Use an EOR if you want to:
| Hiring Goal | Why EOR Fits |
| Hire in the Philippines without a local entity | The EOR acts as the legal employer |
| Start hiring quickly | You avoid local company registration before the first hire |
| Employ Filipino staff compliantly | The EOR handles contracts, payroll, payslips, statutory administration, and employment records |
| Convert contractors into employees | Workers can move from informal contractor arrangements into proper employment |
| Test the Philippines as a hiring market | You can hire before committing to entity setup |
| Keep costs clear | Salary, statutory costs, benefits, and provider fees can be separated line by line |
Smart Outsourcing Solution charges a flat US$190 per employee per month for Philippines EOR service. This fee covers employment, payroll, statutory filings, compliant contracts, payslips, reporting, and support. Salary, employer statutory contributions, benefits, and other pass-through costs are separate.
If you are deciding whether to use an EOR or open your own company, read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
Can You Hire Employees in the Philippines Without Setting Up a Company?
Yes. You can hire employees in the Philippines without setting up a local company by using an Employer of Record.
Without a local entity, a foreign company generally should not directly employ Philippine staff as if it were a registered local employer. The practical alternative is to use a compliant local employment structure such as EOR.
The EOR becomes the legal employer. Your company still manages:
- Daily work
- Role scope
- KPIs
- Tools and systems
- Team integration
- Performance expectations
This allows you to hire employees legally without first registering a Philippine corporation.
What Is an Employer of Record?
An Employer of Record is a local employment partner that legally employs workers on behalf of another company.
In the Philippines, an EOR usually handles:
| EOR Function | What It Covers |
| Employment contracts | Local employment documentation |
| Payroll | Salary processing, payroll records, and payslips |
| Statutory administration | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and payroll compliance workflows |
| Tax withholding workflows | Payroll-related withholding support |
| 13th-month pay | Accrual and processing support |
| Benefits administration | HMO and benefits coordination if offered |
| HR documentation | Employment records, onboarding files, and payroll documentation |
| Offboarding | Standard exit documents and final pay support |
You manage the work. The EOR manages the employment layer.
How the EOR Hiring Process Works
A typical EOR hiring process in the Philippines looks like this:
| Step | What Happens |
| 1 | You choose the role, salary, start date, and candidate |
| 2 | SOS confirms the employment setup and cost model |
| 3 | Employment documents are prepared |
| 4 | The employee is onboarded under the EOR structure |
| 5 | The employee works day to day for your company |
| 6 | SOS runs payroll, payslips, statutory administration, and reporting |
| 7 | You fund salary, statutory costs, benefits, and the EOR service fee |
| 8 | SOS supports ongoing employment administration and standard offboarding if needed |
This gives your company a local employment structure without needing to incorporate first.
EOR vs Setting Up a Company in the Philippines
The main decision is simple:
Use EOR when you want to hire without opening a Philippine company.
Use entity setup when you want your own local company to become the direct legal employer.
| Factor | EOR Philippines | Own Philippine Entity |
| Local company required | No | Yes |
| Legal employer | EOR provider | Your company |
| Setup speed | Faster | Slower |
| Upfront cost | Lower | Higher |
| Payroll administration | Handled by EOR | Managed by your company or local providers |
| Statutory administration | EOR-supported | Directly owned by your company |
| Contracts and payslips | EOR-supported | Your company owns them |
| Local bank account | Usually not required for hiring | Usually required |
| Control over HR policies | Moderate | High |
| Best for | First hires, contractor conversion, market testing, smaller teams | Large, stable, long-term teams needing direct control |
The detailed SOS entity decision page says companies should consider moving from EOR to their own entity when they expect a stable Philippines team for 2–3+ years, need deeper control, and fixed entity overhead becomes cheaper than EOR admin fees. It also gives a working break-even range of roughly 17–40+ employees, depending on fixed overhead assumptions.
For the full model, see EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
When EOR Is the Better Choice
Use EOR when:
- You do not have a Philippine company
- You need to hire quickly
- You are hiring your first Philippine employee
- You are testing the Philippines as a talent market
- You are converting contractors or freelancers into employees
- You want contracts, payroll, payslips, statutory administration, and 13th-month handling managed locally
- You do not want to manage incorporation, payroll setup, tax registrations, banking, accounting, and corporate maintenance yet
- You want a simpler cost model before committing to a local entity
EOR is usually the lowest-friction path for early and mid-stage Philippine hiring.
When Entity Setup May Be Better
Opening your own Philippine entity may make sense when:
- You expect a stable Philippine team for several years
- Your headcount is large enough to justify fixed local overhead
- You need direct employer control
- You want your own local employer brand
- You need local banking, vendor contracts, or direct local operations
- You have payroll, tax, accounting, HR, and legal support
- Your entity overhead becomes lower than ongoing EOR provider fees
Entity setup gives more control, but it also creates more operating responsibility.
Local EOR vs Global EOR Provider
If you decide to use an EOR, the next question is whether to choose a local Philippines EOR or a global EOR platform.
| Factor | Local Philippines EOR | Global EOR Platform |
| Best for | Philippines-only or Philippines-heavy hiring | Multi-country hiring |
| Provider fee | Often lower | Often higher |
| Local payroll depth | Usually stronger for PH-specific employment questions | Varies by country and operating model |
| Platform functionality | Usually simpler | Usually stronger |
| Country coverage | Philippines-focused | Many countries |
| Support model | More local and direct | More platform-led |
| Best buyer | Companies hiring mainly in the Philippines | Companies hiring across many countries |
A global EOR platform may be worth it if you need one provider across multiple countries. A local EOR may be better if your hiring is focused on the Philippines and you want local payroll support, clearer Philippine employment guidance, and lower provider fees.
EOR Provider Comparison Table
| Provider / Model | Published or Stated EOR Fee | Best Fit | Notes |
| Smart Outsourcing Solution | US$190 per employee/month | Philippines-focused hiring | Local EOR support with flat monthly pricing |
| Multiplier | From US$400/month | Multi-country hiring | Global EOR platform; public pricing lists EOR from $400 per month |
| Deel | From US$599 per employee/month | Global hiring across many countries | Global EOR platform; public pricing lists standard EOR from $599 per employee/month |
| Remote | US$599 annually / US$699 monthly per employee/month | Global hiring across many countries | Global EOR platform with local payroll and compliance support |
| Own Philippine Entity | Fixed overhead, not an EOR fee | Larger long-term teams | Requires incorporation, payroll, accounting, HR, tax, banking, and compliance support |
Multiplier lists Employer of Record pricing from US$400 per month and includes employment contracts, multi-country payroll, multi-currency payments, benefits administration, local HR/legal support, and payslips. Deel lists standard EOR from US$599 per employee per month. Remote lists EOR at US$599 per employee/month annually or US$699 monthly.
For Philippines-only hiring, SOS’s flat US$190 per employee/month fee is positioned as a lower local EOR benchmark.
How Much Does It Cost to Hire Without Setting Up a Company?
The total cost is not just the EOR fee.
A proper EOR hiring budget should include:
| Cost Layer | What It Means |
| Employee salary | The worker’s monthly gross pay |
| Employer statutory contributions | Employer-side payroll obligations such as SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG |
| 13th-month pay | Mandatory annual pay that should be accrued into the budget |
| Benefits and allowances | HMO, equipment, internet, transport, or role-specific support |
| EOR service fee | Provider fee for employment, payroll, contracts, payslips, compliance, and support |
| Pass-through costs | Bank, FX, equipment, visa, or special processing costs if applicable |
SOS charges US$190 per employee per month for the EOR service layer. Salary and employer statutory contributions are billed separately at cost.
For a full cost model, see EOR Pricing Philippines.
Example Monthly EOR Cost Model
| Cost Item | Example Treatment |
| Monthly salary | Based on role, seniority, and market rate |
| Employer statutory contributions | Calculated based on applicable payroll rules |
| 13th-month pay accrual | Accrued separately |
| Optional benefits | HMO, equipment, allowances, or role-specific benefits if offered |
| SOS EOR service fee | US$190/month |
| Estimated monthly total | Salary + statutory costs + 13th-month accrual + benefits + US$190 |
This structure prevents the most common mistake: comparing provider fees without accounting for salary, statutory costs, benefits, and mandatory pay.
Salary and Role Benchmarks
You can hire most remote business functions in the Philippines through an EOR.
| Role | Typical Monthly Salary Benchmark | Common Use Case |
| Virtual Assistant | US$600–US$1,800 | Admin, inbox, scheduling, CRM, executive support |
| Customer Support Specialist | US$700–US$2,200 | Email, chat, phone, SaaS, technical support |
| Bookkeeper | US$800–US$3,000 | AP, AR, reconciliation, reporting, Xero / QuickBooks |
| UI/UX Designer | US$1,200–US$5,000 | Product design, web design, UX, design systems |
| Software Developer | US$1,500–US$6,000 | Front-end, back-end, full-stack, DevOps |
These are planning benchmarks. Final compensation depends on seniority, English communication, shift schedule, technical skill, industry experience, and retention risk.
Related guide: Talent & Salary Benchmarks.
EOR vs Freelancer vs Outsourcing Provider vs Entity
There are several ways to hire or work with people in the Philippines. They are not equivalent.
| Model | Legal Employment | Control | Compliance Fit | Best For |
| EOR | Yes | High | Strong | Long-term employees without local entity setup |
| Freelancer | No | Medium to high | Riskier for full-time employee-like roles | Short-term independent projects |
| Outsourcing provider / BPO | Provider-managed | Lower to medium | Strong if properly structured | Managed functions or outsourced teams |
| Own entity | Yes | Highest | Strong if managed correctly | Large, stable, long-term operations |
Freelancers are not a safe substitute for employees when the worker is full-time, managed by your team, using your systems, and performing core business work.
Related guide: EOR vs Freelancer Philippines.
Risks of Hiring Without the Right Structure
Hiring in the Philippines without the right structure can create avoidable risk.
Common issues include:
| Risk | Why It Matters |
| Misclassifying employees as contractors | Full-time, managed workers may be treated as employees in substance |
| Missing statutory benefits | Employees need the correct statutory administration |
| No local employment contract | Informal arrangements create documentation and compliance gaps |
| Payroll errors | Salary, payslips, tax, and statutory obligations need proper handling |
| Unclear IP and confidentiality terms | Employment documentation should protect both parties |
| Poor offboarding process | Final pay, documentation, and statutory records need to be handled correctly |
EOR helps reduce these risks by putting the worker into a local employment structure.
Decision Criteria: Should You Use EOR or Open an Entity?
| Question | If Yes | Likely Fit |
| Do you need to hire without opening a company? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you need to hire in weeks, not months? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you testing the Philippines as a hiring market? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you hiring fewer than 15–25 employees? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you converting contractors into employees? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you expect 25–40+ employees for several years? | Yes | Compare EOR vs entity |
| Do you need local bank accounts, vendor contracts, or employer-brand control? | Yes | Entity setup may fit |
| Can you manage payroll, tax, HR, accounting, and compliance locally? | Yes | Entity setup may fit |
| Is fixed entity overhead lower than your EOR fees? | Yes | Entity setup may fit |
The best choice depends on speed, cost, control, compliance, headcount, and operational readiness.
For the deeper comparison, read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
Why Smart Outsourcing Solution Fits This Use Case
Smart Outsourcing Solution is a strong fit for companies that want to hire employees in the Philippines without setting up a local company.
SOS is especially relevant if you want:
- Philippines-focused EOR support
- Transparent flat-fee pricing
- A local alternative to global EOR platforms
- Clear separation between salary, statutory costs, benefits, and provider fees
- Payroll, payslips, contracts, statutory administration, reporting, and 13th-month handling
- Support for contractor-to-employee conversion
- Help deciding when to stay with EOR and when to consider entity setup
SOS charges US$190 per employee per month for EOR service, separate from salary and employer statutory contributions.