Calculate your exact end-of-service gratuity under Qatar Labor Law
Complete guide with calculator, examples, and Law No. 14 of 2004 regulations
Calculate your end-of-service benefits based on Qatar Labor Law
Real examples showing gratuity amounts for different service lengths
| Basic Salary | 3 Years | 5 Years | 10 Years | 15 Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QAR 5,000 | QAR 10,500 | QAR 17,500 | QAR 35,000 | QAR 52,500 |
| QAR 8,000 | QAR 16,800 | QAR 28,000 | QAR 56,000 | QAR 84,000 |
| QAR 10,000 | QAR 21,000 | QAR 35,000 | QAR 70,000 | QAR 105,000 |
| QAR 12,000 | QAR 25,200 | QAR 42,000 | QAR 84,000 | QAR 126,000 |
| QAR 15,000 | QAR 31,500 | QAR 52,500 | QAR 105,000 | QAR 157,500 |
| QAR 20,000 | QAR 42,000 | QAR 70,000 | QAR 140,000 | QAR 210,000 |
| QAR 25,000 | QAR 52,500 | QAR 87,500 | QAR 175,000 | QAR 262,500 |
| Formula: (Basic Salary ÷ 30) × 21 × Years = 0.7 × Salary × Years | ||||
Qatar uses the simplest gratuity calculation in the GCC: 21 days (3 weeks) of basic salary for EVERY year of service, regardless of tenure length. Unlike UAE (21/30 days) or Saudi Arabia (0.5/1 month), Qatar's rate is uniform throughout your career. The formula is: (Basic Salary ÷ 30) × 21 × Years of Service. Quick calculation: Multiply your basic salary by 0.7, then multiply by years worked. For QAR 10,000 salary and 10 years: 10,000 × 0.7 × 10 = QAR 70,000. This simplicity makes Qatar's system the easiest to understand among Gulf countries.
Step-by-step breakdown of Qatar Labor Law calculation
Gratuity = (Basic Monthly Salary ÷ 30) × 21 × Years of Service
Simplified: Basic Salary × 0.7 × Years of Service
Quick Calculation: For 10 years, multiply your basic salary by 7 (0.7 × 10). Example: QAR 10,000 × 7 = QAR 70,000 total gratuity. For 5 years, multiply by 3.5. For 15 years, multiply by 10.5. This is the easiest GCC gratuity formula to remember.
How gratuity differs between Qatar's employment sectors
| Service Period | Private Sector Rate | Government Sector Rate | 10-Year Example (QAR 10K) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Years 1-5 | 21 days/year | 1 month/year | Private: QAR 35,000 | Govt: QAR 50,000 |
| Years 6-10 | 21 days/year | 1.5 months/year | Private: QAR 35,000 | Govt: QAR 75,000 |
| Years 11+ | 21 days/year | 2 months/year | N/A for 10-year calculation |
| Total (10 Years) | 210 days | 12.5 months | Private: QAR 70,000 | Govt: QAR 125,000 |
Most expatriates in Qatar work in the PRIVATE SECTOR and follow the 21 days/year calculation. Private sector includes: international companies, private businesses, retail, hospitality, construction, healthcare (private), education (private schools), and consulting firms. Government sector typically applies only to Qatari nationals working in: government ministries, Qatar Petroleum, Qatar Airways (some roles), public hospitals, public schools, and state-owned enterprises. If you're an expatriate, you almost certainly fall under private sector rules (21 days/year) unless explicitly told otherwise. Check your employment contract—it should specify which labor law applies. The calculator above is set to private sector by default.
How different exit types affect your Qatar gratuity payment
Gratuity: 100% Full Amount
Example: QAR 70,000 (10 years, QAR 10K salary)
Full gratuity guaranteed if terminated without cause. Includes redundancy, restructuring, or performance. Applies after completing 1+ year. Must not be dismissed for gross misconduct per Article 61.
Gratuity: 100% Full Amount
Example: QAR 70,000 (10 years, QAR 10K salary)
Full gratuity if you resign after completing 5 or more years. Must provide proper notice period (1-2 months). No penalties or reductions. Best to complete 5 years before resigning voluntarily.
Gratuity: Reduced or Varies
Example: May receive partial amount
If you resign between 1-5 years, gratuity may be reduced based on contract terms. Some employers pay full, others partial. Check employment contract for specific terms. Best to wait until 5+ years for guaranteed full payment.
Gratuity: 100% Full Amount
Example: QAR 70,000 (10 years, QAR 10K salary)
When fixed-term contract expires naturally. Full calculated gratuity with no reductions. Common for expatriate employment. No need to resign—contract simply ends. Cleanest exit with guaranteed payment.
Gratuity: 0% (Completely Forfeited)
Example: QAR 0 (all gratuity lost)
Serious violations under Article 61 result in zero gratuity. Includes: fraud, assault, theft, gross negligence, or major misconduct. Employer must prove violation with evidence. Rare but results in complete benefit loss.
Gratuity: As Agreed (Usually 100%)
Example: QAR 70,000 (10 years, QAR 10K salary)
Both parties agree to end employment. Gratuity terms negotiated but typically full amount. Must be documented in writing. Good option for amicable separation. Can include additional severance if agreed.
Key statistics and facts about Qatar end-of-service benefits
Expert tips to ensure you receive full end-of-service payment
If your Qatar employer fails to pay gratuity at termination: (1) Send formal written request to employer and HR department via email and registered mail, (2) File complaint through Ministry of Labour website or visit Labour Relations Department, (3) Provide evidence: employment contract, payslips, service certificate, exit documents, (4) Ministry will investigate and mediate between parties with penalties for employer violations, (5) If unresolved, escalate to Labour Court for enforcement and compensation. Keep all documentation organized. The Wage Protection System (WPS) tracks salary payments but not always gratuity—manual complaint may be needed. Most cases resolve within 1-2 months through Ministry mediation. You can file complaint even after leaving Qatar if needed. Labour courts strongly favor employees in gratuity disputes when documentation is clear and employer violated Law No. 14 of 2004.
Common questions about Qatar labor law gratuity