number can overstate your payout by 40% or more.
If your payslip or contract only shows a total, ask HR for the basic portion before you calculate. The split changes everything.
Resignation versus termination: does it change your gratuity?
In Qatar, no. Resigning and being terminated pay the same gratuity, as long as you completed one year. There is no reduction for leaving early.
This is where a lot of people pick up bad information. The UAE applies a sliding scale that cuts gratuity for workers who resign before 5 years. Qatar does not copy that rule. If you resign after 2 years on the same basic salary as a colleague who was let go after 2 years, you both receive the identical figure.
The reason for leaving only changes the outcome in one case, which is covered next.
When gratuity can be forfeited
Dismissal under Article 61 is the exception. Article 61 lists specific cases of gross misconduct, such as assault at work, a serious breach of duties, or a conviction for a crime involving honour or honesty. An employer who dismisses a worker under Article 61 can withhold the gratuity in full.
This is a narrow provision, and the burden sits with the employer to justify it. If you have been told your gratuity is forfeited, confirm the dismissal was properly made under Article 61 and not just labelled that way. You can file a labour dispute if you disagree with the decision.
Does contract type change your gratuity?
The rate is the same for fixed term and unlimited contracts. A worker on a 2 year fixed term contract that runs to its end earns gratuity on the same 21 day basis as a worker on an open ended contract. What differs between contract types is the notice period and early termination compensation, not the gratuity rate. Complete one year and the end of service gratuity formula is identical either way.
How to use the Qatar gratuity calculator
- Enter your last monthly basic salary in QAR. Basic only, no allowances.
- Set your joining date and your last working day.
- Choose your rate per year. Leave it at 21 days for the statutory minimum, or switch to 30 days or a custom figure if your contract pays more.
- Pick your day basis. Keep 30 days unless your company calculates benefits on a 26 working day month.
- Select your reason for leaving.
- Add any amount you owe the employer, plus unpaid leave days if they apply.
The result updates as you type. You get the net figure, a step by step breakdown, the formula filled in with your own numbers, and a chart that shows how your gratuity built up year by year. Hover any information icon for the rule behind that field.
Common mistakes when calculating end of service benefits
A few errors come up again and again.
Using gross salary instead of basic is the most common, and it inflates the number. Next is rounding service down and dropping the extra months, when those months are paid pro rata. Third is assuming resignation cuts the payout, which is UAE logic and does not apply in Qatar.
People also forget that deductions are allowed. If you owe the employer for a salary advance or a loan, that amount comes off the gratuity before payment. And some still expect the old tiered rates, then feel short changed when the figure uses 21 days for every year. The 21 day rate is correct under the current law.
When gratuity is paid in Qatar
Final dues, including gratuity, are normally settled within 7 days of your last working day. Where an employer ends the contract without notice, the law expects payment to be made quickly.
Gratuity is not taxed. Qatar has no personal income tax, so the figure you calculate is the figure you receive, after any agreed deductions.
If your gratuity is late or short, raise it with your employer first. If that goes nowhere, file a complaint with the Ministry of Labour through mol.gov.qa or at a Labour Dispute Resolution Committee. Filing is free for workers.
Frequently asked questions
How is gratuity calculated in Qatar?
Gratuity in Qatar is calculated as 3 weeks (21 days) of your last basic salary for each year of service. The formula is (basic salary ÷ 30) × 21 × years of service. For a worker on a QAR 6,000 basic salary with 5 years of service, the end of service gratuity in Qatar is QAR 21,000. The Qatar gratuity calculator on this page runs the calculation for you and shows the full breakdown.
What is the gratuity for 5 years in Qatar?
For 5 years of service, gratuity equals 105 days of basic pay, which is 21 days multiplied by 5 years. On a QAR 5,000 basic salary, that comes to QAR 17,500. On a QAR 8,000 basic salary, it comes to QAR 28,000. Use the gratuity calculator Qatar tool above to get the exact end of service gratuity for your salary and dates.
Is gratuity calculated on basic salary or gross salary in Qatar?
Gratuity in Qatar is calculated on basic salary only. Housing, transport, food, and other allowances are excluded from the end of service gratuity calculation. Using gross salary overstates the amount, so confirm your basic wage with HR before you calculate.
Can I get gratuity if I resign in Qatar?
Yes. If you resign after completing one year of continuous service, you receive the full end of service gratuity under Qatar Labour Law. Qatar does not reduce gratuity for resignation, unlike some neighbouring countries. The rate is the same whether you resign or your employer terminates the contract.
How many years do you need to get gratuity in Qatar?
You need one full year of continuous service with the same employer to qualify for end of service gratuity in Qatar. Below one year, no statutory gratuity is due unless your employment contract grants it. After one year, every additional month is paid pro rata.
What is the minimum gratuity in Qatar?
The minimum gratuity in Qatar is 3 weeks of basic salary for every year of service, set by Article 54 of the Qatar Labour Law. This works out to 21 days of basic pay per year. Employers can pay more than the minimum by contract or policy, but never less.
Is gratuity calculated on 21 days or 30 days in Qatar?
Gratuity in Qatar is calculated at 21 days of basic salary per year, using a 30 day month to work out the daily wage. The formula divides your monthly basic by 30, then multiplies by 21 days and your years of service. Some employers use a 26 working day month instead, which raises the figure slightly.
Can an employer refuse to pay gratuity in Qatar?
An employer can only withhold end of service gratuity in Qatar if the worker is dismissed under Article 61 for gross misconduct. In all other cases, including resignation and normal termination, gratuity is a legal right after one year of service. If your gratuity is wrongly withheld, you can file a complaint with the Ministry of Labour.
How long does it take to get gratuity in Qatar?
End of service gratuity in Qatar is normally paid within 7 days of your last working day, as part of your final settlement. If payment is delayed, you can raise a complaint through the Ministry of Labour at mol.gov.qa, where filing is free for workers.
Is end of service gratuity taxable in Qatar?
No. Qatar has no personal income tax, so your end of service gratuity is not taxed. The amount you calculate is the amount you receive, after any deductions for money owed to your employer.