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Namibia leave compliance

Namibia Domestic Worker Leave Guide 2025 — Annual Leave, Sick Leave & Public Holidays

If you employ a nanny, cleaner, cook, gardener, driver, or live-in helper in Namibia, this guide explains the leave rules employers usually need in one place: annual leave, sick leave, public holidays, maternity leave, family responsibility leave, and the leave records that protect both sides.

Quick answer

For Namibia domestic workers, the leave headline most employers need is this: four consecutive weeks of paid annual leave each year, usually stated as 24 working days per year on a six-day schedule; 30 paid sick-leave days in a three-year cycle for a five-day worker; public-holiday pay protection; 12 weeks of maternity leave; and 5 days of family responsibility leave each year.

Fast employer checklist

  • Track leave in working days, not vague calendar estimates.
  • Keep public holidays separate from annual leave balances.
  • Record sick leave and supporting notes as they happen.
  • Write leave balances into the contract from day one.

1. Namibia domestic worker leave at a glance

The safest approach is to treat leave like a standing payroll record

Household employers usually get into trouble when leave is handled informally. The Labour Act is easier to comply with if you keep a leave ledger the same way you keep salary and payroll records. That approach also makes it easier to line up this leave guide with EMPPLOY's Namibia salary guide and payroll guide.

Annual leave

24 working days / year

That is the six-day-week equivalent of section 23's four consecutive weeks of paid annual leave after each year of continuous service.

Sick leave

30 paid days / 3 years

That headline figure applies to a five-day worker. A six-day worker reaches the equivalent cap at 36 working days because the Act measures working days.

Family responsibility leave

5 days / year

Often called compassionate leave in the Labour Act. It is full-pay leave for qualifying family illness or bereavement situations.

Maternity leave

12 weeks

The employer is generally not required to pay wages during maternity leave, but SSC maternity benefits may apply if the worker is registered and contributions are current.

2. Annual leave

Section 23 gives domestic workers four consecutive weeks of paid annual leave

The statutory minimum is not a casual "two weeks off" arrangement. The Labour Act frames annual leave as four consecutive weeks after each year of continuous service. In day-count terms, that is usually 24 working days per year on a six-day schedule or 20 working days on a five-day schedule.

For household employers, the practical step is to record the worker's normal weekly schedule in the contract and then keep the annual leave balance in working days. That avoids confusion if the employee later takes leave during a month that also has a public holiday or a salary adjustment.

Annual leave checklist

  • Write the weekly work pattern into the contract first.
  • Track annual leave in working days, not weekends.
  • Keep public holidays outside the annual leave deduction.
  • Include unused leave in the final-pay calculation if employment ends.

3. Sick leave

The headline figure is 30 paid sick-leave days per 3-year cycle

The figure many Namibia domestic-worker searches want is 30 paid sick-leave days in a 36-month cycle. That is the five-day-week version. If the worker normally works six days each week, the equivalent statutory cap is 36 working days because the Act counts working days, not calendar days.

Record every sick-leave absence with the date, number of working days used, and whether a supporting medical note was provided. That same file should sit next to the payslip record so the household can prove what was paid and why.

4. Family responsibility leave

Five paid days each year for qualifying family events

Employers often search for "family responsibility leave" even though the Labour Act uses the term compassionate leave. The practical answer is the same: a domestic worker can qualify for 5 working days per year on full pay for the serious illness or death of close family members covered by the Act.

Keep this category separate from annual leave and sick leave. If everything is dumped into one balance, the final leave position is usually wrong when the employment ends and the employer turns to the termination guide for the close-out calculation.

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5. Public holidays

Public holidays need their own line on the 2025 leave calendar

Public holidays are not just a calendar note. If a public holiday falls on one of the worker's ordinary work days and the worker does not work, the worker is entitled to the pay they would ordinarily have received. If the worker does work on that public holiday, additional holiday-pay rules apply, so it is worth keeping the day separate from annual leave and overtime records.

In 2025, two Namibia public holidays fall on Sundays, so the Monday observance matters for domestic-worker scheduling and pay: Cassinga Day and Africa Day.

Holiday2025 dateDomestic-worker note
New Year's DayWednesday, 1 January 2025If this is one of the worker's ordinary work days and they do not work, pay the usual daily remuneration.
Independence DayFriday, 21 March 2025If the worker works, the public-holiday pay rule applies on top of the ordinary entitlement for the day.
Good FridayFriday, 18 April 2025Treat it as a public holiday. Record the hours separately if work is required.
Easter MondayMonday, 21 April 2025If the worker does not work and it is an ordinary work day, pay for the day as normal.
Workers' DayThursday, 1 May 2025If work is required on an ordinary work day holiday, the worker is entitled to the daily pay plus hourly pay for each hour worked.
Cassinga DaySunday, 4 May 2025; observed Monday, 5 May 2025Because the holiday falls on a Sunday in 2025, the following Monday should be treated as the public holiday.
Africa DaySunday, 25 May 2025; observed Monday, 26 May 2025The same Sunday rule applies here, so employers should plan for the Monday observance.
Genocide Remembrance DayWednesday, 28 May 2025Keep it on the leave and payroll calendar because it sits in the same month as Africa Day in 2025.
Heroes' DayTuesday, 26 August 2025A worker who does not work on their ordinary day still receives the holiday pay protection.
Day of the Namibian Women / International Human Rights DayWednesday, 10 December 2025Keep it on the same leave tracker so the December payroll cycle stays accurate.
Christmas DayThursday, 25 December 2025If emergency or family travel requires work, record the hours and apply the public-holiday pay rule.
Family DayFriday, 26 December 2025Do not confuse this public holiday with family responsibility leave. They are separate entitlements.

6. Maternity leave

Qualifying employees are entitled to 12 weeks of maternity leave

For domestic workers with the required service, the Labour Act gives 12 consecutive weeks of maternity leave. The Act also makes an important payroll point clear: the employer is generally not required to pay wages during maternity leave.

That does not mean the period should be invisible in the file. Record the leave dates, keep the supporting documents, and check whether the worker can claim the Social Security Commission's maternity benefit if she is registered and the contribution record is current.

7. Leave tracking template

A simple table beats a memory-based system

Keep one shared leave sheet with the date, category, days earned, days used, running balance, and supporting note. That one sheet makes payroll, final pay, and renewals easier to manage.

DateLeave typeDays earnedDays usedBalanceNote
Opening balanceAnnual leave24.00.024.0Start of leave year
21 Mar 2025Public holiday0.00.024.0Independence Day
02 Jun 2025Annual leave0.02.022.0Approved in writing
15 Aug 2025Sick leave0.01.0Sick cycle: 29.0Medical note on file
10 Dec 2025Public holiday0.00.022.0Namibian Women / Human Rights Day

8. Common mistakes and penalties

Most leave disputes start as admin failures before they become legal problems

A household employer usually does not get into trouble because the law is impossible to understand. The problem is usually weak records, informal arrangements, and delayed corrections. That is why the leave file should sit beside the salary, payroll, and termination records rather than in a separate notebook.

Treating a live-in worker as always available

Live-in status does not cancel annual leave, sick leave, public holidays, or maternity protections.

Using the wrong unit for leave

The Labour Act measures working days. If the schedule is six days a week, the annual and sick-leave figures are higher than the five-day equivalent many online summaries repeat.

Counting public holidays against annual leave

A public holiday should not be deducted from annual leave just because it falls inside a week the worker is away.

No written leave record

When employers rely on memory or WhatsApp alone, disputes over balances and final pay become much harder to defend.

Assuming maternity leave is fully unpaid paperwork-free time

The employer may not have to pay wages during maternity leave, but the leave still needs to be recorded properly and the worker may need support with SSC maternity benefit paperwork.

Ignoring labour-inspector instructions

Leave breaches can escalate into compliance orders, Labour Commissioner disputes, payment claims, and offences if a compliance order is ignored.

Related guides

Connect leave compliance to the rest of the Namibia employment file

Leave records only stay reliable when the contract, wage terms, payroll admin, and final-pay workflow all line up. These related guides keep that full Namibia cluster connected.

10. FAQ

Namibia domestic worker leave FAQs

How much annual leave does a domestic worker get in Namibia?

Section 23 gives four consecutive weeks of paid annual leave after each year of continuous service. That is usually 20 working days on a five-day week or 24 working days on a six-day week.

How much sick leave does a domestic worker get in Namibia?

The headline figure most employers search for is 30 paid sick-leave days in a 36-month cycle. If the worker normally works six days a week, the equivalent statutory cap is 36 working days.

Do domestic workers get paid for public holidays in Namibia?

Yes. If the holiday falls on one of the worker's ordinary work days and they do not work, the worker is still entitled to the remuneration they would ordinarily have received. If they work, additional public-holiday pay rules apply.

Is maternity leave paid for domestic workers in Namibia?

The Labour Act gives qualifying employees 12 weeks of maternity leave, but the employer is generally not required to pay wages during that leave. SSC maternity benefits may still apply if the worker is registered and up to date.

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