Employee Rights Under Kuwait Labour Law (Complete Guide)
- Wefaq Law Firm
- Dec 7, 2025
- 3 min read

Kuwait Labour Law No. 6 of 2010 is the main law governing employment relationships in the private sector. It applies to both Kuwaiti and expatriate employees and regulates contracts, wages, working hours, termination, end-of-service benefits, and dispute resolution.
This guide explains your core legal rights in simple language, without legal complexity, and highlights the most common labour disputes currently before Kuwaiti courts.
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1. Who Is Protected Under Kuwait Labour Law?
The law applies to:
All private-sector employees
Kuwaiti and non-Kuwaiti workers
Full-time and fixed-term employees
Male and female employees
The law does not apply to:
Government employees
Domestic workers (they are regulated by a separate law)
Military and security staff
If you work for a private company in Kuwait, this law protects you.
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2. Your Employment Contract Rights
Every employee has the right to:
A written employment contract
A clear statement of:
Salary
Job title
Working hours
Contract duration
Leave entitlements
Even if no written contract exists, the law still recognizes the employment relationship based on:
Salary transfers
Work attendance
Messages
Internal emails
This is extremely important in court.
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3. Probation Period – Your Legal Protection
The probation period:
Cannot exceed 100 working days
Can only be applied once
During probation:
Either party may terminate without notice
However, repeating probation is illegal
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4. Salaries and Wage Protection
Your employer is legally required to:
Pay your full agreed salary
Pay wages on time
Not deduct more than five days per month as a disciplinary penalty
Unlawful deductions, delays, or partial payments are among the most common winning cases in Kuwaiti labour courts.
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5. Working Hours, Overtime & Rest Days
Normal working hours: 8 hours per day
One weekly rest day is mandatory
Overtime must be paid
Employees cannot be forced into dangerous or abusive working conditions
Saturday is legally included in working-day calculations in Kuwait.
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6. Female Workers’ Legal Rights
Female employees are entitled to:
70 days of paid maternity leave
Protection from termination during maternity leave
Equal pay for equal work
Daily nursing breaks after returning to work
Any termination linked to pregnancy is automatically unlawful.
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7. Disciplinary Actions – What Employers Must Follow
Before any punishment:
The employee must be informed in writing
The employee must be allowed to defend themselves
Only one punishment per violation is allowed
Punishment must be imposed promptly after the violation
Delayed or arbitrary punishments are frequently cancelled in court.
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8. Suspension During Investigation
An employer may suspend an employee during investigation:
Suspension must be temporary
If no violation is proven → full salary must be paid
Long-term unpaid suspension is unlawful
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9. When Can an Employer Terminate Without Notice?
Immediate termination is only legal in very serious cases, such as:
Fraud or forgery
Major financial loss caused intentionally
Disclosure of business secrets
Crimes involving honour or trust
Repeated serious violations
If these conditions are not strictly proven, the termination is legally classified as wrongful dismissal.
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10. Termination With Notice (Open-Ended Contracts)
If your contract has no fixed duration:
Monthly-paid employees → 3 months’ notice
Others → 1 month’s notice
If notice is not given, financial compensation must be paid instead.
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11. End-of-Service Benefits (Indemnity)
End-of-service benefits are calculated based on:
Length of service
Last basic salary
Reason for termination
Failure to pay indemnity is one of the top labour disputes in Kuwait and is almost always ruled in favour of the employee when proven.
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12. The Most Common Labour Cases in Kuwait Today
Based on real court filings and ongoing disputes, the most common cases are:
Unpaid salaries
Wrongful termination
End-of-service benefits not paid
Forced resignations
Fake misconduct accusations to avoid compensation
Illegal probation renewals
Visa abuse and job mobility blocking
Unpaid overtime
Work injuries with no compensation
Most employees who preserve evidence early succeed in court.
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13. What To Do If Your Labour Rights Are Violated
If your rights are violated:
File a complaint with the Public Authority for Manpower
If unresolved, the case is referred to Labour Court
Do not resign emotionally
Preserve all evidence:
Salary transfers
Messages & Emails
Contract copies
Attendance records
Timing and documentation are everything.
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14. Final Legal Warning
Many employees lose their rights because they:
Resign emotionally
Accept verbal promises
Do not document violations
Delay filing complaints
Under Kuwaiti law, proof and timing decide the case, not sympathy.
Kuwait Labour Law provides employees with powerful legal protections, but these rights only have real value when they are properly understood and enforced. In practice, most labour disputes are decided not by emotions or verbal promises, but by written evidence, legal procedure, and correct timing. Whether you are an employee seeking to protect your livelihood or an employer aiming to avoid costly disputes, proper legal awareness and early legal action are the decisive factors that determine the outcome of any labour case in Kuwait.
