Comprehending Kuwait's New Sahel Salary Deduction Notifications

 
 
 

This guide is mainly for: Private-sector employees registered under the Public Authority for Manpower (PAM).

Important: Payroll rules and complaint routes can differ for government employees and domestic workers (who are governed under separate regulations). Always follow the exact category shown in your official employment records.

How the Sahel Salary Notification Works

PAM’s electronic wage monitoring process is designed to reduce “silent” underpayment in the private sector. In simple terms:

  1. Your employer deposits salary into your local bank account (as required under the wage deposit framework).
  2. PAM’s monitoring system detects whether the deposit reflects a shortage that needs explanation.
  3. If a shortage is detected, you may receive an alert through the Sahel (سهل) app to view the reason and related status.

Why this is a big deal: the worker gets visibility, and the employer is pushed to document and justify any shortage using official channels.

What Details You’ll See in the Notification

When a salary shortage is flagged, the Sahel notification typically aims to show:

  • The deposited salary amount (and the shortage compared to the expected wage record)
  • The “reason” recorded for the shortage (as entered by the employer, if entered)
  • Company file status (whether the case is pending clarification / compliance action)

Note: Exact labels can vary as Sahel services are frequently updated.

What Counts as a “Shortage” (Common Reasons)

Not every alert means wrongdoing. Shortages can appear for valid reasons—but they must be properly recorded and supported.

Common valid reasons (if documented properly)

  • Unpaid leave (approved leave without pay)
  • Absence days (unauthorized absence affecting salary)
  • Disciplinary deductions (must follow written procedures and limits)
  • Court-ordered deductions (e.g., alimony within limits)

Common “false alarm” situations

  • Salary paid in two separate transfers (part now, part later)
  • Late deposit (deposit happens after the due window)
  • Employer payroll mapped incorrectly (wrong month / wrong employee record)

Your Legal Rights (Kuwait Labour Law Basics)

These are the core wage rules employees should know (private sector):

  • Payment frequency & timing: Monthly employees must be paid at least once a month, and wages should not be delayed beyond the 7th day after the due date.
  • Bank deposit requirement: Employers must deposit wages into the worker’s account at a local financial institution (wage deposit framework).
  • Limits on disciplinary deductions: Deductions as a penalty cannot exceed five days’ wage per month (with any excess carried forward).
  • Limits on debt/loan deductions: For employer debts/loans, deductions are capped (commonly cited as 10%), with separate rules for other debts such as alimony within specified limits.

Practical takeaway: Even when deductions are legal, they must be justified, documented, and within legal limits.

Penalties & Company File Suspension (What Happens to Employers)

Under the current enforcement approach reported in Kuwait in 2026, when wage shortages are detected and not clarified properly, PAM can apply administrative actions such as:

  • Suspension / temporary closure of the company file
  • Blocking certain transactions until the wage issue is clarified and resolved

This pressure mechanism is meant to ensure employers address underpayment quickly and compensate affected workers where required.

Employer Responsibility: Ashal/AS’HAL Salary Shortage Documentation

Employers are expected to use the Ashal (أسهل) / AS’HAL company system to record any salary shortage and provide the legal reason. Good compliance practice includes:

  • Entering the shortage against the correct employee/month
  • Choosing the appropriate legal reason (leave, absence, disciplinary action, etc.)
  • Attaching supporting documentation where required (approvals, warning letters, absence reports)

Why this protects workers: it creates an official record that can be reviewed in disputes.

What Employees Should Do If They Receive a Deduction Alert

Step-by-step checklist (do this same day)

  1. Take a screenshot of the Sahel notification (date/time + amount + reason).
  2. Check your bank statement to confirm the deposited amount and date.
  3. Ask HR in writing for the exact justification and supporting documents (leave approval / disciplinary memo / court order).
  4. Verify if it’s a split payment: Ask whether a second transfer is scheduled.
  5. If unresolved, use PAM worker e-services to submit an inquiry/complaint and attach your proof (Sahel screenshot + bank statement).

How This Helps Employees AND Companies

How it helps employees

  • Transparency: Workers are alerted when a shortage is detected instead of discovering it months later.
  • Evidence: Sahel notifications support workers when raising disputes and complaints.
  • Faster resolution: Many issues are fixed quickly once the employer is forced to justify the shortage.

How it helps companies (especially compliant employers)

  • Fewer misunderstandings: Clear recorded reasons reduce disputes and rumors.
  • Early error detection: Payroll mapping or bank transfer mistakes can be corrected before becoming formal cases.
  • Compliance protection: Proper documentation helps the company avoid escalating penalties and file suspension.
 
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IFL Kuwait