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Egypt’s Labour Law No. 14 of 2025 represents the most comprehensive overhaul of employment contracts in Egypt in more than two decades, replacing the long-standing Labour Law No. 12 of 2003 and introducing sweeping changes to contract formation, leave entitlements, remote-work arrangements, termination procedures and severance calculations. Published in the Official Gazette on 3 May 2025, the statute entered into force on 1 September 2025, giving employers a narrow compliance window that many are still racing to close. For General Counsel, HR directors, payroll leads and in-country counsel, the practical challenge is no longer understanding what changed, it is executing the clause-level contract rewrites, policy updates and ministerial filings that labour law compliance in Egypt now demands.
This guide provides a step-by-step audit checklist, copy-ready sample clauses and an implementation roadmap so that every employment contract in your Egyptian operation meets the requirements of Law No. 14.
Before diving into the detail, here is the two-minute compliance brief. If you take away nothing else, act on these priorities immediately.
Must-do contract changes this quarter:
HR policy priorities:
What is the Egypt labour law in 2026? Labour Law No.14 of 2025 is the governing employment statute. It was enacted on 3 May 2025, entered into force on 1 September 2025 and replaces Labour Law No.12 of 2003. It applies to all private-sector employees in Egypt and introduces new protections around contracts, leave, remote work and termination.
Law No.14 applies to every private-sector employer operating in Egypt, regardless of size or industry. It was published in the Official Gazette on 3 May 2025 and took effect on 1 September 2025. Employers who had not updated employment contracts in Egypt by that date were technically non-compliant from day one. The statute also delegates significant operational detail to ministerial decrees, several of which have since been issued by the Ministry of Manpower to govern contract filing, electronic registration and working-hour arrangements. For a deeper overview of the statute’s background and policy objectives, see our Egypt Labour Law 2026, Employer Guide.
The changes that demand immediate contract redrafting fall into seven categories:
What are the new rules for employees? Employees now benefit from capped probation (three months), automatic conversion of fixed-term contracts, extended maternity leave (four months on full pay), new paternity leave, a statutory remote-work framework and enhanced severance protections, all of which must be reflected in updated employment contracts.
A contract audit is the fastest way to identify gaps and prioritise action. The table below provides a structured template that legal and HR teams can use to work through the entire employee population systematically.
| Employee group | Contract type | Clause category | Required change | Draft clause ref. | Owner | Deadline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All employees | All | Language & copies | Arabic original; three copies; file with labour office | Clause 1 | Legal | Immediate |
| Fixed-term staff | Fixed-term | Term & renewal | Cap at 5 years; auto-conversion language | Clause 5 | Legal | 30 days |
| New hires / recent hires | All | Probation | Max 3 months; single probation; clear end-date | Clause 4 | HR + Legal | 30 days |
| All employees | All | Working hours & overtime | 8-hour day; overtime caps & premium rates | Clause 7 | HR + Payroll | 60 days |
| All employees | All | Leave (annual, maternity, paternity) | Update entitlements per Law No.14 | Clause 8 | HR | 60 days |
| Remote / hybrid roles | All | Remote work | Add remote-work clause or supplemental policy | Clause 6 | Legal + IT | 60 days |
| All employees | Indefinite | Termination & severance | Notice periods; severance formula; dismissal grounds | Clauses 2–3 | Legal | 90 days |
Not every contract carries the same risk. Use this prioritisation logic:
What must employers file with the Ministry? Under Law No.14 and subsequent ministerial decrees, employers are required to file a copy of every employment contract with the competent labour office and to upload employee data electronically to the Ministry of Manpower’s registration portal within the timeframes specified by the applicable decree.
Immediate actions checklist:
The clauses below are drafted in English for illustrative purposes. In practice, the Arabic-language version is the legally binding text under Law No.14. Each clause includes a drafting note explaining the statutory basis and negotiation considerations.
“This Employment Contract is executed in the Arabic language in three (3) original copies: one for the Employer, one for the Employee and one to be deposited with the competent labour office in accordance with Labour Law No.14 of 2025. Any translation attached hereto is for convenience only and shall not prevail over the Arabic text in the event of inconsistency.”
Drafting note: Law No.14 mandates that employment contracts be in Arabic and that a copy be delivered to the labour office. Failure to comply exposes the employer to administrative penalties and weakens the employer’s evidentiary position in any dispute.
“Either party may terminate this Contract by serving written notice on the other party. The notice period shall be: (a) two (2) months where the Employee has completed more than ten (10) years of continuous service; or (b) three (3) months where stipulated by ministerial decree or by mutual agreement. During the notice period, the Employee shall be entitled to one full day off per week for job-seeking purposes, without deduction of pay.”
Drafting note: This clause reflects the minimum notice periods under Law No.14. Employers may agree to longer notice periods but cannot shorten them below the statutory floor. The job-seeking day is a statutory right and must not be omitted.
“Upon termination of an indefinite-term contract by the Employer (other than for a cause qualifying as summary dismissal under Article [X] of Law No.14), the Employee shall be entitled to severance pay calculated at a rate of not less than two (2) months’ most recent gross monthly salary for each complete year of service. For the avoidance of doubt, any fraction of a year exceeding six (6) months shall be treated as a complete year for severance calculation purposes.”
Drafting note: The two-months-per-year floor is mandatory. Employers may offer more generous terms. A worked example: an employee earning EGP 25,000 per month with seven years of service would receive a minimum of EGP 350,000 (7 × 2 × EGP 25,000). For a detailed severance calculator and termination notice template, see our guide on severance and termination procedures under Egypt’s labour law.
“The Employee shall serve a probationary period of three (3) months commencing on the start date. Either party may terminate this Contract during the probationary period without notice or severance, provided that the terminating party gives written notice at least [X] days before the intended termination date. The Employee shall not be subjected to more than one probationary period with the Employer.”
Drafting note: Law No.14 prohibits probation beyond three months and prohibits repeat probation with the same employer. Any clause exceeding these limits is void as a matter of law.
“This Contract is for a fixed term of [duration, maximum five years] commencing on [date] and expiring on [date]. If renewed, or if the Employee continues to perform work after the expiry date, this Contract shall be deemed converted into an indefinite-term contract as of the original start date, with all rights accruing accordingly.”
Drafting note: The automatic-conversion rule is one of the most significant changes under Law No.14. Employers should calendar contract expiry dates and make renewal decisions well in advance. Rolling short-term contracts are no longer a viable workforce-management strategy under the Egypt labour law.
“Where the Employer and the Employee agree that the Employee may perform all or part of their duties remotely, the following terms shall apply: (a) the Employee’s remote-working schedule, including core hours and availability, shall be set out in a Remote-Work Addendum; (b) the Employer shall provide or reimburse the cost of equipment necessary for remote work as agreed in writing; (c) the Employee shall comply with all data-protection and confidentiality obligations as if working on-site; (d) the Employer’s right to monitor performance and attendance remotely shall be exercised in accordance with applicable data-protection regulations; (e) social-insurance contributions shall continue to be calculated and paid on the basis of the Employee’s salary as if the work were performed on-site.”
Drafting note: Law No.14 recognises remote and flexible work arrangements for the first time under Egyptian statute. The clause above is intentionally modular, employers should develop a full remote work policy for Egypt as a standalone document and cross-reference it in the contract. For a sample policy template, see our guide on remote-work policy requirements for Egyptian employers.
“The Employee’s standard working hours shall not exceed eight (8) hours per day or forty-eight (48) hours per week, exclusive of rest and meal periods. Overtime shall not exceed two (2) hours per day and shall be compensated as follows: (a) daytime overtime, base hourly rate plus 35%; (b) night-time, rest-day or public-holiday overtime, base hourly rate plus 70%. Any on-call period during which the Employee is required to remain available shall be compensated in accordance with the applicable ministerial decree.”
Drafting note: The overtime premiums (35% day / 70% night and rest day) are statutory minima. Employers may negotiate higher rates but cannot offer less. Payroll systems must be configured to calculate these premiums automatically.
“The Employee shall be entitled to the following leave: (a) Annual leave, 21 days per year after six months of service, increasing to 30 days for employees with ten or more years of service or aged 50 or above; (b) Maternity leave, four (4) months on full pay, available for up to three pregnancies during the Employee’s career with the Employer; (c) Paternity leave, as prescribed by ministerial decree; (d) Sick leave, as certified by the competent medical authority and compensated in accordance with social-insurance legislation.”
Drafting note: Annual leave entitlements described here reflect the provisions commonly cited as Article 47 of Law No.14. Employers operating in hazardous environments or remote locations should check whether enhanced entitlements apply. Leave that is not taken within the applicable calendar year may carry forward only under the conditions specified in the statute; employers should not include “use it or lose it” language that contradicts the law.
Updated employment contracts in Egypt are only half the equation. The operational HR policies behind those contracts must be rewritten to match.
Every employer permitting remote or hybrid work should now maintain a standalone remote-work policy that covers eligibility criteria, schedule and core-hours requirements, equipment provision and reimbursement, data security and confidentiality, performance monitoring, health-and-safety obligations (including ergonomic standards for home offices) and the process for revoking remote-work arrangements. The policy should be referenced in the employment contract (see Clause 6 above) and issued as a signed addendum.
Leave policies must be revised to reflect the extended maternity entitlement (four months on full pay, up to three times), the new paternity-leave right and the updated annual-leave tiers. Administrative processes, request forms, approval chains, carry-forward rules and return-to-work procedures after maternity leave, should be updated simultaneously. Sick-leave procedures should reference the social-insurance coordination requirements under Law No.14.
Termination procedures Egypt employers follow must now include a mandatory investigation step before any summary dismissal. The policy should specify: who conducts the investigation, the timeline for completion, the employee’s right to be heard, documentation requirements and the sign-off authority for termination decisions. A template termination notice, including the statutory notice period, the severance calculation and the employee’s right to a job-seeking day, should be attached as an appendix. For a model termination-notice template and step-by-step calculation guide, see our article on summary dismissal procedures.
The National Wages Council has continued to announce periodic increases to the minimum wage in Egypt for the private sector. Employers must ensure payroll systems reflect the latest floor. A short payroll-change memo, issued to Finance, HR and line managers, should confirm the new minimum, the effective date, the affected employee population and the updated overtime and severance base rates. Industry observers expect further increases to be announced before the end of 2026, so building a repeatable payroll-update workflow is advisable.
| Policy area | Previous position (Law No.12) | New requirement (Law No.14) | Action required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternity leave | 90 days | 4 months on full pay (up to 3 times) | Rewrite leave policy; update payroll |
| Paternity leave | Not provided | New statutory entitlement per decree | Add paternity-leave clause to policy |
| Annual leave (10+ yrs / 50+) | 21 days | 30 days | Update leave accrual tables |
| Fixed-term renewal | Unlimited rolling renewals common | Auto-conversion to indefinite on renewal/continuation | Calendar expiry dates; convert contracts |
| Probation | Up to 3 months (practice varied) | Capped at 3 months; single probation per employer | Amend contract templates |
| Remote work | No statutory framework | Statutory recognition; must be in contract/policy | Draft standalone remote-work policy |
| Severance (indefinite term) | Varied; often negotiated | Minimum 2 months’ salary per year of service | Update HR handbook & payroll formulas |
The following timeline maps the key legislative and administrative dates to concrete employer actions. Assign clear ownership to avoid bottlenecks.
| Date | Event | Employer action (owner) |
|---|---|---|
| 3 May 2025 | Law No.14 enacted and published in the Official Gazette | Legal team to prepare statutory summary and gap analysis (Legal) |
| 1 September 2025 | Law No.14 enters into force | Begin executing updated contracts; submit employee data to Ministry portal (HR + Payroll + Legal) |
| Within 30 days of effective date | Ministerial decree filing deadline (per applicable decree) | Upload contract copies and employment data to the labour office (HR) |
| Q4 2025 | Ministerial decrees on remote work, paternity leave and wage council orders | Monitor Official Gazette; update policies as decrees are issued (Legal + HR) |
| Q1 2026 | First enforcement and inspection cycle expected | Conduct internal compliance audit; verify all contracts filed; train managers (Compliance) |
| Ongoing | National Wages Council minimum-wage announcements | Adjust payroll and update severance bases within 30 days of each announcement (Payroll) |
For employers with large workforces, the likely practical effect will be that a dedicated project team, comprising at least one employment lawyer, an HR operations lead and a payroll analyst, is required to meet the filing deadlines without disruption. Smaller employers should consider outsourcing the contract-update exercise to specialist employment lawyers in Egypt.
Law No.14 significantly raises the stakes for non-compliance. The Ministry of Manpower’s inspection directorate has authority to issue administrative fines, order corrective action and, in cases of repeated or serious violation, refer matters for criminal prosecution.
Common pitfalls to avoid:
Best practice is to maintain a compliance file for each employee containing the signed Arabic-language contract, the labour-office filing receipt, all policy acknowledgements and any investigation records. This documentation package is the employer’s primary defence in any inspection or dispute.
To accelerate your compliance programme, the following tools complement this guide:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Assem Al Hawy at Shield Advocates – Al Hawy and Hassane, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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