Captive Team vs BPO vs EOR in the Philippines: 2026 Comparison Guide

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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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Captive Team vs BPO vs EOR in the Philippines: 2026 Comparison Guide

Author: Martin English
Date Updated: June 9, 2026

TL;DR: Captive team vs BPO vs EOR — what is the difference?

A captive team, BPO, and Employer of Record are three different ways to build or access talent in the Philippines.

A captive team usually means setting up your own Philippine entity or dedicated operating structure, hiring employees directly, and managing everything yourself. It gives the most control, but it also requires the most time, cost, compliance ownership, and management infrastructure.

A BPO is an outsourced service model. You pay a provider to deliver a function, process, team, seat, or managed service. The BPO usually manages recruitment, supervision, payroll, HR, quality assurance, and day-to-day operations.

An EOR is an employment model. Your team members are legally employed in the Philippines through the EOR, while your company manages their daily work, tools, KPIs, training, and culture. The EOR handles local employment, payroll, payslips, statutory contributions, benefits coordination, and HR administration.

Use a captive team when you want maximum ownership and are ready for entity setup. Use a BPO when you want outsourced delivery. Use an EOR when you want a dedicated team without setting up a Philippine entity.

For companies moving from outsourced delivery to a dedicated team, start with How to Move from a BPO to an EOR in the Philippines.

Quick answer: which model should you choose?

Choose a captive team if you are ready to build a long-term Philippine operation, set up a local entity, manage local compliance directly, and invest in HR, payroll, finance, legal, facilities, and management infrastructure.

Choose a BPO if you want a provider to manage delivery, supervision, staffing, quality assurance, and operational output for a defined process or function.

Choose an EOR if you want dedicated Filipino employees who work like part of your own company, but you do not want to open a Philippine entity or manage local payroll and employment compliance yourself.

The right model depends on what you want most: ownership, outsourced delivery, or dedicated employment without entity setup.

Who is this guide for?

This guide is for companies comparing operating models for building a team in the Philippines.

It is especially useful for:

  • founders deciding whether to use BPO, EOR, or entity setup
  • COOs reviewing offshore operating models
  • CFOs comparing cost, control, and compliance exposure
  • HR leaders planning long-term workforce structure
  • companies using a BPO but wanting more team ownership
  • businesses hiring customer support, finance, operations, admin, technical, or client services roles
  • teams deciding whether to build a captive operation or start with EOR first

If you need a managed service, BPO may be enough. If you need dedicated employees without entity setup, EOR may be the better bridge. If you need full ownership and local infrastructure, a captive team may be the long-term destination.

Captive team vs BPO vs EOR: side-by-side comparison

Comparison area Captive team BPO EOR
Main purpose Build your own Philippine operation Outsource a process or function Employ a dedicated team without opening an entity
Legal employer Your Philippine entity BPO provider EOR provider
Daily management Your company Usually the BPO Your company
Setup complexity High Low to medium Low to medium
Speed to launch Slowest Fast Fast
Control over people Highest Lower or shared High
Payroll visibility Highest if managed well Usually lower Higher than BPO
Compliance ownership Your company BPO owns its employment compliance EOR handles employment administration
Best fit Large, long-term operations Transactional or vendor-managed work Dedicated teams without entity setup
Main trade-off High cost and complexity Less control and visibility More management responsibility than BPO

For a deeper BPO/EOR comparison, see BPO vs EOR: Cost, Control and Compliance Compared.

Best for / not best for

Model Best for Not best for
Captive team Large, long-term Philippine operations needing maximum control and local infrastructure Small teams, pilots, or companies not ready for entity setup
BPO Transactional, seasonal, high-volume, vendor-managed processes Teams needing direct control, named staff retention, or employee-level payroll visibility
EOR Dedicated teams that need direct management and local employment support without entity setup Companies that want fully managed service delivery with minimal internal management

This is the simplest decision rule: captive is for ownership, BPO is for outsourced delivery, and EOR is for dedicated employment without entity setup.

Which model fits your company stage?

The best model often depends on where you are in the offshore journey.

Company stage Best-fit model Why
Testing the Philippines with 1–5 roles EOR or BPO EOR works for dedicated roles; BPO works for outsourced tasks
Needing quick operational capacity BPO The provider can manage seats, supervision, QA, and process delivery
Building a long-term dedicated team EOR You get more control and continuity without opening an entity
Scaling a Philippines-heavy team EOR or captive EOR can support scale; captive may make sense once headcount and infrastructure justify it
Building a permanent local operation Captive team Entity ownership gives maximum control but requires local infrastructure
Moving away from a BPO EOR or hybrid EOR can help move core roles into a dedicated structure while keeping BPO overflow

Many companies do not need to choose the final model on day one. A common pathway is to start with BPO or EOR, then move towards a captive team only when the headcount, risk profile, and long-term commitment justify entity setup.

What is a captive team?

A captive team usually means your company directly owns or controls the local operating structure. In the Philippines, this often involves setting up a local entity, registering with relevant government agencies, hiring employees directly, managing payroll, handling employment compliance, and building local operations infrastructure.

A captive model may include:

  • Philippine entity setup
  • local HR and payroll
  • local finance and tax support
  • employment contracts
  • statutory contributions
  • benefits and HMO management
  • office or remote-work infrastructure
  • IT, security, and equipment processes
  • local managers and policies
  • direct employment records
  • local compliance ownership

A captive team gives the most control, but it also carries the most responsibility. It is usually better for companies that have scale, long-term commitment, local leadership, and enough headcount to justify the overhead.

When is a captive team too early?

A captive team can be the wrong first step if the company has not yet validated the Philippines as a long-term hiring location.

It may be too early if:

  • you only need one to five roles
  • you are still testing the market
  • you do not have local management capacity
  • you are not ready to manage local payroll, HR, finance, and compliance
  • you do not yet know the long-term headcount plan
  • setup costs would outweigh the benefits
  • you need to hire quickly
  • you are not ready for entity administration

In these cases, an EOR can be a practical bridge. It lets you build and manage a dedicated team before deciding whether a captive entity is worth the investment.

What is a BPO?

A BPO, or business process outsourcing provider, delivers a service or function for your company. The BPO usually employs or manages the staff, supervises work, provides operational oversight, and invoices you for the service.

A BPO may be suitable for:

  • customer support
  • data entry
  • back-office processing
  • seasonal campaigns
  • overflow support
  • basic administrative workflows
  • standardised finance processing
  • transactional work
  • managed QA and supervision

A BPO is often useful when you want a vendor to manage staffing and delivery. The trade-off is that you may have less direct control over individual employees, payroll visibility, culture, retention, and process ownership.

For a broader service model comparison, see Employer of Record vs Staff Leasing vs BPO.

What is an EOR?

An Employer of Record allows your company to hire employees in the Philippines without opening a local entity. The EOR becomes the local legal employer, while your company manages daily work.

An EOR typically handles:

  • employment contracts
  • payroll processing
  • payslips
  • SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG administration
  • BIR withholding support
  • 13th month pay administration
  • benefits coordination
  • HR documentation
  • local employment administration
  • onboarding and offboarding support

Your company still manages the work: KPIs, tools, training, performance, communication, culture, and role priorities.

For companies that want local employment support without entity setup, see Employer of Record Services in the Philippines.

Cost comparison: captive team vs BPO vs EOR

The cost structure is different in each model.

A captive team can offer long-term control, but usually requires upfront and ongoing overhead. A BPO often provides bundled pricing. An EOR usually gives a more itemised employment cost model.

Cost area Captive team BPO EOR
Setup cost Highest Low to medium Low
Entity setup Required Not required Not required
Payroll setup Your responsibility Included in vendor model Handled by EOR
HR infrastructure Your responsibility BPO-managed EOR-supported
Management cost Your responsibility Often included in service fee Your company manages daily work
Employee salary visibility High Often limited High
Statutory cost visibility High if managed well Often limited Usually clearer
Provider fee Not applicable, but overhead exists Bundled service fee EOR admin fee
Best cost fit Larger teams with long-term scale Outsourced service delivery Dedicated teams without entity overhead

The lowest visible cost is not always the best value. Captive teams can become efficient at scale, but they require investment. BPO can be cost-effective for managed delivery. EOR can be cost-effective when you want a dedicated team without local entity overhead.

For employment cost modelling, use EOR Pricing in the Philippines.

Control comparison

Control is one of the biggest differences between the three models.

Control area Captive team BPO EOR
Hiring decisions Highest Limited or shared High
Salary and package design Highest Limited High
Daily management Your company Usually BPO Your company
Tools and systems Your company BPO or shared Your company
KPIs and coaching Your company BPO or shared Your company
Culture and engagement Your company Limited or BPO-led Your company
Retention strategy Your company BPO-controlled or shared Your company
Process ownership Highest Lower High

A captive team gives the most control, followed by EOR. A BPO gives less direct control but reduces internal management burden.

Compliance comparison

Compliance also differs by model.

Compliance area                               Captive team.                                              BPO EOR
Local entity compliance Your company BPO EOR
Employment contracts Your company BPO EOR
Payroll administration Your company BPO EOR
Statutory contributions Your company BPO EOR
Tax withholding support Your company BPO EOR
HR documentation Your company BPO EOR
Client visibility Highest Usually lower Higher than BPO.            
Client responsibility Highest Lower for employment,
higher for vendor management
Shared operating
responsibility

A captive team is not automatically safer. It gives more control, but it also gives your company direct responsibility for local compliance. A BPO is not automatically less compliant, but client visibility may be lower. An EOR can provide a middle ground: local employment administration without opening an entity, with more employee-level visibility than a BPO.

For classification and employment structure risks, see Contractor vs Employee in the Philippines: Classification Rules Explained.

Speed and scalability comparison

Model Typical launch speed Scaling profile
Captive team Slowest Strong once infrastructure exists
BPO Fast Fast for seats, queues, and managed processes
EOR Fast Strong for dedicated team growth

A BPO is often fastest for adding capacity to standardised processes. EOR is often faster for building dedicated roles without entity setup. Captive teams are slower at the start but may become more suitable once the company has enough scale.

Employee experience comparison

Employees experience each model differently because each model creates a different relationship between the worker, the provider, and your company.

Employee experience area Captive team BPO EOR
Sense of belonging Fully part of your company Often feels part of the BPO provider Usually feels embedded in your team while employed through the EOR
Legal employer Your Philippine entity BPO provider EOR provider
Day-to-day manager Your manager Usually BPO supervisor or team lead Your manager
Benefits communication Your internal HR team BPO-managed EOR-supported, with your company setting expectations
Career development Managed by your company Usually follows BPO career path Led by your company, with EOR employment support
Culture and engagement Fully shaped by your company Mostly shaped by the BPO environment More aligned with your company than a BPO model
Retention of key people Highest control Limited control unless agreed with BPO Higher control than BPO because the team is dedicated

 

When should you use a captive team?

A captive team may be the right choice when:

  • you have large or growing headcount in the Philippines
  • the Philippines is a long-term strategic location
  • you want full control over HR, payroll, policies, and local operations
  • you have local leadership or are ready to hire it
  • you need direct entity ownership for legal, tax, or operational reasons
  • you can justify the cost and complexity of local infrastructure
  • you want maximum control over culture, retention, and process

A captive team is usually a scale decision, not a first-hire decision.

When should you use a BPO?

A BPO may be the right choice when:

  • the work is transactional or process-driven
  • you want vendor-managed supervision
  • you need quick capacity
  • you have seasonal or overflow demand
  • the work can be managed through SLAs and QA
  • you do not need named staff retention
  • you prefer a service invoice over employee-level employment records
  • your internal team does not want to manage people directly

A BPO is usually strongest when you are buying an outcome or managed service.

When should you use an EOR?

An EOR may be the right choice when:

  • you want dedicated employees in the Philippines
  • you do not want to open a local entity
  • you want more control than a BPO provides
  • your team members use your tools and systems
  • you want direct performance management
  • you need clearer payroll and statutory documentation
  • you want stronger employee continuity
  • you are building a long-term offshore team
  • you may set up an entity later but are not ready yet

An EOR is often the best bridge between BPO and captive. It gives you dedicated team control without the full entity setup burden.

Can you move from BPO to EOR or captive later?

Yes. Many companies evolve through stages.

A common path is:

  1. BPO for fast outsourced capacity
  2. EOR for dedicated team control without entity setup
  3. Captive team once headcount, risk, and scale justify local entity ownership

You do not need to jump directly from BPO to captive. An EOR can be a practical transition model while you test headcount, management capacity, cost structure, and long-term commitment.

If you are already planning a BPO exit, use the BPO Exit Checklist: 2026 Philippines Guide.

Decision checklist: captive, BPO, or EOR?

Question Captive team BPO EOR
Do you want maximum ownership? Yes No Partial
Do you want vendor-managed delivery? No Yes No
Do you want dedicated staff without an entity? No Limited Yes
Do you need fast launch? No Yes Yes
Do you want direct daily management? Yes Usually no Yes
Do you want employee-level payroll visibility? Yes Usually no Yes
Do you want lower internal management effort? No Yes No
Are you testing a new offshore team? Sometimes Yes Yes
Are you building a long-term team? Yes Sometimes Yes
Are you ready for local entity ownership? Yes No No

Common mistakes when comparing the three models

Avoid these mistakes:

  • comparing only headline monthly cost
  • assuming captive is always cheaper at small scale
  • assuming BPO is always lower risk
  • assuming EOR is a managed service
  • ignoring internal management capacity
  • overlooking statutory documentation
  • underestimating entity setup complexity
  • failing to define who manages daily work
  • choosing BPO when you really need named staff retention
  • choosing captive before headcount justifies the overhead
  • choosing EOR without preparing managers to lead the team

The best model is the one that fits the work, team size, management capacity, and compliance needs.

What proof should you request?

Each model produces different proof.

Model Proof to request or maintain
Captive team Entity registrations, employment contracts, payroll registers, statutory records, tax filings, benefits records, HR policies
BPO Service agreement, scope of work, SLA reports, QA reports, invoice breakdowns, data security policies, vendor compliance evidence
EOR Employment agreements, payslips, payroll registers, statutory contribution summaries, BIR documentation status, benefits confirmation, leave records

Captive proof is entity-level and employee-level. BPO proof is service-focused. EOR proof is employment-focused.

Why Smart Outsourcing Solution for EOR in the Philippines?

Smart Outsourcing Solution is a Philippines-first EOR and offshore team partner for companies that want local employment support without setting up a Philippine entity.

For companies comparing captive teams, BPO, and EOR, SOS can help assess whether the better path is outsourced delivery, dedicated EOR employment, hybrid transition, or eventual entity setup.

SOS can support:

  • EOR model assessment
  • BPO-to-EOR transition planning
  • role and team mapping
  • local employment setup
  • employment documents
  • payroll onboarding
  • payslips
  • SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG handling
  • BIR withholding support
  • 13th month pay administration
  • benefits coordination
  • employee communication support
  • dedicated local account management

SOS is best suited for companies that want Philippines-specific employment administration, payroll support, statutory documentation, and employee coordination without opening a local entity.

For companies not ready for captive setup, SOS can support a dedicated EOR team as a bridge: more control than BPO, less setup complexity than a local entity.

Related resources

FAQs

What is the difference between captive team, BPO, and EOR?

A captive team is your own local operation, usually through a Philippine entity. A BPO is an outsourced service provider. An EOR legally employs your Philippine team while your company manages the work.

Is a captive team better than BPO or EOR?

A captive team gives the most control, but it also requires the most setup, cost, and compliance ownership. It is usually best for larger, long-term operations.

Is BPO cheaper than EOR?

Not always. BPO pricing is usually bundled, while EOR pricing is more itemised. BPO may be cost-effective for managed delivery, while EOR may offer better value for dedicated long-term roles.

Is EOR better than BPO?

EOR is better when you want direct management, dedicated staff, payroll visibility, and long-term team continuity. BPO is better when you want vendor-managed service delivery.

Is EOR the same as a captive team?

No. With EOR, the provider is the local legal employer. With a captive team, your company usually owns or controls the local entity and directly employs the staff.

Can we start with EOR and move to captive later?

Yes. Many companies use EOR first to build and test a Philippine team before deciding whether local entity setup is worth it.

Which model gives the most control?

A captive team gives the most control, followed by EOR. BPO generally gives less direct control because the vendor manages delivery.

Which model is fastest to launch?

BPO and EOR are usually faster than captive team setup. Captive teams require more time because of entity setup, local infrastructure, and compliance preparation.

Which model gives better compliance visibility?

Captive and EOR models usually give more employee-level employment and payroll visibility. BPO compliance may be strong, but clients often see service-level proof rather than employee-level records.

Final takeaway

Captive team, BPO, and EOR are different operating models.

A captive team gives the most ownership but requires the most infrastructure and compliance responsibility. A BPO gives outsourced delivery and lower management burden but less direct visibility. An EOR gives dedicated team control without opening a Philippine entity.

For many companies, EOR is the practical middle path: more control and visibility than BPO, less setup complexity than captive.

The best model depends on your stage. BPO can work for outsourced delivery, EOR can work for dedicated team growth, and captive can make sense once your Philippines operation is large and permanent enough to justify entity ownership.

Ready to compare captive, BPO, and EOR options?

Comparing offshore team models in the Philippines? Contact Smart Outsourcing Solution to review your roles, cost model, control needs, compliance requirements, and whether BPO, EOR, captive setup, or a phased model is the best-fit structure.

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