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MOM Termination Without Notice Singapore (2026): Salary in Lieu, Misconduct Inquiries & Employer Controls

By Global Law Experts
– posted 51 minutes ago

Understanding the rules around MOM termination without notice in Singapore has never been more consequential for employers. With the Workplace Fairness legislative framework heightening regulatory scrutiny in 2026, the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) and the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP) are paying closer attention to how companies handle summary dismissals. Employers who skip procedural steps, even when the underlying misconduct is genuine, risk costly wrongful dismissal claims at the Tripartite Alliance for Dispute Management (TADM). This guide walks employers, in-house HR professionals and company directors through every stage: the legal tests, the investigation playbook, salary-in-lieu calculations, documentation controls and dispute-resolution pathways, so that termination decisions are defensible from day one.

Key Takeaways, TL;DR for Employers

  • Summary dismissal without notice is permitted only in narrow circumstances, principally gross misconduct or a fundamental breach of contract, as set out by MOM.
  • Salary in lieu of notice must be paid whenever the contract provides for a notice period and the terminating party does not serve it, unless the dismissal is for proven misconduct after a proper inquiry.
  • A written termination letter is required, MOM guidance makes clear that termination notices must be given in writing.
  • Fair inquiry before dismissal is not merely best practice; it is the single factor most likely to determine the outcome of a TADM wrongful dismissal claim.
  • If in doubt, pause. Follow the step-by-step checklist in Section 3 below before taking any action. Consult a Singapore employment lawyer for complex or high-value cases.

1. Legal Overview: Termination Types and Statutory Hooks

Singapore’s Employment Act, accessible via the Attorney-General’s Chambers’ Singapore Statutes Online, is the primary legislation governing the termination of employment for employees covered by the Act. MOM’s termination-of-employment guidance translates the Act’s provisions into practical rules that apply across most private-sector contracts. Employers who fall outside the Employment Act’s coverage (for example, those employing seafarers or domestic workers on separate statutes) still face contractual and common-law obligations that mirror many of the same principles.

Quick Definitions

  • Termination with notice. Either party ends the contract by serving the notice period stated in the employment contract (or the statutory minimum if the contract is silent). Salary in lieu may be paid instead of serving the notice period.
  • Termination without notice (summary dismissal). The contract is ended immediately, no notice period is served, and no salary in lieu is paid, typically triggered by gross misconduct or a fundamental contractual breach.
  • Resignation. The employee initiates termination; the same notice-period and salary-in-lieu rules apply in reverse.
  • Retrenchment. Termination due to redundancy or restructuring, governed by separate MOM guidelines on retrenchment benefits.
Termination Type Legal Basis Typical Employer Action
Termination with notice Employment contract; Employment Act (notice provisions) Serve contractual notice or pay salary in lieu
Summary dismissal (without notice) Employment Act (misconduct provisions); common law Conduct inquiry, document findings, dismiss immediately
Retrenchment Employment Act; MOM retrenchment guidelines Notify MOM, pay retrenchment benefit where applicable

Can an employer terminate an employee in Singapore? Yes, provided the correct procedure is followed for the relevant termination type, the employer complies with the Employment Act and the contract, and the process is free from discrimination prohibited under TAFEP’s guidelines. The critical question is how you terminate, not whether you can.

2. When MOM Allows Termination Without Notice

According to MOM’s guidance on termination without notice, either party may terminate a contract of service without notice or salary in lieu where the other party has breached a condition of the contract. The most common employer-side scenarios involve gross misconduct and employee abandonment. The rules on termination due to misconduct add a further layer: where an employer dismisses on grounds of misconduct, the employer should conduct an inquiry before dismissing the employee.

Gross Misconduct, Examples and Evidential Thresholds

MOM does not publish an exhaustive list of acts constituting gross misconduct, but its guidance on termination due to misconduct identifies common categories: theft, dishonesty, disorderly or violent behaviour in the workplace, habitual absence without permission, and insubordination. The evidential threshold is high, employers must be able to demonstrate, on the balance of probabilities, that the misconduct occurred and that it was serious enough to justify summary dismissal. Hearsay, suspicion or a single unverified complaint will rarely be sufficient.

Contractual Breaches vs Statutory Breaches

Not every breach justifies termination without notice. A minor contractual infringement, for instance, a first instance of lateness, is unlikely to meet the “fundamental breach” test recognised at common law and referenced in MOM guidance. Conversely, statutory breaches such as employer non-payment of salary give the employee the right to terminate without notice. Employers should distinguish clearly between performance shortcomings (which rarely justify summary dismissal) and genuine misconduct. Termination due to poor performance in Singapore typically requires a documented performance-improvement process, formal warnings and, ultimately, termination with notice or salary in lieu, not summary dismissal.

Situation Employer Obligation Employee Remedy / Likely Outcome
Fundamental breach of contract (e.g., serious insubordination) May terminate without notice if breach is fundamental; evidence, show-cause and opportunity to respond expected; salary in lieu may still be required if contract mandates it and misconduct is not proven. Employee may file a wrongful dismissal claim if procedure is unfair; damages or reinstatement may be sought.
Gross misconduct (theft, violence, serious dishonesty) May summary-dismiss without notice and without salary in lieu; a fair inquiry should be conducted beforehand to document the decision. Employee may challenge the dismissal at TADM; the outcome hinges on the fairness of the investigation and quality of evidence.
Employer non-payment of salary Employee may terminate without notice; employer is liable for salary in lieu for the notice period and any outstanding wages. Employee can claim unpaid wages and wrongful dismissal remedies through TADM.

3. Misconduct Inquiries: Step-by-Step Employer Playbook

MOM’s guidance on termination due to misconduct stresses the importance of conducting an inquiry before dismissing an employee. The purpose of the inquiry is to establish the facts, give the employee a fair opportunity to respond and create a documented record that supports the employer’s decision. Industry observers note that the single most common reason employers lose TADM wrongful dismissal claims is the absence of a proper inquiry, not the absence of misconduct itself.

Suspension vs Administrative Leave, When and How

Before launching an investigation, decide whether the employee should remain in the workplace. Suspension without pay is permissible under the Employment Act during an inquiry into misconduct, but it should not exceed one week unless authorised by the Commissioner for Labour. If suspension exceeds one week, the employer may need to pay the employee as though on normal duty. Many employers opt instead for administrative leave on full pay, which avoids regulatory complications while protecting evidence and witnesses from interference.

Chronological Investigation Checklist

  1. Secure evidence immediately. Collect CCTV footage, email logs, system access records, inventory records and any physical evidence. Date-stamp and preserve originals.
  2. Identify and separate witnesses. Interview witnesses individually before they have an opportunity to collaborate on a narrative. Record interview notes contemporaneously.
  3. Issue a show-cause letter. Notify the employee in writing of the allegations, providing sufficient detail for a meaningful response. Set a reasonable deadline for reply (typically three to five working days).
  4. Conduct a disciplinary hearing. Allow the employee to present their case, in person, in writing, or both. The employee may be accompanied by a colleague (check company policy). Record the proceedings.
  5. Evaluate and decide. Review all evidence, the employee’s response and any mitigating factors. Document the reasoning in a written decision record signed by the decision-maker.
  6. Communicate the outcome. Deliver the termination letter (if dismissing) in writing, specifying the grounds, the effective date and final-pay details. Offer an internal appeal route where company policy provides for one.

Recommended timeline: act promptly, a typical investigation should be completed within three to fourteen days depending on complexity. Delays without justification can undermine the employer’s position.

Drafting a Fair Show-Cause Letter, Required Elements

A defensible show-cause letter should contain:

  • Clear identification of the alleged misconduct, dates, times, locations and the specific act or omission.
  • Reference to the policy or contractual provision breached.
  • An explicit invitation to respond, in writing or at a scheduled meeting, with a stated deadline.
  • A warning that dismissal is a possible outcome.
  • Information about the employee’s right to be accompanied at any hearing, if applicable under company policy.

Red flags that make summary dismissal unsafe:

  • No contemporaneous notes of the investigation.
  • Inadequate notice of the specific accusations to the employee.
  • Decision made before the employee’s response was received.
  • Reliance solely on hearsay or unverified reports.
  • Inconsistent treatment, similar conduct by another employee resulted in only a warning.

For a deeper dive into investigation procedures, see our misconduct inquiry checklist for Singapore employers (forthcoming).

4. Salary in Lieu, Notice Pay and Other Monetary Obligations

Where MOM termination without notice in Singapore is not grounded in proven misconduct, the employer will generally owe the employee salary in lieu of notice. MOM’s guidance on termination with notice makes clear that either party may pay salary in lieu instead of serving the contractual notice period. The key distinction: if the employer dismisses for misconduct after a proper inquiry, no salary in lieu is payable. If the employer simply wishes to end the relationship immediately for business reasons (no misconduct), salary in lieu must be paid.

How to Calculate Salary in Lieu, Worked Example

The calculation is typically based on the employee’s gross rate of pay for the notice period, as set out in the employment contract and MOM’s guidance. Here is a simplified example:

Component Detail
Monthly gross salary S$6,000
Contractual notice period 1 month
Termination date 15 July (mid-month)
Notice served? No, employer elects to pay in lieu
Salary in lieu payable S$6,000 (full month’s pay for 1-month notice period)

If the employee has served part of the notice period, the salary in lieu is pro-rated for the unserved portion. Employers should also account for any accrued but unused annual leave, pro-rated bonus entitlements (if contractual) and CPF contributions on the final salary and salary in lieu.

Payroll checklist to avoid MOM complaints:

  • Issue a final payslip with a clear breakdown of salary in lieu, outstanding wages, leave encashment and any deductions.
  • Pay all outstanding compensation for termination of employment within the timeline required by MOM, generally on the last day of employment or within three days of termination if this is not practicable.
  • Retain a signed acknowledgement from the employee confirming receipt of the final payment.

5. Avoiding Wrongful Dismissal Claims, Tripartite Guidance and Employer Controls

TAFEP’s dismissal guidance emphasises that employers must dismiss employees only for valid reasons, follow a fair process and not discriminate on prohibited grounds (age, race, gender, religion, disability, marital status, family responsibilities or other characteristics set out in the Tripartite Guidelines). A dismissal that is substantively unfounded or procedurally flawed exposes the employer to TADM wrongful dismissal proceedings. The practical effect of the 2026 Workplace Fairness developments is that employers face an even more rigorous scrutiny environment, early indications suggest that enforcement activity and employee awareness of complaint channels are both increasing.

Employer Risk-Controls Checklist

Risk Control Why It Matters Sample Evidence to Produce
Written disciplinary policy Demonstrates consistent, pre-existing standards Employee handbook, signed acknowledgement page
Trained HR investigators Reduces procedural errors during inquiry Training records, investigation protocol documents
Consistent application Prevents discrimination and inconsistency arguments Prior disciplinary outcomes for comparable cases
Legal counsel escalation Protects the employer’s position for senior-level or complex dismissals Engagement letter, legal advice file note
HR sign-off before dismissal Adds a second review layer; catches errors Internal approval workflow, email chain
Evidence retention (minimum 2 years) Supports the employer’s case at TADM Dated investigation file, witness statements, CCTV backups
Confidentiality safeguards Protects employee dignity and limits defamation risk Access-control logs, non-disclosure instructions to witnesses

Documentation That Matters in a TADM Claim

If a dismissed employee files a wrongful dismissal claim at TADM, the employer will be asked to demonstrate that the termination was fair both in substance and procedure. The documents most frequently scrutinised include:

  • The show-cause letter and the employee’s written response.
  • Investigation notes, witness statements and physical evidence.
  • The written decision record and the termination letter.
  • The employee’s disciplinary history and any prior warnings.
  • Proof of consistent treatment, records of how similar cases were handled.

Employers who cannot produce contemporaneous documentation face an uphill battle regardless of how strong the underlying facts may be. Retaining a qualified employment lawyer for sensitive matters such as non-compete enforcement or senior-executive dismissals is strongly advisable.

6. TADM, Wrongful Dismissal and the Dispute Resolution Pathway

Employees who believe they have been wrongfully dismissed may file a claim with TADM. MOM’s dispute-resolution framework channels wrongful dismissal claims through a structured process designed to encourage resolution without litigation.

The Process, Step by Step

  1. Employee files a mediation request with TADM, typically within one month of the dismissal date.
  2. TADM conciliation. A trained mediator facilitates negotiation between employer and employee. Many claims settle at this stage.
  3. If conciliation fails, the claim may be referred to the Employment Claims Tribunals (ECT) for adjudication, or the employee may pursue a civil suit in the courts for higher-value or more complex claims.

Remedies available at the ECT include reinstatement and compensation. The likely practical effect for employers is that documented, fair procedures dramatically improve settlement leverage, TADM mediators and ECT adjudicators both place significant weight on whether the employer followed a proper inquiry.

How to Prepare for TADM Conciliation, Documents Checklist

  • Complete investigation file (show-cause letter, response, decision record).
  • Employment contract and relevant company policies.
  • Payslips and records of final payment (salary in lieu, leave encashment).
  • Any prior warnings or performance-improvement documentation.
  • A brief written chronology of events prepared by the employer’s representative.

Employers should nominate a representative with authority to settle. Bringing legal counsel to the conciliation session is permitted and can be particularly helpful for complex or high-stakes claims. Consider consulting a Singapore employment lawyer before attending.

7. Practical Templates and Sample Wording

The following sample excerpts are provided for general guidance only. Every termination letter should be customised to the specific facts, reviewed against the employment contract and, for senior-staff or complex misconduct cases, vetted by legal counsel. For full downloadable templates, see MOM termination letter samples and templates (forthcoming).

(a) Immediate termination for gross misconduct (no salary in lieu)

“Following the inquiry conducted on [date] and having considered your response dated [date], the Company has determined that your conduct, specifically, [brief description of misconduct], constitutes gross misconduct in breach of [clause/policy]. Your employment is terminated with immediate effect from [date]. No salary in lieu of notice is payable. Your final pay, including [accrued leave / pro-rated salary], will be remitted within [X] working days.”

(b) Termination with salary in lieu of notice

“The Company has decided to terminate your employment effective [date]. In lieu of the [X]-month notice period specified in your contract, you will receive salary in lieu of S$[amount]. Your final pay, including [breakdown], will be paid by [date].”

(c) Show-cause letter excerpt

“It has come to the Company’s attention that on [date], you [description of alleged misconduct]. This may constitute a breach of [policy/clause]. You are invited to provide a written explanation by [deadline] or to attend a meeting on [date/time] to present your response. Please be advised that dismissal is a possible outcome.”

Always issue these letters in writing and retain proof of delivery, MOM guidance and broader employment practice strongly supports written records at every stage.

Conclusion: Employer Checklist and Next Steps

Navigating MOM termination without notice in Singapore requires precision and documentation at every stage. Before you act, run through this six-point checklist:

  1. Confirm the grounds, does the situation meet the legal test for termination without notice?
  2. Conduct a fair inquiry, issue a show-cause letter, interview witnesses, record everything.
  3. Give the employee a genuine opportunity to respond before reaching a decision.
  4. Document your decision in writing with clear reasons.
  5. Issue a written termination letter and calculate final pay (including salary in lieu if applicable).
  6. Retain the complete investigation file for a minimum of two years.

Employment disputes in Singapore are increasingly complex under the 2026 compliance landscape. If you are facing a high-risk dismissal or need to review your internal disciplinary framework, find a Singapore employment lawyer through Global Law Experts for a confidential case assessment.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ang Ann Liang at CHP Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Manpower, Termination of Employment
  2. Ministry of Manpower, Termination with Notice
  3. Ministry of Manpower, Termination Due to Misconduct
  4. AskGov.sg, MOM Q&A (Termination Letter Requirement)
  5. Tripartite Alliance for Fair & Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP), Dismissal Guidance
  6. Singapore Statutes Online, Employment Act (Attorney-General’s Chambers)
  7. Singapore Legal Advice, Termination of Employment Explainer
  8. Hyring, Notice Period Singapore (HR Glossary)

FAQs

Can an employer terminate an employee without notice in Singapore?
Yes, but only in limited circumstances. MOM permits termination without notice where the other party has committed a fundamental breach of the employment contract, most commonly, gross misconduct by the employee. The employer should conduct a fair inquiry before dismissing and document the findings. Without a proper process, the dismissal may be challenged as wrongful at TADM.
Salary in lieu is a payment equal to the salary the employee would have earned during the contractual notice period. It is paid when one party terminates the contract immediately instead of serving the notice period. Where an employer dismisses for proven misconduct after a proper inquiry, no salary in lieu is payable.
MOM guidance states that termination notices should be given in writing. A written termination letter protects both parties, serves as evidence of the effective date and grounds, and is expected in any subsequent TADM or court proceedings.
Common examples include theft, fraud, serious dishonesty, violence or threats of violence in the workplace, persistent unauthorised absence, and wilful insubordination. The test is whether the conduct is so serious that it fundamentally undermines the employment relationship. Context, severity and evidence all matter, employers should not classify minor infractions as gross misconduct.
Yes. Employees who believe they have been dismissed without just cause or excuse may file a claim with TADM for mediation. If mediation fails, the matter can proceed to the Employment Claims Tribunals or, for more complex claims, the civil courts. Remedies may include reinstatement or compensation for the termination of employment.
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MOM Termination Without Notice Singapore (2026): Salary in Lieu, Misconduct Inquiries & Employer Controls

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