In the labor market, many employers attempt to reduce labor costs by inducing or even forcing employees to sign a Voluntary Waiver of Social Insurance Agreement, which promises to provide cash subsidies instead of social insurance contributions. The agreement claims that “once signed, you can no longer pursue liability.”
As a practicing attorney, I, Qiang Lyu, must make it clear: such agreements are completely null and void. Even with a signed document, employees still have the right to sue the employer, recover unpaid social insurance, and potentially obtain economic compensation or damages. Employers will ultimately bear the legal costs of their illegal acts.
Core Legal Principle
The payment of social insurance is a mandatory statutory obligation for both employers and employees, which cannot be waived by private agreement.
Under the Social Insurance Law of the People’s Republic of China:
Employers shall declare and pay social insurance premiums in full and on time.
Such obligations may be deferred or reduced only under statutory reasons such as force majeure.
Employees shall participate in social insurance, with premiums withheld and paid by the employer.
The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security has explicitly confirmed that a “voluntary waiver of social insurance” has no legal effect and does not exempt the employer from its statutory duty to contribute.
Such agreements are invalid because they attempt to exempt the employer from legal responsibilities and infringe upon employees’ lawful rights, violating mandatory provisions of law. Under the Labor Contract Law, such clauses are void ab initio and not binding on employees. Court precedents consistently support employees’ claims for retroactive payment even if a waiver was signed. The employer shall bear any late payment surcharges.
Employees’ Rights and Remedies
1. Retroactive Payment of Unpaid Social Insurance
Employees may demand full retroactive payment of all five types of social insurance:
Pension insurance
Medical insurance
Work-related injury insurance
Unemployment insurance
Maternity insurance
If the employer refuses, employees may:
File a complaint with the social insurance agency
Apply for labor arbitration
File a lawsuit
The social insurance collection authority may order payment within a time limit, impose a daily surcharge of 0.05% for late payment, and enforce payment by bank transfer or seizure of assets.
2. Economic Compensation or Damages
Failure to pay social insurance constitutes a statutory ground for employees to unilaterally terminate the labor contract and claim economic compensation.
According to the Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on the Application of Law in the Trial of Labor Dispute Cases (II):
Agreements exempting employers from social insurance contributions are invalid.
Employees who terminate the contract due to unpaid social insurance are entitled to economic compensation.
Calculation standard:
One month’s salary for each full year of employment
Six months or more but less than one year: counted as one year
Less than six months: half a month’s salary
Important Reminder
Cash subsidies cannot replace legal social insurance obligations. Even if subsidies were provided, the employer remains liable for retroactive contributions and may recover the subsidies from the employee. Employees are not legally barred from claiming their rights simply because they signed a waiver.