Contractor to Employee Cost Calculator Philippines: 2026 Tool

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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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Contractor to Employee Cost Calculator Philippines: 2026 Tool

Author: Martin English
Last Updated: June 3, 2026

Use this calculator to estimate the cost of converting a Filipino contractor, freelancer or virtual assistant into an employee in the Philippines.

The goal is to compare the contractor’s current monthly cost with a more complete employee cost model, including salary, employer-side costs, 13th-month pay accrual, benefits, equipment, provider fees and transition costs.

Direct answer: To estimate the cost of converting a contractor to an employee in the Philippines, start with the proposed monthly salary, then add employer-side costs, 13th-month pay accrual, benefits, equipment, provider or EOR fees and one-off transition costs. Compare this with the current contractor cost to understand the true monthly, annual and first-year difference.

This tool is designed for international businesses reviewing Filipino contractors who have become long-term, embedded or employee-like members of the team.

For the parent conversion pathway, read Convert Contractors to Employees in the Philippines.

Calculator note: This calculator is for planning only. It does not automatically calculate official SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, withholding tax or final payroll obligations. Confirm current contribution tables, payroll treatment, benefits, EOR fees and legal requirements before making employment decisions.

TL;DR: Contractor to Employee Cost Calculator

Question Practical Answer
What does the calculator estimate? Monthly, annual and first-year cost of converting contractors into employees.
What inputs are needed? Current contractor cost, proposed salary, employer costs, 13th-month accrual, benefits, provider fees, tools and transition costs.
Does it calculate exact statutory contributions? No. It uses editable fields so current official tables can be applied.
Why include 13th-month pay? It is an important annual payroll cost for covered Philippine employees.
Can it model teams? Yes. Add the number of contractors being converted to estimate team-level totals.
Can it compare EOR vs direct employment? Yes. Use the EOR/provider fee field for EOR, or replace it with internal employment-administration costs for direct hiring.
Is this payroll advice? No. It is a planning tool. Final payroll and classification decisions should be reviewed.

Calculator Formula

The calculator uses a planning model, not final payroll computation.

Formula Calculation
Monthly 13th-Month Accrual Proposed Monthly Salary ÷ 12, if included
Employer-Side Costs Fixed PHP amount or percentage of salary
Estimated Monthly Employee Cost Salary + employer-side costs + 13th-month accrual + benefits + provider fee + tools
Monthly Difference Estimated monthly employee cost − current monthly contractor cost
Annual Employee Cost Estimated monthly employee cost × 12
First-Year Cost Annual employee cost + one-off transition cost
Team Monthly Cost Monthly employee cost × number of employees
Team First-Year Cost First-year cost × number of employees

What Inputs Should You Enter?

Input Description
Current Monthly Contractor Cost What you currently pay the contractor each month
Proposed Monthly Salary Salary you expect to offer as an employee
Employer Cost Mode Choose fixed PHP amount or percentage of salary
Employer-Side Costs Estimated employer-side employment cost
13th-Month Pay Accrual Usually modelled as monthly salary divided by 12 for planning
Monthly Benefits HMO, allowances or other recurring employee benefits
Monthly EOR / Provider Fee Provider fee if using an EOR
Monthly Equipment / Tools Software, device, security or support cost
One-Off Transition Cost Setup, documentation or conversion-related cost
Number of Employees Use this when modelling several contractors at once

Example Cost Model

Cost Item Example Amount
Current Contractor Cost ₱60,000 / month
Proposed Monthly Salary ₱65,000
Estimated Employer-Side Costs ₱7,500
13th-Month Pay Accrual ₱5,417
Benefits ₱3,000
EOR / Provider Fee ₱10,000
Equipment / Tools ₱1,500
Estimated Monthly Employee Cost ₱92,417
Monthly Difference vs Contractor Cost ₱32,417

This example is for illustration only. Actual costs depend on salary, contribution tables, provider terms, benefits, employment model and internal policy.

Contractor vs Employee Cost Comparison

Cost Area Contractor Arrangement Employee / EOR Arrangement
Monthly Pay Contractor invoice or agreed service fee Salary through payroll
Employer Contributions Usually not administered as employee contributions Employer-side costs may apply
13th-Month Pay Usually not part of contractor fee unless agreed Should be modelled where applicable
Benefits Usually self-managed by contractor May include HMO, leave and employee benefits
Payroll Administration Contractor invoices and payment process Payroll process, payslips and employment records
Provider Fee Usually none unless agency/BPO involved EOR or employment-administration fee may apply
Compliance Risk Higher if contractor works like an employee Lower future misclassification risk if correctly employed

A contractor may appear cheaper on a monthly invoice, but the comparison is incomplete unless the business also considers legal risk, continuity, retention, benefits, access control and management structure.

When Should You Use This Calculator?

Use this calculator when:

  • A Filipino contractor works full-time or near full-time.
  • A contractor follows company hours, tools and internal workflows.
  • A VA, developer, support agent or finance assistant has become part of daily operations.
  • HR or finance wants to compare contractor cost against employee cost.
  • You are planning to convert 5–10 contractors in a pilot.
  • You are deciding between direct employment and EOR.
  • You need a CFO-friendly cost model before approving conversion.

For classification guidance, read Contractor vs Employee in the Philippines.

For risk detail, read Contractor Misclassification in the Philippines.

Role Examples: What to Model First

Contractor Role Why Cost Modelling Helps Related Guide
Virtual Assistants Often move from flexible contractor work into embedded admin roles Agency vs Freelancer vs EOR for Hiring VAs
Customer Support Staff Shift-based work may create employee-like patterns Customer Support: BPO vs Freelance vs EOR
Developers Long-term product work may become integrated into the team Developers to EOR Philippines
Finance Assistants Access, review and recurring finance workflows require stronger controls Finance Assistants to EOR Philippines

How to Use the Calculator for a Team

For multiple contractors, calculate the cost per person first, then multiply by the number of people being converted.

Step What to Do
1 Group contractors by role type
2 Enter the current monthly contractor cost for each role
3 Estimate the proposed monthly salary for each role
4 Add employer-side costs, benefits and provider fees
5 Add one-off transition costs
6 Compare monthly, annual and first-year cost difference
7 Prioritise high-risk and business-critical roles first

For team prioritisation, use the Contractor-to-Employee Conversion Matrix for Philippines Teams.

CFO View: What the Calculator Should Show

A useful contractor-to-employee cost calculator should separate recurring cost from one-off cost.

Output Why It Matters
Current Monthly Contractor Cost Establishes the baseline
Estimated Monthly Employee Cost Shows recurring converted cost
Monthly Difference Shows monthly budget impact
Annual Employee Cost Supports full-year planning
First-Year Cost Including Transition Includes one-off setup or migration costs
Team Monthly Cost Shows monthly budget impact for several conversions
Team First-Year Cost Supports finance approval and rollout planning
EOR Fee as Separate Line Prevents provider cost from being hidden
Benefits as Separate Line Shows employee support investment clearly
13th-Month Accrual Avoids annual payroll surprises

For a deeper finance planning resource, read Hourly Freelancers to Salaried Employees in the Philippines: Cost Modelling Playbook for CFOs.

Important Cost Notes

Do Not Compare Contractor Cost to Salary Alone

A salary-only comparison is incomplete. Employee cost may include employer contributions, benefits, 13th-month accrual, provider fees, tools and internal administration.

Keep Statutory Fields Editable

SSS, PhilHealth and Pag-IBIG amounts should be calculated using current official contribution tables. Keep the calculator editable so finance or payroll teams can enter the current figures.

Treat Tax Separately

Employee tax treatment and contractor tax treatment are different. This calculator is for employer-side cost planning, not final income-tax calculation.

Include Transition Costs

Conversion may involve onboarding, documentation, equipment, legal review, payroll setup, communication and internal management time.

Do Not Assume Conversion Removes Past Risk

Converting a contractor may reduce future misclassification risk, but historical exposure should be reviewed separately.

Direct Employment vs EOR Cost Modelling

Cost Area Direct Employment EOR Employment
Local Entity Required Not required by the client initially
Payroll Administration Managed by client or local payroll team Managed through EOR scope
Employer Costs Client administers directly Included or passed through under EOR arrangement
Benefits Client arranges directly Provider may administer benefits
HR Documentation Client prepares and maintains EOR supports employment documentation
Monthly Provider Fee May not apply EOR fee applies
Internal Admin Load Higher Lower, depending on provider scope
Best Fit Larger or long-term local operation Dedicated employees without entity setup

For the full conversion route, read Convert Contractors to Employees in the Philippines.

What to Prepare Before Converting Contractors

Preparation Area What to Confirm
Classification Review Does the current working relationship look employee-like?
Role Scope What job title and responsibilities will the employee have?
Salary Mapping How will contractor pay translate into salary?
Benefits What benefits will be provided?
Payroll Cutover When will contractor payments stop and payroll begin?
Employment Documents What documents need to be signed?
Communication How will the change be explained to workers?
Systems Access Do accounts or permissions need to change?
Historical Risk Should past classification exposure be reviewed?
Cost Approval Has finance approved the monthly and first-year cost?

Use the EOR Transition Communication Pack for Filipino Freelancers and Contractors to prepare employee-facing messages.

CMS / Developer Calculator Specification

Field Type Default Notes
Current Monthly Contractor Cost Number 60000 Baseline monthly contractor payment
Proposed Monthly Salary Number 65000 Proposed employee salary
Employer Cost Mode Radio Fixed Fixed amount or percentage of salary
Employer Cost Fixed Amount Number 7500 Used when fixed mode is selected
Employer Cost Percentage Number 12 Used when percentage mode is selected
Include 13th-Month Accrual Checkbox On Salary ÷ 12 if selected
Monthly Benefits Number 3000 HMO, allowances or recurring benefits
Monthly EOR / Provider Fee Number 10000 EOR or admin provider fee
Monthly Equipment / Tools Number 1500 Software, device or support cost
One-Off Transition Cost Number 15000 Setup, documents or migration costs
Employee Count Number 1 Number of contractors being converted

Required Outputs

Output Formula
Employer-Side Cost Used Fixed amount or salary × percentage
Monthly 13th-Month Accrual Salary ÷ 12, if selected
Monthly Employee Cost Per Person Salary + employer cost + 13th accrual + benefits + provider fee + tools
Monthly Difference Per Person Monthly employee cost − current contractor cost
Annual Employee Cost Per Person Monthly employee cost × 12
First-Year Cost Per Person Annual employee cost + transition cost
Team Monthly Employee Cost Monthly employee cost × employee count
Team Monthly Difference Monthly difference × employee count
Team Annual Employee Cost Annual employee cost × employee count
Team First-Year Cost First-year cost × employee count

Frequently Asked Questions

What Is a Contractor to Employee Cost Calculator?

A contractor to employee cost calculator estimates the cost of converting a contractor into an employee by adding salary, employer-side costs, benefits, 13th-month pay accrual, provider fees and transition costs.

Why Is Employee Cost Higher Than Contractor Cost?

Employee cost may include statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, payroll administration, equipment, provider fees and management support. Contractor invoices often do not show these items separately.

Should I Use Contractor Pay as the Employee Salary?

Not automatically. Contractor pay may include the worker’s self-managed benefits, taxes, tools and risk premium. Salary should be set based on role, market, benefits and employment structure.

Does the Calculator Include SSS, PhilHealth and Pag-IBIG?

The calculator should include editable employer-side cost fields. Final SSS, PhilHealth and Pag-IBIG amounts should be checked against current official contribution tables before payroll processing.

Does the Calculator Include 13th-Month Pay?

Yes. For planning, 13th-month pay can be modelled as a monthly accrual. Final treatment should be confirmed against current payroll guidance and employee records.

Can This Compare EOR vs Direct Employment?

Yes. Use the EOR fee field for an EOR model, or replace it with internal payroll, HR and entity-administration costs for direct employment modelling.

Does Conversion Remove Misclassification Risk?

Conversion may reduce future risk where the person should be employed, but it does not automatically remove historical classification exposure.

Estimate the True Cost Before You Convert

Converting contractors to employees can improve workforce stability, reduce future classification risk and create a stronger employment structure. But finance, HR and legal teams need a clear cost model before making the change.

Smart Outsourcing Solution helps international businesses assess contractor-to-employee conversion pathways in the Philippines and evaluate EOR-supported employment for dedicated long-term team members.

Discuss contractor conversion costs in the Philippines with Smart Outsourcing Solution

 

Disclaimer: This calculator and guide provide general planning information only. They are not legal, employment, payroll, tax or financial advice. Actual costs, contributions, benefits, tax treatment and conversion requirements depend on the worker, role, salary, provider terms and applicable Philippine requirements. Confirm details with qualified advisers and current official contribution tables before making employment or payroll decisions.

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