Bahamas Employment Act: What Every Employer Needs to Know
Complete guide to the Bahamas Employment Act 2001. Minimum wage, overtime, leave, termination, NIB contributions, and what hotels keep getting wrong.

A resort in Nassau fired a housekeeper last year. Ten years on the job. They handed her a cheque for two weeks’ pay, walked her out, and figured that was that.
It wasn’t.
The Bahamas Employment Act 2001 is the primary legislation governing employment relationships in the Bahamas, covering everything from minimum wage ($260/week) and overtime (time-and-a-half after 40 hours) to annual leave, sick leave, maternity protections, termination notice, and severance pay. It applies to virtually every employer operating in the country, and its protections are significantly stronger than what most foreign-owned businesses expect.
That housekeeper was entitled to severance of two weeks’ pay for every year of service. Twenty weeks of pay, not two. The Industrial Tribunal added another 26 weeks in compensation for the way it was handled. The resort paid more in penalties than they would have spent getting it right.
This keeps happening. Hotels and resorts staffed by American and Canadian managers who assume Bahamian labour law works like what they’re used to back home. It doesn’t. The Employment Act has teeth, and the Tribunal uses them.
- Minimum wage is $260/week (effective January 2023), with overtime at 1.5x after 40 hours and 2x on public holidays
- Employees earn 2 weeks paid annual leave after 1 year, 1 week paid sick leave after 6 months, and 13 weeks maternity leave (12 weeks paid for NIB contributors)
- NIB contributions total 9.8% of insurable wages: 5.9% employer, 3.9% employee
- Termination requires proper notice (1 week to 1 month depending on tenure) plus severance of 2 weeks’ pay per year of service for non-managerial staff
- The Bahamas has 10 public holidays per year, and work performed on those days must be compensated at double time
What the Employment Act Actually Covers
The Employment Act 2001 is the foundational employment legislation in the Bahamas. Fifty-three sections covering the full employment relationship, from hiring to separation. It replaced a patchwork of older statutes and brought Bahamian labour law broadly in line with International Labour Organization (ILO) conventions.
It covers every employer and employee in the Bahamas, with limited exceptions for members of the Defence Force and police. Domestic workers, hotel staff, construction workers, gaming employees. All covered.
And here’s the part that surprises people: it’s not vague. The notice periods are specified by tenure. The overtime multipliers are fixed. The severance formula is mathematical. There’s very little room for interpretation, which means there’s very little excuse for getting it wrong.
Minimum Wage: $260 Per Week and Climbing
The current minimum wage in the Bahamas is $260 per week. That took effect January 1, 2023, up from $210. Before that, it sat at $150 since the Employment Act first introduced a statutory minimum in 2001.
Two increases in twenty-two years. The National Tripartite Council has signalled another is coming, possibly before end of 2026.
For context, $260/week works out to $6.50/hour for a 40-hour week. That applies across every industry. No separate tipped-worker rate. No training wage. No carve-outs for seasonal staff. The $260 floor is the floor, period.
Where Employers Get Tripped Up
Employers who pay monthly salaries sometimes lose sight of the weekly minimum. A monthly salary of $1,000 sounds reasonable until you divide it across a 48-hour work week and realise you’re paying below minimum wage on an hourly basis once overtime is factored in. The Employment Act calculates minimum wage on a weekly basis, and every pay arrangement has to clear that bar.
Overtime Rules That Actually Have Teeth
Standard workweek: 40 hours. Standard workday: 8 hours. Maximum daily hours: 12, hard cap.
Anything beyond 40 hours in a week or 8 hours in a day triggers overtime at time-and-a-half (150% of the regular hourly rate). Work performed on a public holiday or on the employee’s scheduled rest day: double time (200%).
This is where the hospitality industry bleeds money without realising it.
A front desk clerk earning $300/week works a 50-hour week during peak season. That’s 10 hours of overtime. Their regular hourly rate is $7.50 ($300 / 40). Overtime rate: $11.25/hour. Those 10 extra hours cost $112.50, not the $75.00 that a flat hourly calculation would produce.
Multiply that across a 200-person resort running peak-season schedules for four months. The difference between correct overtime and flat-rate overtime adds up to tens of thousands of dollars in underpayment. And when employees eventually raise it, the liability is retroactive.
The hotels that get this wrong aren’t malicious. They’re applying US labour thinking to Bahamian law. Different country. Different rules. The Act doesn’t care about your head office’s payroll policies.
Annual Leave, Sick Leave, and Maternity: The Entitlements Nobody Can Skip
Leave entitlements under the Bahamas Employment Act are tiered by tenure. They’re not generous by European standards, but they’re mandatory, and they’re more structured than what you’ll find across most of the Caribbean.
Annual Leave
- After 6 months of continuous employment: 1 week paid
- After 1 year: 2 weeks paid
- After 2 years: 3 weeks paid
One detail that catches employers off guard: vacation pay must be paid at least one day before the leave starts. Not on the next regular payday. Before the employee walks out the door. Get this wrong and you’ve technically violated the Act, even if the money showed up two days later.
Sick Leave
After 6 months of employment: 1 week (7 days) paid sick leave per year. The first sick day doesn’t require a medical certificate. Every day after that does. Unused sick leave doesn’t carry over. That’s it. Simple, but employers who don’t track it end up paying for sick days that were never earned or approving leave that exceeds the entitlement.
Maternity Leave
This is where the Act gets serious about protection. After 12 months of continuous service:
- 13 weeks total maternity leave
- At least 1 week before expected delivery, at least 8 weeks after
- 12 weeks paid for employees who are NIB contributors (NIB maternity benefit covers a portion, employer covers the gap)
- Employer pays minimum one-third of wages below the NIB insurable ceiling
- Dismissal due to pregnancy is automatically unfair under Sections 21 and 38, with no qualifying period
That last point is the one that matters most. You cannot dismiss someone because they’re pregnant. Full stop. Not during probation. Not during their first week. The protection applies from day one of employment, regardless of tenure. Employers who try to work around this by calling it a “performance issue” or a “restructuring” find out at the Industrial Tribunal that the burden of proof shifts to them.
If you’re managing leave entitlements across dozens or hundreds of employees, tracking tenure-based accruals manually is where mistakes creep in. One miscalculated start date changes someone’s entire leave balance. This is why employers running operations in the Bahamas increasingly rely on systems that automate workforce management rather than spreadsheets that drift.
The 10 Public Holidays (and Why Double Time Matters)
The Bahamas observes 10 public holidays per year:
- New Year’s Day (January 1)
- Majority Rule Day (January 10)
- Good Friday
- Easter Monday
- Whit Monday
- Labour Day (first Friday in June)
- Independence Day (July 10)
- Emancipation Day (first Monday in August)
- National Heroes Day (second Monday in October)
- Christmas Day (December 25)
If a public holiday falls on a Sunday, the following Monday is observed. If it falls on a Saturday, the preceding Friday is observed in many workplaces, though the Act itself is less prescriptive on this point than you’d expect.
Any employee required to work on a public holiday earns double time. Not time-and-a-half. Double. For hotels and resorts that operate 365 days a year, this is a significant payroll line item that needs to be budgeted, not discovered after the fact.
Probation Periods: What You Can and Can’t Do
The Employment Act allows for a probation period, but it doesn’t create a compliance-free zone. During probation, the employer can terminate with shorter notice (typically one week). But the employee still has rights.
Probation doesn’t exempt you from minimum wage. Doesn’t exempt you from overtime. Doesn’t exempt you from the prohibition on pregnancy discrimination. And if the probation period isn’t specified in the written statement of employment, the default rules on notice apply.
In practice, most employers set probation at 3 to 6 months. The Act doesn’t prescribe a maximum length, but unreasonably long probation periods (12 months, 18 months) can be challenged as an attempt to avoid statutory entitlements.
Running HR in the Bahamas shouldn’t mean guessing at compliance
Workzoom handles payroll, leave tracking, NIB contributions, and termination calculations for some of the largest Bahamian employers. One platform, $4/employee/month, no setup fees, no contracts.
Termination and Severance: The Expensive Part
This is the section of the Employment Act that generates the most Industrial Tribunal cases. And the reason is almost always the same: employers either don’t know what they owe or don’t follow the process.
Notice Periods by Tenure
- Less than 6 months: 1 week
- 6 to 12 months: 2 weeks
- 12+ months (non-managerial): 2 weeks
- Managerial/supervisory roles: 1 month regardless of tenure
Pay in lieu of notice must include the full wage package. Base salary, housing allowance, vehicle allowance, regular benefits. Employers who pay base salary only and skip the allowances are making a short payment, and it will be challenged.
Severance Calculation
Any employee with 12+ months of continuous service gets severance upon termination, unless dismissed for serious misconduct (theft, fraud, gross insubordination, gross negligence).
- Non-managerial employees: 2 weeks’ basic pay per year of service, capped at 24 weeks
- Managerial/supervisory employees: 1 month’s basic pay per year of service, capped at 48 weeks
The calculation uses the employee’s average weekly wage over the 12 months preceding termination. Not their current rate. Not their starting rate. The 12-month average. This distinction matters when employees have received raises, bonuses, or variable pay during that period.
Key Takeaway
A manager earning $1,200/week who’s been with you for 8 years is owed roughly $41,600 in severance alone, plus notice pay. Miscalculate and the Tribunal can add up to 26 weeks of additional compensation on top.
The 2017 Employment Amendment also closed a loophole some employers were using: terminating employees and immediately re-engaging them as independent contractors doing the same work. If you rehire a former employee as a contractor within 12 months of redundancy, the arrangement is deemed employment unless the new terms are more favourable to the worker. The Act anticipated that move and blocked it.
For a deeper look at the specific mistakes that land employers at the Industrial Tribunal, including the redundancy trap and unfair dismissal claims, we’ve covered that separately.
NIB Contributions: The Payroll Obligation That Never Stops
Every employer in the Bahamas must register with the National Insurance Board and contribute on behalf of every employee. The current rates:
- Employer: 5.9% of insurable wages
- Employee: 3.9% of insurable wages
- Total: 9.8%
- Insurable wage ceiling: $740/week ($38,480/year)
NIB contributions fund sickness benefit, maternity benefit, invalidity benefit, retirement pension, and survivors’ benefit. The employer portion is not optional, and late contributions attract a 10% surcharge plus 1.5% monthly compound interest.
New employers must register with NIB within 7 days of hiring their first employee. New hires must be registered individually. The C10 form (monthly contribution schedule) is due by the 15th of the following month. Miss it, and the penalties start accruing immediately.
We’ve written a complete guide to NIB compliance and C10 forms if you need the full breakdown of how Bahamian payroll actually works in practice.
Why Hotels and Resorts Keep Getting This Wrong
I’ll be direct about this. The pattern is specific and it repeats.
Large hospitality operations in the Bahamas are frequently managed by executives who built their careers in the US or Canada. They bring management playbooks from Marriott or Hilton corporate. Those playbooks assume at-will employment, FLSA overtime rules, and a legal environment where termination is relatively frictionless.
The Bahamas is not an at-will jurisdiction. There is no at-will employment. Every termination requires either proper notice or pay in lieu. Every employee with 12 months of tenure is entitled to severance. Dismissal without adequate documentation or process can be challenged as unfair, with the Tribunal empowered to order reinstatement or substantial compensation.
A 300-room resort running 200 staff during peak season might have 50 employees in overtime every week. If the payroll system is calculating overtime based on US FLSA rules (weekly threshold only, no daily threshold), it’s underpaying on every shift that exceeds 8 hours even if the weekly total stays under 40. That’s a liability building quietly, pay period by pay period.
If you’re managing payroll across multiple countries, the differences in how overtime, contributions, and termination work aren’t details you can approximate. They’re statutory requirements that vary by jurisdiction.
What Changes Are Coming
The Bahamian government has signalled amendments to the Employment Act expected by mid-2026. Based on what the National Tripartite Council has discussed publicly:
- Statutory paternity leave for the first time
- Expanded maternity benefits
- Alignment with additional ILO conventions
- A further minimum wage increase is under active consideration
For employers still tracking leave and pay manually, each amendment adds complexity that spreadsheets absorb poorly. The pattern with Caribbean labour law is consistent: protections expand, they don’t contract. Building compliance infrastructure now means you’re ready when the rules change, not scrambling after.
Employers across the Caribbean are dealing with similar dynamics. Jamaica’s payroll compliance market has its own complexities, and the trend across the region is toward stronger worker protections.
The Real Compliance Gap
The Bahamas Employment Act isn’t ambiguous. The notice periods are in the statute. The overtime multipliers are specified. The severance formula is arithmetic. The leave entitlements are tiered by tenure with specific accrual dates.
So why do employers keep ending up at the Industrial Tribunal?
Not because the law is unclear. Because the systems they use to apply it are inadequate. Paper files, disconnected spreadsheets, verbal agreements, and payroll processes that rely on someone remembering the rules instead of encoding them.
Cable Bahamas runs payroll and HR for 850 employees on Workzoom. Island Luck manages 850 staff across 60+ gaming locations. Both stopped treating compliance as something that happens in someone’s head and started treating it as infrastructure.
The Employment Act doesn’t reward good intentions. It rewards consistent execution. And consistent execution at scale requires systems, not willpower.
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