A compliant Philippines Employer of Record should give you more than a monthly invoice.
A Philippines EOR should be able to show clear evidence for:
| Compliance Area | What the EOR Should Provide |
| Local employment documentation | DOLE-aligned employment contracts, onboarding records, role terms, compensation terms |
| Payroll processing | Payroll registers, payslips, salary calculations, deductions, approvals |
| Statutory contributions | SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG administration and remittance evidence |
| 13th-month pay | Accrual, calculation, payment record, and employee-facing evidence |
| Payroll transparency | Payslips, payroll journals, variance logs, approval trails |
| Benefits administration | HMO, allowances, equipment, leave, and agreed benefit records |
| Offboarding | Final pay calculation, clearance, last payslip, statutory closure where applicable |
| Audit-ready proof pack | Contracts, payslips, remittance receipts or summaries, payroll reports, issue logs |
In the Philippines, key employer-side compliance areas include employment contracts, payroll records, statutory contribution administration, 13th-month pay, payslips, and employment documentation. SSS publishes employer/employee contribution tables, PhilHealth has confirmed the 5% premium rate for 2026 under the Universal Health Care schedule, and Pag-IBIG Circular No. 460 increased the maximum fund salary used for computing employee and employer savings to ₱10,000 per month.
Smart Outsourcing Solution’s EOR service should be positioned around visible compliance: contracts, payroll, statutory handling, payslips, 13th-month handling, reporting, and evidence that the employment layer is being administered properly.
Philippines EOR compliance is the set of employment, payroll, statutory, documentation, and reporting controls required when an Employer of Record legally employs Filipino workers on behalf of a client company.
The EOR is the legal employer. The client company manages the employee’s day-to-day work.
A compliant EOR arrangement should make the split clear:
| Area | EOR Owns / Administers | Client Owns |
| Legal employment structure | Yes | No |
| Local employment documents | Yes, with client inputs | Role and commercial terms |
| Payroll processing | Yes | Payroll funding and approvals |
| Statutory administration | Yes | Review and funding |
| Day-to-day work | No | Yes |
| Performance management | Supports documentation only | Yes |
| Payslips and payroll records | Yes | Review and recordkeeping |
| 13th-month handling | Yes | Funding and review |
| Offboarding documentation | Yes | Business decision and operational access removal |
A Philippines EOR is not just a hiring shortcut. It is a compliance operating layer.
A strong EOR should provide a proof pack that shows employment, payroll, and statutory obligations are being handled correctly.
| Proof Item | Why It Matters |
| DOLE-aligned employment contract | Shows the worker is engaged under a local employment structure |
| Signed onboarding documents | Confirms the employment record was set up properly |
| Payroll register | Shows salary, deductions, allowances, employer costs, and net pay |
| Employee payslip | Gives the employee a clear record of pay and deductions |
| SSS contribution evidence | Shows social security administration |
| PhilHealth contribution evidence | Shows health insurance contribution administration |
| Pag-IBIG contribution evidence | Shows housing fund contribution administration |
| 13th-month accrual / payment record | Shows mandatory annual pay is tracked |
| Payroll approval trail | Shows pay changes were reviewed and approved |
| Remittance receipts or summaries | Supports audit, due diligence, and board reporting |
| Benefits record | Shows HMO, allowances, equipment, or other agreed benefits |
| Final pay / offboarding record | Shows the employment relationship was closed cleanly |
The proof pack matters because EOR compliance should be visible, not assumed.
Related spoke: Philippines Payroll Compliance Proof Pack
Payroll compliance in the Philippines is not only about paying the employee on time.
A compliant payroll cycle should document:
| Payroll Area | What Should Be Clear |
| Gross salary | Employee’s agreed monthly compensation |
| Payroll period | Covered dates and pay date |
| Allowances | Recurring or one-off allowances |
| Deductions | Statutory and approved deductions |
| Employer statutory costs | Employer-side contributions and payroll obligations |
| Net pay | Amount paid to the employee |
| Payslip | Employee-facing payroll record |
| Payroll register | Employer/client-facing payroll record |
| Remittance evidence | Proof or summary of statutory payments |
| Variance log | Explanation for changes from prior payroll |
| Approval trail | Record of who approved payroll and changes |
A good EOR should make payroll easy to verify after each cycle.
A Philippines EOR should administer the relevant statutory contribution workflows for employed workers.
| Statutory Item | What It Covers | What the EOR Should Evidence |
| SSS | Social security benefits and contribution administration | Contribution computation and remittance record |
| PhilHealth | National health insurance contribution administration | Premium computation and remittance record |
| Pag-IBIG | Housing fund savings contribution administration | Contribution computation and remittance record |
SSS publishes official contribution tables for employer and employee contributions. PhilHealth’s 2026 premium rate is 5% of monthly income within the applicable schedule. Pag-IBIG Circular No. 460 increased the maximum fund salary used for computing employee and employer savings to ₱10,000 per month, with the implementation circulated by the Philippine government.
Because statutory rules and contribution tables can change, the EOR should verify current rates before every payroll setup and whenever government agencies issue updates.
13th-month pay is a core Philippines payroll requirement.
A Philippines EOR should track and evidence:
| 13th-Month Requirement | What to Check |
| Eligibility | Whether the employee is covered |
| Accrual | How the amount is tracked during the year |
| Calculation | How basic salary and employment period are reflected |
| Payment timing | When the 13th-month pay is released |
| Payslip / record | Whether the employee can see the payment clearly |
| Final pay treatment | How accrued 13th-month is handled when an employee exits |
DOLE has stated that 13th-month pay applies to rank-and-file employees in the private sector, and government explainers commonly summarise the minimum amount as one-twelfth of the total basic salary earned within the calendar year.
The EOR should not treat 13th-month pay as an afterthought. It should be part of the monthly employment cost model and the year-end proof pack.
A Philippines EOR should provide local employment documentation that reflects Philippine employment requirements and the actual role.
A good employment document should clearly state:
| Contract Area | Why It Matters |
| Legal employer | Identifies the local employer of record |
| Employee details | Confirms identity and employment record |
| Job title and role | Aligns the role with actual work |
| Compensation | States salary and pay cycle |
| Benefits | Documents agreed HMO, allowances, equipment, or other benefits |
| Work arrangement | Remote, hybrid, shift, location, or schedule expectations |
| Confidentiality | Protects company information |
| IP assignment | Protects work product and company assets where applicable |
| Policies | References relevant employment, security, and conduct rules |
| Termination / offboarding | Sets expectations for exit handling |
For roles with sensitive access, such as Amazon/Shopify VAs, executive assistants, finance staff, developers, and data analysts, contracts should also support confidentiality, IP, access controls, and clean offboarding.
A compliant EOR should produce evidence that can be reviewed by the client, employee, finance team, or auditor.
| Evidence Type | Audience | Purpose |
| Payslip | Employee | Shows salary, deductions, net pay, and pay period |
| Payroll register | Client / Finance | Shows employee-level payroll calculation |
| Payroll journal | Finance | Supports accounting and reconciliation |
| Statutory summary | Client / Finance | Shows SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG amounts |
| Remittance receipt or evidence | Client / Audit | Shows statutory payments were handled |
| Variance log | Client / Finance | Explains changes from prior payroll |
| Approval trail | Client / Finance | Shows payroll was reviewed before release |
If a provider cannot show payroll evidence, the client cannot easily verify compliance.
Use this as the standard proof-pack checklist.
| Proof Pack Section | Documents / Evidence |
| Employment setup | Contract, onboarding forms, role and salary confirmation |
| Payroll cycle | Payroll register, payslips, payroll approval trail |
| Statutory contributions | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG summaries and remittance evidence |
| 13th-month | Accrual log, calculation, payment record |
| Benefits | HMO enrolment, allowance records, equipment acknowledgements if applicable |
| Leave and HR records | Leave balances, employee record updates, HR notes where relevant |
| Compliance reporting | Monthly payroll summary, variance report, issue log |
| Offboarding | Final pay, last payslip, clearance, access revocation confirmation where applicable |
This proof pack should be available after payroll cycles and during audits, diligence reviews, provider switching, or employee exits.
Use this checklist before choosing or auditing an EOR provider.
| Question | What a Good Answer Looks Like |
| Who is the legal employer? | The provider can explain the local employment structure clearly |
| Are contracts locally aligned? | The provider uses Philippine employment documentation |
| How is payroll approved? | Payroll has cutoffs, draft review, approval, and release steps |
| Are payslips issued? | Employees receive itemised payslips |
| Are statutory contributions handled? | SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG are administered and evidenced |
| Is 13th-month pay tracked? | Accrual and payment are documented |
| Are benefits documented? | HMO, allowances, equipment, and other benefits are recorded |
| Is remittance evidence available? | The provider can provide summaries or receipts |
| Is offboarding documented? | Final pay, records, and employment closure are handled |
| Is there an audit trail? | Payroll changes, approvals, and issues are logged |
A compliant provider should be able to answer these before payroll starts.
Different roles create different compliance risks.
| Use Case | Compliance Priority | Supporting Spoke |
| Amazon / Shopify VA | Access control, payroll proof, statutory evidence, offboarding | Amazon FBA / Shopify VA page |
| Customer support team | Night shift, SLAs, payroll accuracy, benefits clarity | Customer Support VA page |
| Developers | IP assignment, confidentiality, device and repository access | Offshore Data Security & IP Protection page |
| Executive assistants | Confidentiality, inbox/calendar access, travel/security SOPs | EA Philippines SOP page |
| Bookkeepers / finance staff | Financial data access, confidentiality, payroll and records discipline | Hire Bookkeepers page |
| Scaling teams | Payroll cadence, statutory evidence, support model, bulk onboarding | Philippines EOR for Scaling Teams |
| Switching EOR providers | Record transfer, remittance evidence, first payroll validation | Switch EOR Provider Philippines |
This pillar page owns the general compliance standard. The spokes should own role-specific execution.
A contractor model may work for short-term, independent project work. It becomes riskier when the person operates like an employee.
| Factor | Contractor | EOR Employee |
| Best for | Short-term independent work | Long-term employee-like work |
| Payroll | Invoice-based | Payroll-based |
| Employment contract | Service agreement | Local employment documentation |
| Statutory benefits | Usually not employer-administered | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG administered |
| 13th-month pay | Usually not applicable | Required where applicable |
| Payslips | Usually none | Issued |
| Compliance proof | Limited | Payroll and statutory evidence |
| Offboarding | Often informal | Final pay and records process |
Use EOR when the worker is full-time or close to full-time, managed by your team, using your systems, and part of core operations.
Related spoke: EOR vs Freelancer Philippines
An EOR helps you hire without opening a Philippine company. Your own entity gives more control but also more responsibility.
| Compliance Area | EOR | Own Philippine Entity |
| Legal employer | EOR provider | Your company |
| Payroll administration | EOR handles | Your team or provider handles |
| Statutory filings | EOR administers | Your entity owns directly |
| Contracts | EOR-supported | Your company owns |
| Payslips | EOR-supported | Your company issues |
| Corporate maintenance | Not required for hiring | Required |
| Control | Moderate | High |
| Operating burden | Lower | Higher |
If your team becomes large, stable, and long-term, entity setup may eventually make sense. The compliance pillar should link out to the separate entity decision page rather than trying to own that full topic.
Related pillar: EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines
Local and global EOR providers can both be compliant, but the proof experience may differ.
| Factor | Local Philippines EOR | Global EOR Platform |
| Payroll detail | Often more locally direct | Varies by local partner / country model |
| Support | More local and direct | More platform-led |
| Remittance proof | Often easier to request locally | May depend on system and partner process |
| Pricing | Often simpler for Philippines-only hiring | Often higher for multi-country platform coverage |
| Best for | Philippines-focused teams | Multi-country teams |
| Compliance review | Local evidence and payroll files | Dashboard plus country evidence |
If the client is hiring only in the Philippines, a local EOR may offer clearer compliance visibility. If the client is hiring across many countries, a global EOR may offer broader operational consistency.
Related spoke: Best Local Employer of Record in the Philippines
Smart Outsourcing Solution should position its Philippines EOR compliance around evidence, not vague assurance.
SOS should be known for:
Smart Outsourcing Solution helps companies employ workers in the Philippines through an EOR model with visible compliance proof, including local employment documentation, payroll records, payslips, statutory contribution administration, 13th-month handling, and remittance evidence.
Send us your role, headcount, current hiring model, payroll setup, and whether you already have employees in the Philippines.
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