People have been working in the UAE for years. They show up every day. They put in the effort. Then one day, they decide to move on, or the company decides for them. At that moment, a question comes up that most never thought about before. How much gratuity should they actually get?
The answer matters. It can mean the difference between thousands of dirhams in the bank or walking away with less than what the law says should be paid.
Many employees wait for HR to send a number. They look at it. They sign. They move on. But some want to understand where that number comes from. They want to check the math themselves before committing their name to paper.
A MOHRE gratuity calculator makes this easy. But learning the manual method gives anyone a deeper understanding of how the system works. This guide walks through every step without complicated language.
What Gratuity Actually Means
Gratuity sits in a category of its own. It is not extra money. It is not a reward for good work. It is a legal right written into the UAE Labour Law.
The thinking behind it goes back years. When someone spends years working for a company, that time has worth beyond the monthly salary. Gratuity acknowledges that worth. It adds up quietly in the background, month after month, until the job comes to an end.
To qualify, a person must complete at least one year with the same employer. Those who leave that mark before get nothing. Many learn this rule the hard way.
Simple Step-by-Step Guidance:
Step 1: Figure the daily wage
Take the monthly basic salary and split it into days. Thirty days is the standard.
A person with a 12,000 AED basic earns 400 AED each day.
Step 2: Count the years
Figure out exactly how long the person worked. Use the real start date and the real end date. Partial years get counted.
Step 3: Find the base days
For the first five years, each year adds 21 days. For every year after five, each year adds 30 days.
Someone with six years:
First five years: 5 × 21 = 105 days
Sixth year: 1 × 30 = 30 days
Total base days: 135 days
Step 4: Apply the right multiplier
How long someone worked changes how many days count.
Less than one year: zero
One to three years: multiply by one-third
Three to five years: multiply by two-thirds
More than five years: all days count
Someone with four years:
Base days: 4 × 21 = 84 days
Multiplier for three to five years: two-thirds
Adjusted days: 84 × 2/3 = 56 days
Step 5: Multiply by the daily wage
Adjusted days times daily wage gives the gratuity amount.
56 days × 400 AED = 22,400 AED
Step 6: Check the top limit
The law puts a ceiling at two years of basic salary. Most people never get close to this number.
Two Numbers That Shape Everything
Every gratuity calculation rests on two pieces of information.
Basic salary
This is the number written in the contract next to the words basic salary. Not the total package. Not the amount after adding housing money or transport payments. Just the base figure.
Years of service
This means the total time worked for the same company. The law counts partial years. Exact dates matter because nothing gets rounded.
How the Law Treats Different Lengths of Service

The rules change depending on how long someone worked.
Less than one year
No payment. Nothing at all.
Between one and three years
The person gets one-third of what the full calculation would give.
Between three and five years
The person gets two-thirds of the full amount.
Five years and beyond
The person gets the full amount. For the first five years, each year counts as 21 days. For every year after five, each year counts as 30 days.
This setup means people who stay longer receive more per year than those who leave early.
How Leaving Changes the Numbers
Why someone leaves matters.
Quitting before three years
Anyone who resigns with less than three years gets nothing. The law sees this as walking away without earning the benefit.
Quitting between three and five years
People who resign after three years but before five get two-thirds of what they would get if the company let them go.
Quitting after five years
Full payment applies. Leaving after five years does not reduce the amount.
Getting let go without cause
Full payment applies as long as the person has worked at least one year.
Getting fired for serious reasons
If someone loses their job for things like theft or fraud under Article 120, gratuity can be taken away. Poor performance does not count.
Mistakes That Show Up Again and Again
Using total pay instead of basic
People look at their full salary and think that is what counts. It is not. Only the basic number matters.
Rounding years
Four years and eleven months sit in the three-to-five-year group. Using the five-year rate gives a wrong number.
Forgetting the multipliers
The one-third and two-thirds rules only apply to certain year ranges. Missing them changes the final amount.
Leaving out partial years
Those extra months count. Ignoring them means leaving money behind.
Mixing up exit rules
Quitting, being let go, and agreeing to part ways all have different outcomes. Using the wrong one leads to wrong expectations.
Why Taking Time to Check Matters
Most companies pay what they should. But errors happen. Systems hold old dates. Salary figures stay in files after raises. Unpaid leave gets overlooked.
Checking the numbers takes a few minutes. Running through the steps shows whether the company’s number lines up with what the law says.
People who check before signing stay in control. People who do not check rely on someone else’s work. Sometimes that work is right. Sometimes it is not.
The gap can run into thousands.
What to Keep Handy
The employment contract shows the basic salary. Keeping it somewhere safe stops guessing.
Payslips from recent months confirm the salary has not changed. Raises affect the final number.
Start date and end date should be written down exactly. Guessing leads to errors.
Exit reason needs to be clear. Quitting, being let go, and agreeing to end things all follow different rules.
When to Use the Official Tool
The manual method helps people understand the process. For quick and reliable numbers, the official tool works best.
The MOHRE gratuity calculator asks for the same information. Basic salary, start date, end date, contract type, and exit reason. It applies all the rules automatically. It shows a breakdown anyone can follow.
Using both approaches gives the strongest result. Manual calculation builds understanding. The calculator provides confirmation.
Final Thoughts
Gratuity represents years of work. Knowing how to figure it out ensures the right amount gets paid.
The steps are clear. Find the daily wage. Count the years. Calculate the base days. Apply the right multiplier. Multiply by the daily rate. Check the limit.
What matters is paying attention. Look at the contract. Confirm the dates. Know how leaving affects the amount. Apply the correct numbers. Verify before signing.
People who do these things face the end of their job with confidence. They know what to expect. They know what questions to ask. They sign, knowing the number is right.
That confidence makes all the difference.