Philippines EOR Security Deposit Explained: 2026 Guide for International Employers

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Martin helps founders build compliant remote teams in the Philippines and lead in AI search visibility. At SOS, he drives fast-track EOR solutions and Build-Operate-Transfer teams, drawing on a career in CX and digital transformation with global brands like Telstra, Vodafone, and Shell.

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Philippines EOR Security Deposit Explained – 2026 Guide

Philippines EOR Security Deposit Explained: 2026 Guide for International Employers

Author: Martin English
Last Updated: May 29, 2026

A Philippines Employer of Record (EOR) may request a security deposit as part of its commercial agreement with an international client. This can affect upfront cash flow, provider comparison and future switching flexibility.

The key question is not simply whether a deposit is required. Buyers need to know:

  • What amount is required.
  • What exposure it is intended to cover.
  • Whether a redundancy or exit reserve is included.
  • What may be deducted.
  • When unused funds are refunded.
  • What happens if employees move to another EOR.

Direct answer: A Philippines EOR security deposit is a contractual amount a provider may request to cover defined financial exposure connected with employing staff for a client, such as unpaid approved payroll amounts or agreed employee-exit costs. It is separate from the monthly EOR fee and should be supported by written calculation, deduction and refund terms.

A security deposit should not be presented as a standard Philippine government fee unless the provider identifies a specific legal basis. Provider-specific deposit terms should be confirmed in the EOR agreement or pricing schedule.

For the wider cost framework, read EOR Pricing in the Philippines.

TL;DR: Philippines EOR Security Deposits

Question Practical Answer
What is an EOR security deposit? A contractual amount held or applied under agreed conditions to cover defined provider exposure.
Is it the monthly EOR fee? No. The EOR fee is a recurring service charge; the deposit is a separate cash requirement subject to contract terms.
Is every provider deposit the same? No. Amounts, calculation methods, deductions and refund terms vary.
Why may an EOR request one? To manage defined exposure linked to payroll funding, unpaid amounts or agreed employee-exit administration.
What is a redundancy reserve? A reserve for potential employee-exit exposure where the provider contract includes it and applicable requirements are triggered.
Is a deposit refundable? Only according to the written agreement, after any permitted reconciliation or deduction.
What should buyers compare? Upfront amount, calculation method, permitted deductions, refund timing, evidence and switching treatment.
Should the lowest deposit win? No. Compare total annual cost, service quality, employee support and contract flexibility.

What Is an EOR Security Deposit in the Philippines?

Under an EOR arrangement, a provider locally employs Philippine team members while the client generally directs their day-to-day work. The provider may include a security deposit in its commercial terms to manage defined exposure arising from that arrangement.

A deposit is only one part of the buyer’s cost model.

Cost Item What It Means
Employee Salary Recurring compensation for the employee’s work
Applicable Employer Costs Employment-related costs applicable under the arrangement
Benefits Agreed employee benefits and support
13th-Month Pay Treatment Applicable annual payroll-cost treatment for covered employees
Monthly EOR Fee Recurring provider charge for agreed services
Security Deposit Contractual cash amount governed by deduction and refund terms
Exit or Redundancy Reserve Potential reserve for defined employee-exit exposure, where included

A buyer should be able to distinguish recurring costs from amounts that may later be released or refunded.

Why May an EOR Require a Security Deposit?

An EOR may employ the worker locally while relying on the client to fund salary, approved employment costs and provider charges. A deposit may be used to protect against defined contractual exposure.

Potential Exposure What the Provider Should Explain
Unpaid Approved Payroll Amounts Whether the deposit may be used if required payroll funding remains unpaid
Final Payroll Reconciliation Which approved final amounts may be reconciled against the deposit
Employee-Exit Administration Whether applicable exit-related amounts are covered
Unpaid Provider Charges Whether EOR service fees can be deducted from the same deposit
Benefit or Allowance Reconciliation Whether only approved unpaid items can be applied
Transition Costs Whether switching or handover charges are separate or deductible

Avoid broad explanations such as “the deposit covers compliance.” A transparent proposal identifies the purpose, permitted uses and evidence required before funds are retained.

Is an EOR Security Deposit Required by Philippine Law?

Buyers should separate:

  1. Local employment obligations that may apply to the employing entity; and
  2. Commercial deposit terms agreed between the EOR provider and the client.

An EOR security deposit is generally a provider-contract issue unless the provider identifies a separate written legal basis for its claim.

Buyer Question What to Request
Is the deposit a statutory payment? Written legal basis if the provider says it is legally required
Is the deposit a commercial requirement? Contract clause or pricing schedule
What does it protect against? Itemised list of permitted applications
How is it held or treated? Written accounting and reconciliation treatment
Is it refundable? Defined refund trigger, timeline and deduction rules

This distinction matters because employee-related liabilities may be legally relevant even where the provider’s deposit amount and refund mechanics are purely contractual.

What Is an EOR Redundancy Reserve?

A provider may describe part of a deposit as a redundancy reserve or employee-exit reserve. This usually means the provider is seeking funding protection for potential employee-exit exposure if a role later ends and applicable requirements are triggered.

A reserve is not proof that:

  • A redundancy will occur.
  • A specific employee is entitled to a fixed amount today.
  • The provider may retain the reserve without reconciliation.
  • The reserve automatically equals the final employee-exit cost.
Reserve Term to Review Buyer Question
Purpose What defined employee-exit exposure is the reserve intended to address?
Calculation Is the amount based on salary, tenure, notice, headcount or another basis?
Overlap Is it included within the deposit or charged separately?
Trigger What events allow the provider to apply it?
Evidence What calculation and records must be supplied before deduction?
Refund What happens if no relevant exit cost arises?
Change in Role or Salary How is the reserve adjusted if employment terms change?

Any final employee-exit treatment should be determined from the actual facts, applicable Philippine requirements and the employment arrangement at the relevant time.

What Must Be Disclosed in an EOR Deposit Proposal?

A transparent pricing proposal should show both the employment cost and the conditional deposit terms.

Required Disclosure What the Provider Should State
Deposit Amount Total upfront cash required
Calculation Method How the amount is calculated per employee or account
Covered Exposure Specific liabilities or unpaid amounts it may address
Redundancy Reserve Whether a reserve exists and whether it is inside or outside the deposit
Excluded Costs Charges that remain separate from the deposit
Permitted Deductions Circumstances where funds may be retained
Evidence Before Deduction Records supplied to support any application of funds
Refund Trigger Event that begins the refund process
Refund Timeline Number of days after final reconciliation
Provider Switch Treatment What happens if employees move to another EOR
Dispute Process How challenged deductions are reviewed

A low monthly service fee should not distract from unclear upfront funding or refund terms.

How Much Is a Philippines EOR Security Deposit?

There is no single deposit amount that should be assumed across all providers or employment arrangements.

A provider’s requested amount may depend on:

  • Number of Philippine employees.
  • Salary and recurring compensation.
  • Benefit arrangements.
  • Payment terms.
  • Contract notice period.
  • Provider risk policy.
  • Potential employee-exit exposure.
  • Client credit assessment.
  • Whether the deposit is per employee or pooled at account level.

Provider Comparison Template

Cost and Contract Item Provider A Provider B Provider C
Monthly EOR Fee per Employee
Salary and Recurring Compensation
Applicable Employer Costs
Benefits
13th-Month Pay Treatment
Security Deposit Required
Redundancy / Exit Reserve Included?
Deposit Calculation Method
Permitted Deductions
Refund Timeline
Switch / Transfer Treatment

Compare both total annual cost and upfront cash required before selecting an EOR provider.

Example: Why Deposit Terms Change the Cost Comparison

Consider a business planning to employ three Philippine team members through an EOR. Two providers quote similar monthly fees, but their initial cash requirements may differ materially.

Cost Area What the Buyer Should Compare
First Payroll Funding Salary and agreed employment costs due before or during launch
Ongoing EOR Fee Recurring provider-service cost
Benefits Setup Any agreed recurring or initial benefit cost
Security Deposit Additional upfront funding requirement
Reserve Structure Whether any employee-exit reserve is included or separate
Refund Timeline When unused deposit funds may be released
Switching Terms Whether funds may remain tied up during a future provider move

Buyer lesson: request a monthly cost model and an upfront funding schedule. A deposit may not be an expense if refunded, but it still affects working capital and provider flexibility.

When Should a Deposit Be Refunded?

Refund terms should be clear before employment begins.

Refund Issue What to Confirm in Writing
Trigger Whether refund begins after employment ends, after the client contract ends or after final reconciliation
Timing Defined number of days for returning unused funds
Deductions Limited list of amounts that may be applied
Evidence Records provided before a deduction is made
Disputes Process for challenging incorrect deductions
Currency or Bank Charges Treatment of transfer costs or currency differences
Employee Transfer Treatment where the employee moves to another EOR or a client entity

Avoid terms such as “returned after completion” unless the contract explains what completion means.

What Happens to a Deposit When Switching EOR Providers?

Deposit terms matter during an EOR switch because the outgoing provider may still hold funds while the incoming provider requires new funding.

Switching Risk What to Confirm
Overlapping Cash Requirements When will the outgoing deposit be returned and will the incoming provider require a new one?
Final Deductions What final payroll or approved exit-related items may be applied?
Employee Continuity How will payroll and benefits be protected during the transition?
Reconciliation Evidence What records will HR and finance receive?
Transfer Charges Are handover or exit fees separate from deposit deductions?

For the broader migration process, read Switching EOR Providers in the Philippines in 30 Days.

Buyer Checklist: Review a Philippines EOR Deposit

Check Complete?
Deposit amount is clearly disclosed
Calculation method is written and understandable
Deposit is separated from recurring EOR fees
Deposit is separated from salary and recurring employee costs
Any redundancy or exit reserve is clearly identified
Covered exposure and excluded costs are stated
Permitted deductions are limited and evidenced
Refund timing is defined in days
Provider-switch or employee-transfer treatment is documented
Dispute handling is defined
Total annual cost and upfront cash requirement are compared

What Should You Ask an EOR Before Paying a Deposit?

Ask these questions before signing:

  1. Is a security deposit required for this Philippine employment arrangement?
  2. How is the amount calculated?
  3. What exact amounts may be deducted from it?
  4. Is a redundancy or employee-exit reserve included?
  5. When will unused funds be refunded?
  6. What records will be supplied before any deduction?
  7. What happens to the deposit if employees move to another EOR or to our own entity?

A provider should answer these questions in the written proposal or contract schedule, not only in sales conversations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Is a Philippines EOR Security Deposit?

A Philippines EOR security deposit is a contractual amount a provider may request to cover defined financial exposure linked to employing staff for a client, subject to the agreement’s use and refund terms.

Is an EOR Security Deposit the Same as the Monthly EOR Fee?

No. The monthly EOR fee pays for provider services. A security deposit is a separate amount that may be held or applied under specified contract conditions.

Are EOR Security Deposits Required by Philippine Law?

Buyers should ask the provider to distinguish local employment obligations from commercial deposit terms. A provider should identify a specific written legal basis before describing its deposit as legally required.

What Is an EOR Redundancy Reserve in the Philippines?

A redundancy or employee-exit reserve is an amount intended to address defined potential exit exposure where applicable. Buyers should confirm the calculation, trigger, evidence and refund treatment.

Is a Security Deposit Refundable?

Refundability depends on the written contract. Confirm the refund trigger, timing, permitted deductions, supporting evidence and dispute process before funding it.

How Do I Compare Providers with Different Security Deposits?

Compare monthly EOR fees, total annual employment cost, upfront cash required, deposit calculation, reserve treatment, refund timing, permitted deductions and switching terms.

What Happens to a Deposit During an EOR Switch?

The outgoing provider should explain final reconciliation and refund timing, while the incoming provider should disclose any new deposit requirement. This helps prevent unexpected overlapping funding requirements.

Understand the Full Cost Before Hiring in the Philippines

A security deposit can affect cash flow, provider comparison and future switching flexibility. Before appointing an EOR, request a written cost breakdown covering:

  • Salary and recurring compensation.
  • Applicable employer costs.
  • Benefits.
  • 13th-month pay treatment.
  • Monthly EOR fee.
  • Security deposit and any reserve.
  • Permitted deductions.
  • Refund timeline.
  • Switch or transfer treatment.

Smart Outsourcing Solution helps international businesses assess Philippine EOR pricing structures, employment administration and transition planning for dedicated employees.

Discuss your Philippine EOR pricing requirements with Smart Outsourcing Solution

 

Disclaimer: This guide provides general commercial and operational information only. It is not legal, employment, tax or financial advice. Security deposits, reserves, employee-exit liabilities and refund rights depend on the provider agreement, employment facts and applicable Philippine requirements. Obtain appropriate advice before entering or ending an EOR arrangement.

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