PEO vs EOR in the Philippines: Which is Right for You? (2026 Guide)
Author: Martin English, CEO & Founding Partner
Updated: May 27, 2026
TL;DR
The difference between PEO and EOR in the Philippines comes down to one question:
Do you already have a Philippine entity?
| Situation | Best Fit |
| You already have a Philippine entity | PEO |
| You need payroll and HR admin support for your entity | PEO |
| You want your company to remain the legal employer | PEO |
| You do not have a Philippine entity | EOR |
| You want to hire in the Philippines without setting up a company | EOR |
| You need the provider to act as legal employer | EOR |
A PEO supports your existing Philippine entity with payroll, HR administration, statutory workflows, payslips, benefits coordination, and reporting.
An EOR legally employs workers on your behalf when you do not have a Philippine entity. Your company manages the employee’s day-to-day work, while the EOR handles the employment layer.
Smart Outsourcing Solution positions its PEO support at US$99 per employee per month for companies with an existing Philippine entity. For companies without a Philippine entity, SOS offers EOR service at US$190 per employee per month. The current SOS PEO vs EOR page describes SOS pricing as US$99/month for PEO and US$190 flat for EOR.
For the broader entity decision, read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
Quick Answer: Should You Use PEO or EOR?
Use this decision table.
| Question | If Yes | Better Fit |
| Do you already have a Philippine entity? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you want your company to remain the legal employer? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you need payroll and HR administration support? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you need statutory workflow support for your own entity? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you not have a Philippine entity? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you need to hire without opening a company? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you need the provider to legally employ workers? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you testing the Philippines before incorporation? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you converting contractors into employees with no local entity? | Yes | EOR |
The simple rule:
PEO supports your Philippine entity. EOR replaces the need for your own Philippine entity at the hiring stage.
What Is a PEO in the Philippines?
A Professional Employer Organization, or PEO, supports companies that already have a Philippine legal entity.
Your company remains the legal employer. The PEO helps administer the employment operations.
| PEO Support Area | What It Covers |
| Payroll administration | Payroll calendars, calculations, payslips, and records |
| Statutory workflows | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and payroll-related administration |
| BIR-related payroll support | Withholding and payroll documentation workflows |
| HR documentation | Employment records, onboarding files, letters, and offboarding documents |
| Benefits administration | HMO, eligibility, enrolment, changes, and exits |
| Reporting | Payroll summaries, finance exports, and evidence packs |
| Payroll change control | Salary changes, allowances, retro pay, deductions, and approvals |
A PEO is useful when you want operational support but still want your own company to remain the legal employer.
What Is an EOR in the Philippines?
An Employer of Record, or EOR, legally employs workers on behalf of a company that does not have a local entity.
The EOR becomes the legal employer. Your company manages the employee’s daily work.
| EOR Handles | Your Company Handles |
| Employment contracts | Day-to-day work |
| Payroll and payslips | Role scope |
| Statutory administration | Tools and systems |
| 13th-month handling | Performance management |
| Employment records | Work priorities |
| Compliance workflows | Team integration |
| Standard offboarding support | Business outcomes |
An EOR is usually the right model if your main question is: “How can I hire in the Philippines without a local entity?”
PEO vs EOR: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | PEO Philippines | EOR Philippines |
| Local entity required | Yes | No |
| Legal employer | Your company | EOR provider |
| Best for | Companies with a Philippine entity | Companies without a Philippine entity |
| Primary purpose | Payroll and HR administration support | Legal employment without entity setup |
| Setup speed | Fast if your entity and employee data are ready | Fast if documents and candidate details are ready |
| Payroll | PEO supports payroll operations | EOR administers payroll under its employment structure |
| Statutory workflows | PEO supports your entity’s workflows | EOR administers employment-related workflows |
| Contracts | Your company owns contracts, with support | EOR-supported employment documents |
| Payslips | PEO-supported | EOR-supported |
| 13th-month handling | PEO-supported | EOR-supported |
| Control | Higher | Moderate |
| Operating responsibility | Higher because your entity remains employer | Lower because EOR provides employment layer |
| Typical SOS fee anchor | US$99/employee/month | US$190/employee/month |
The current SOS page also notes that both models can be fast when documents and data are ready, with SOS describing about 48 hours as typical to set calendars, run a test payroll, and produce draft remittance artefacts.
PEO vs EOR Cost Breakdown
The provider fee is only one part of the full employment cost.
| Cost Layer | PEO | EOR |
| Employee salary | Funded by your company | Funded by client through EOR |
| Employer statutory contributions | Funded by your company | Funded by client through EOR |
| 13th-month pay | Funded by your company | Funded by client through EOR |
| Benefits / HMO | Funded by your company | Funded by client through EOR |
| Equipment / allowances | Funded by your company | Funded by client |
| Payroll administration | PEO fee | EOR fee |
| Legal employment layer | Your entity | EOR provider |
| SOS fee anchor | US$99/employee/month | US$190/employee/month |
The PEO fee is usually lower because your company remains the legal employer. The EOR fee is higher because the provider supplies the legal employment layer.
What Is Included in SOS PEO Support?
SOS PEO support is for companies that already have a Philippine entity and need help administering payroll and HR operations.
| Included in SOS PEO Support | What It Covers |
| Payroll administration | Payroll calendars, calculations, payslips, and payroll records |
| Statutory workflow support | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and payroll-related administration |
| BIR-related payroll support | Payroll withholding and documentation support |
| HR documentation | Employee records, onboarding files, templates, and offboarding documents |
| Benefits coordination | HMO, eligibility, enrolment, changes, and exits if applicable |
| Evidence packs | Payroll registers, approval trails, variance logs, and remittance support |
| Reporting | Payroll summaries and finance-ready records |
| Local support | Philippines-focused payroll and HR coordination |
Salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, allowances, equipment, and pass-through costs remain separate from the PEO administration fee.
What Is Included in SOS EOR Service?
SOS EOR service is for companies that want to hire in the Philippines without opening a local company.
| Included in SOS EOR Service | What It Covers |
| Legal employment support | Employ staff in the Philippines without opening your own entity |
| Employment documentation | Local employment contracts and records |
| Payroll processing | Monthly payroll support and records |
| Payslips | Payslip preparation and documentation |
| Statutory administration | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, withholding, and payroll compliance workflows |
| 13th-month handling | Accrual and processing support |
| Reporting | Payroll summaries and finance-ready records |
| Account support | Philippines-based EOR coordination |
The EOR service fee is separate from salary, statutory employer costs, 13th-month pay, optional HMO, equipment, allowances, and pass-through costs.
PEO vs EOR vs Entity Setup
PEO and EOR are not the only options. Some companies eventually open their own Philippine entity.
| Model | Local Entity Required? | Legal Employer | Best For |
| PEO | Yes | Your company | Companies with a Philippine entity that need payroll and HR operations support |
| EOR | No | EOR provider | Companies hiring in the Philippines without a local entity |
| Own entity | Yes | Your company | Larger, stable, long-term Philippines teams that need full control |
Use PEO when you already have an entity. Use EOR when you do not. Consider entity setup when the team becomes large, stable, and long-term enough to justify fixed local overhead.
For the full headcount, cost, and control model, read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
Local vs Global EOR Providers
If you choose EOR, you also need to decide between a local Philippines provider and 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 knowledge | Usually stronger for PH-specific workflows | Varies by provider and country |
| Platform depth | 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 |
If your hiring is only or mainly in the Philippines, a local EOR may offer better fee efficiency and more direct local support. If you are hiring across many countries, a global EOR platform may be worth the higher provider fee.
Provider and Model Comparison Table
| Provider / Model | Published or Stated Fee | Best Fit | Notes |
| Smart Outsourcing Solution PEO | US$99 per employee/month | Companies with a PH entity | Payroll and HR administration support |
| Smart Outsourcing Solution EOR | US$190 per employee/month | Companies without a PH entity | Local EOR service for Philippines hiring |
| Multiplier EOR | From US$400/month | Multi-country hiring | Global EOR platform |
| Deel EOR | From US$599/employee/month | Global hiring | EOR fee includes onboarding, compliance, payroll, tax filings, benefits administration, and HR/legal support |
| Remote EOR | From US$599/employee/month | Global hiring | Global EOR platform |
| Own Philippine entity | Fixed overhead, not a provider fee | Larger long-term teams | Requires incorporation, payroll, accounting, HR, tax, banking, and compliance support |
Deel states that EOR pricing starts at US$599/month and includes payroll, benefits administration, taxes, compliance, and HR/legal support. For SOS, the current PEO vs EOR article states US$99/month for PEO and US$190 flat for EOR.
Decision Criteria: PEO, EOR, or Entity Setup?
| Question | If Yes | Likely Fit |
| Do you already have a Philippine entity? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you need payroll and HR admin support for that entity? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you want your company to remain the legal employer? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you need to hire without opening a company? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you testing the Philippines as a hiring market? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you converting contractors into employees but have no entity? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you expect a stable Philippines team for several years? | Yes | Compare EOR vs entity |
| Are you approaching 25–40+ employees? | Yes | Model entity setup |
| Do you need full local control over banking, policies, and employer brand? | Yes | Entity setup may fit |
The answer is not “PEO is better” or “EOR is better.” The answer depends on whether you already have a legal entity and how much employer responsibility you are ready to own.
Migration Path: EOR to PEO
Some companies start with EOR, then move to PEO after setting up a Philippine entity.
A clean transition usually looks like this:
- Hire through EOR to start quickly.
- Build the team and validate Philippines as a hiring market.
- Decide whether entity setup makes sense.
- Register the Philippine entity.
- Plan the payroll cutover.
- Novate or rehire contracts where appropriate.
- Align payroll calendars.
- Re-enrol benefits if needed.
- Preserve evidence continuity: receipts, approvals, variance logs, and payroll records.
- Move to PEO support once your entity becomes the legal employer.
The current SOS page already recommends this kind of EOR-to-PEO path: hire now on EOR, incorporate, then transition contracts, payroll calendars, benefits, and evidence continuity before steady-state PEO.
Risk Differences: PEO vs EOR
| Risk Area | PEO | EOR |
| Legal employer responsibility | Your company owns it | EOR provider acts as legal employer |
| Payroll admin risk | PEO supports; your entity remains accountable | EOR administers under its employment model |
| Entity compliance | Your entity owns corporate obligations | Not required for hiring through EOR |
| IP and confidentiality | Your company should ensure local contracts align | EOR contracts should support IP assignment and confidentiality |
| Permanent establishment risk | Entity is already present | Not automatically eliminated by EOR; depends on activity and authority |
| Misclassification risk | Lower if employees are properly employed by your entity | Lower if employees are properly employed through EOR |
Staff leasing is not the same as PEO or EOR. The current SOS article states that staff leasing is agency supply, while PEO and EOR are employment models with compliance scaffolding.
Why Smart Outsourcing Solution Fits This Use Case
Smart Outsourcing Solution is a strong fit because it separates the two models clearly:
| If You Have… | Recommended SOS Model |
| No Philippine entity | EOR |
| A Philippine entity | PEO |
SOS fits buyers who want:
- A clear model choice based on entity status
- Philippines-focused payroll and employment support
- Transparent fee anchors: US$99/month PEO and US$190/month EOR
- Local payroll and statutory workflow support
- Evidence-first operations: remittance records, approvals, variance logs, and payroll files
- Support for moving from EOR to PEO after incorporation
If you do not have a Philippine entity, start with EOR. If you already have one, use PEO support to run payroll and HR operations more cleanly.
FAQs
What is the difference between PEO and EOR in the Philippines?
A PEO supports your existing Philippine entity with payroll and HR administration. An EOR legally employs workers on your behalf when you do not have a Philippine entity. Use PEO if you already have an entity. Use EOR if you need to hire without one.
Which is better: PEO or EOR in the Philippines?
PEO is better if you already have a Philippine entity and want payroll or HR operations support. EOR is better if you do not have a Philippine entity and want to hire employees legally without opening one.
Do I need a Philippine entity to use PEO?
Yes. PEO is designed for companies that already have a Philippine entity. Your company remains the legal employer, and the PEO supports payroll and HR administration.
Can I use EOR without a Philippine entity?
Yes. EOR is designed for companies that want to hire employees in the Philippines without setting up a local company. The EOR becomes the legal employer.
How can I hire in the Philippines without a local entity?
Use an Employer of Record. The EOR legally employs the worker locally and handles contracts, payroll, payslips, statutory administration, 13th-month handling, and employment documentation.
Should I use an EOR or open an entity in the Philippines?
Use an EOR if you want to hire quickly without opening a company. Consider opening an entity if your Philippine team is stable, long-term, large enough to justify fixed overhead, and your company is ready to manage local payroll, tax, HR, accounting, and compliance.
How much does SOS PEO cost?
The current SOS PEO vs EOR page positions SOS PEO at US$99 per employee per month. Salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, and pass-through employment costs are separate.
How much does SOS EOR cost?
The current SOS PEO vs EOR page positions SOS EOR at US$190 per employee per month. Salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, optional HMO, equipment, allowances, and other pass-through costs are separate.
Is staff leasing the same as PEO or EOR?
No. Staff leasing is agency supply. PEO and EOR are employment models with payroll, HR, and compliance workflows.
Can I switch from EOR to PEO later?
Yes. Many companies start with EOR, then move to PEO after setting up a Philippine entity. The transition should align contracts, payroll calendars, benefits, statutory records, and evidence continuity.
Choose the Right Philippines Hiring Model
Tell us whether you already have a Philippine entity, your target headcount, roles, salary range, and timeline.
We’ll help compare:
- PEO vs EOR fit
- Whether entity setup is worth modelling
- Salary and statutory costs
- 13th-month handling
- Payroll and HR operations needs
- EOR-to-PEO migration path
- SOS monthly service fee model
Speak with a specialist and get a quote
Read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines
View EOR Pricing Philippines
Recommended Reads
- EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines
- EOR Pricing Philippines
- Employer of Record Philippines
- Hire Employees in the Philippines Without Setting Up a Company
- PEO Support Philippines: The Operations Playbook
- Top PEO Providers in the Philippines
- EOR vs PEO vs Entity Setup
- Top PEO Providers in the Philippines
- Talent & Salary Benchmarks Philippines
- Salary Guide Philippines