How to Convert Existing Filipino Contractors into Employees Without Setting Up a Philippine Entity
Author: Martin English
Date Updated: June 9, 2026
TL;DR: Can you convert existing Filipino contractors into employees without opening a Philippine entity?
Yes. If you already work with Filipino contractors who now operate like part of your team, you can move them into local employment without setting up your own Philippine company by using an Employer of Record.
This page is not a general guide to hiring in the Philippines. It is specifically for companies that already have Filipino contractors and want to convert them into compliant local employees without creating a Philippine entity, payroll operation, or local HR infrastructure.
The cleanest route is usually:
- Identify which contractors are employee-like.
- Decide who should convert first.
- Build the employment package.
- Close the contractor arrangement with a final invoice.
- Use an EOR to issue local employment documents.
- Move the worker onto local payroll.
- Validate the first payslip, deductions, benefits, and statutory setup.
- Keep a conversion proof pack.
The goal is not to relabel the worker. The goal is to move an employee-like relationship into a proper local employment structure while your company continues managing the person’s day-to-day work.
For the broader contractor-to-employee pillar, see Convert Contractors to Employees in the Philippines.
Quick answer: what makes this different from general contractor conversion?
This guide focuses on one specific situation:
You already have Filipino contractors, they are becoming employee-like, and you want to convert them into local employees without setting up a Philippine entity.
That is different from a general hiring guide, a contractor misclassification guide, or a broad “hire without entity” page.
| Page type | Main focus |
| General contractor conversion page | Why and when to convert contractors into employees |
| Contractor misclassification page | Risks, red flags, and consequences of employee-like contractor relationships |
| Hire without entity page | How companies can hire employees in the Philippines without opening a company |
| This page | The practical cutover from existing contractor arrangement to EOR employment without setting up a Philippine entity |
This page is a practical transition guide. It focuses on the mechanics of moving from contractor invoices to EOR payroll.
Who is this guide for?
This guide is for companies that already have Filipino contractors and want to move them into a more formal employment structure without opening a Philippine company.
It is especially useful for:
- founders with full-time Filipino contractors
- HR teams reviewing employee-like contractor roles
- finance teams planning final invoices and payroll cutover
- operations leaders managing offshore workers through internal systems
- Australian, US, UK, and global companies with Philippines-based contractors
- companies that want to provide benefits, leave, or stable payroll
- businesses that need payslips, payroll records, and statutory documentation
- teams that want local employment support without entity setup
If you are still deciding whether contractor hiring is legal or appropriate, start with Can I Legally Hire Contractors in the Philippines?.
When this page is not the right fit
This page is not the best guide if:
- you are hiring a new Philippines worker from scratch
- you are comparing contractor vs employee classification for the first time
- you are researching penalties for contractor misclassification
- you are already planning to open your own Philippine entity
- your contractors are genuinely independent and project-based
In those cases, use the broader hiring, misclassification, or EOR resources linked below.
When does an existing contractor need to be reviewed?
An existing Filipino contractor should be reviewed when the role no longer looks genuinely independent.
Common triggers include:
- the contractor now works full-time or near full-time
- the person works fixed hours
- your company sets the daily workflow
- the contractor reports to your manager
- the contractor uses your systems every day
- the person works mainly or only for your company
- the role is ongoing rather than project-based
- the work is core to your operations
- the contractor receives employee-style benefits or leave
- losing the contractor would disrupt the business
One factor alone does not decide the issue. But when several factors appear together, the relationship may be better suited to local employment through an EOR.
For deeper risk guidance, see Contractor Misclassification Philippines.
Entity setup vs EOR conversion
If you want to convert contractors into employees, you have two main options: set up your own Philippine entity or use an EOR.
| Requirement | Set up your own Philippine entity | Use an EOR |
| Local incorporation | Required | Not required |
| Local payroll registration | You manage | EOR manages |
| Employment contracts | You issue locally | EOR issues locally |
| Statutory contributions | You administer | EOR supports administration |
| BIR withholding support | You manage locally | EOR supports payroll withholding process |
| 13th month pay | You administer | EOR administers |
| Payslips | You issue | EOR issues |
| Benefits coordination | You manage | EOR coordinates |
| Local HR records | You maintain | EOR supports |
| Local HR team | Usually needed as team grows | Not required at the start |
| Speed to implement | Usually longer | Usually faster |
| Best fit | Large permanent local operations | Converting contractors without entity setup |
For many companies, an EOR is the practical middle path. It lets you employ workers locally without immediately building your own Philippine company, payroll function, and compliance infrastructure.
For broader entity-free hiring context, see Hire Employees in the Philippines Without Setting Up a Company.
What the EOR handles vs what your company still controls
An EOR helps with the local employment structure. It does not replace your role as the day-to-day manager.
| Area | EOR handles | Your company still controls |
| Legal employment | Local employment setup | Role need and business case |
| Employment documents | Local employment contract and onboarding documents | Job description and role expectations |
| Payroll | Payroll processing and payslips | Salary approval and budget |
| Statutory administration | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, BIR withholding support | Headcount planning and internal approvals |
| 13th month pay | Administration and payroll handling | Compensation policy decisions |
| Benefits | Benefits and HMO coordination where included | Which benefits to offer |
| HR administration | Local HR records and employee support | Performance, workload, feedback, and promotion decisions |
| Offboarding | Local employment offboarding support | Business decision to end or change role |
| Daily work | Not managed by EOR | Managed by your team |
This separation is important. The EOR provides the local employment infrastructure. Your company still manages the role, performance, tools, workflows, culture, and business outcomes.
Which contractors should be converted first?
Start with the highest-risk and most business-critical roles.
| Convert first | Why |
| Full-time virtual assistants | Fixed hours, daily supervision, and internal workflows |
| Customer support staff | Shift work, scripts, tools, and customer-facing responsibilities |
| Finance assistants | Sensitive data, recurring tasks, and internal systems |
| Developers working only for your company | Sprint routines, system access, and long-term dependency |
| Marketing assistants in daily workflows | Team meetings, manager direction, and ongoing internal work |
| Operations coordinators | Embedded processes, internal tools, and high continuity risk |
| Client services or admin staff | Core support work, recurring tasks, and team integration |
| Contractors receiving benefits or leave | Employee-like treatment may weaken contractor status |
You do not need to convert every contractor at once. A phased approach is usually easier for payroll, finance, HR, and employee communication.
Contractor-to-EOR cutover checklist
This checklist focuses on the transition itself: from contractor invoice to EOR payroll.
| Cutover area | What to confirm |
| Contractor end date | When does the contractor arrangement formally end? |
| Final invoice period | What dates does the final contractor invoice cover? |
| Final invoice amount | Is the final invoice approved by finance? |
| Employment start date | What date does EOR employment begin? |
| Payroll cut-off | What is the first payroll cut-off date? |
| First payroll date | When will the worker receive first EOR salary payment? |
| Salary package | Gross salary, benefits, allowances, and HMO if included |
| 13th month handling | How 13th month pay will be accrued or administered |
| Required documents | IDs, bank details, tax/payroll forms, emergency contact |
| Employment documents | EOR employment contract and onboarding forms |
| System access | Does access continue without gaps or excess permissions? |
| Manager communication | Does the manager understand what changes and what stays the same? |
| Employee communication | Has the worker received clear explanation and timeline? |
| First payroll check | Who validates payslip, deductions, benefits, and net pay? |
This is the part many companies underestimate. The biggest operational risk is not the idea of conversion. It is a messy transition between final invoice and first payroll.
Step-by-step Guide: Convert existing contractors without setting up an entity
Step 1: Separate genuine contractors from employee-like contractors
Do not convert everyone automatically.
Group your current contractors into three categories:
| Category | What it means | Likely next step |
| Genuine independent contractor | Project-based, multiple clients, controls method and schedule | Keep as contractor, with clear scope |
| Mixed-risk contractor | Some employee-like signs, but not fully integrated | Review scope, access, hours, and supervision |
| Employee-like contractor | Full-time, managed, integrated, ongoing, core role | Consider EOR conversion |
This keeps the page focused on existing workers, not generic hiring.
Step 2: Prioritise the first conversion group
Start with contractors who are:
- full-time
- long-term
- directly supervised
- using company systems daily
- handling sensitive data
- critical to operations
- receiving employee-style benefits
- difficult to replace
This reduces the biggest exposure first while keeping the rollout manageable.
Step 3: Build the EOR employment package
Before announcing the change, prepare the proposed employment package.
Confirm:
- gross monthly salary
- job title
- job description
- manager
- schedule
- benefits or HMO
- leave terms
- equipment or allowance
- 13th month pay handling
- employment start date
- first payroll date
- final contractor invoice date
A clear package prevents confusion and builds trust.
Step 4: Explain the change as a continuity move
The communication should be positive.
Do not frame the change as “we made a mistake” or “you were misclassified”. Frame it as a move into a more stable local employment structure because the role has become long-term and important.
You can say:
Your role has become an important long-term part of our team. We would like to move it into a formal Philippines employment structure through our local Employer of Record partner. This gives the role clearer payroll, benefits, statutory administration, and employment support while your day-to-day work with our team continues.
Keep the tone calm, clear, and practical.
Step 5: Close the contractor arrangement cleanly
Before EOR employment begins, close out the contractor side.
Confirm:
- contractor agreement end date
- final contractor invoice
- final invoice approval
- final payment date
- outstanding reimbursements
- access continuity
- documentation handover
- whether any contractor tools or accounts need to change
Avoid accidental overlap where the same period is paid as both contractor invoice and employee payroll.
Step 6: Complete EOR onboarding
The EOR should guide local employment onboarding.
Typical onboarding includes:
- employment contract
- personal information forms
- government ID collection
- bank details
- tax and payroll forms
- benefits information
- company policies
- confidentiality and data protection terms
- start date confirmation
Your company should also handle internal onboarding: team announcement, manager check-in, system access, role expectations, and internal SOPs.
Step 7: Move from invoice payment to payroll
Once the EOR employment start date begins, the worker should move from contractor billing to employee payroll.
Check:
- gross salary
- payroll period
- pay date
- payslip access
- deductions
- statutory setup
- benefits setup
- 13th month accrual
- bank payment details
This is where the employment structure becomes operational, not just contractual.
Step 8: Validate the first payroll
First payroll validation is critical.
Review:
- salary amount
- deductions
- net pay
- payslip
- statutory setup
- benefits or HMO
- leave setup
- employee questions
- manager feedback
- payroll cut-off understanding
- final contractor invoice closure
A 15-minute first payroll review can prevent weeks of confusion.
Step 9: Keep a conversion proof pack
Keep a record of why the contractor was converted and how the conversion was handled.
Include:
- original contractor agreement
- contractor risk review
- conversion approval
- final contractor invoice
- final contractor payment record
- EOR employment contract
- job description
- salary package
- onboarding records
- payroll start date
- first payslip
- benefits confirmation
- statutory setup confirmation
- employee communication
- post-conversion check notes
This makes the transition easier to explain to finance, HR, leadership, or auditors later.
Sample timeline: final invoice to first payroll
| Timeline | Action |
| Week 1 | Review existing contractors and identify employee-like roles |
| Week 2 | Confirm EOR employment package, salary, benefits, and proposed start date |
| Week 3 | Communicate with contractor, collect documents, prepare EOR employment contract |
| Week 4 | Confirm contractor end date, final invoice, and EOR employment start date |
| First payroll | Validate salary, payslip, deductions, statutory setup, benefits, and employee questions |
| 30 days after start | Review employee experience, manager feedback, payroll accuracy, and access controls |
Simple conversions may move faster. Larger contractor groups, sensitive roles, or finance-heavy approval processes may need a phased rollout.
How to avoid disruption during conversion
The worker should experience the change as a stable transition, not a sudden reset.
To avoid disruption:
- keep the same manager where possible
- explain what changes and what stays the same
- align final contractor invoice with first payroll
- avoid income gaps
- confirm benefits before start date
- keep system access controlled but continuous
- give the employee a payroll contact
- brief the manager before the conversion
- check the first payslip
- hold a 30-day post-conversion review
The operational objective is simple: the worker should understand the new structure, get paid correctly, and continue doing their role without confusion.
Cost considerations for entity-free conversion
EOR employment can look more expensive than contractor payments because more costs are visible.
Include:
- gross salary
- employer statutory costs
- 13th month pay accrual
- benefits or HMO
- EOR admin fee
- payroll or banking fees
- equipment or allowances
- final contractor invoice
- transition communication time
A contractor invoice may look cheaper, but it may not include statutory administration, benefits, payroll proof, employee retention, or the cost of correcting an employee-like contractor structure later.
What not to do when converting contractors
Avoid these mistakes:
- converting without reviewing the relationship
- calling the change a penalty or correction
- changing pay without explaining the package
- missing payroll cut-off dates
- failing to close the final contractor invoice
- unintentionally paying both invoice and payroll for the same period
- collecting documents too late
- leaving benefits or 13th month unclear
- failing to brief the manager
- not validating the first payslip
- converting every contractor at once without a phased plan
- failing to keep a conversion proof pack
Most conversion problems are not caused by the EOR model. They are caused by unclear timing, communication, and payroll cutover.
When should you set up your own Philippine entity instead?
An EOR is useful for converting contractors without immediate entity setup, but it is not the only long-term option.
Consider your own Philippine entity when:
- you plan to build a large permanent local operation
- you want full local corporate control
- you have enough headcount to justify local infrastructure
- you are ready to manage local HR, payroll, tax, legal, and compliance operations
- you need local contracts, leases, or business registrations under your own entity
- you have long-term leadership and admin capacity in the Philippines
For many companies, EOR is the starting point. Entity setup may come later if the Philippines becomes a major long-term operating base.
Why Smart Outsourcing Solution for entity-free contractor conversion?
Smart Outsourcing Solution is a Philippines-first EOR and offshore team partner for companies that want to convert existing Filipino contractors into local employees without setting up a Philippine entity.
SOS can support:
- existing contractor review
- contractor-to-EOR conversion planning
- EOR employment setup
- employment documents
- payroll onboarding
- final contractor invoice planning
- first payroll validation
- payslips
- SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG handling
- BIR withholding support
- 13th month pay administration
- benefits coordination
- employee communication support
- post-conversion checks
- dedicated local account management
SOS is especially useful when the issue is not “how do we hire in the Philippines?” but “how do we move our existing Filipino contractors into a clearer employment structure without opening a Philippine company?”
Related resources
- Hire Employees in the Philippines Without Setting Up a Company
- Contractor Misclassification Philippines
- Employer of Record Services in the Philippines
FAQs
Can I convert Filipino contractors into employees without setting up a Philippine entity?
Yes. An Employer of Record can employ the worker locally in the Philippines while your company continues to manage day-to-day work.
Is this the same as setting up a Philippine company?
No. With an EOR, the EOR acts as the local legal employer. Your company does not need to incorporate locally just to convert the worker into employment.
What changes for the contractor?
The worker moves from contractor payments to local payroll. They receive employment documents, payslips, statutory administration, 13th month handling, and benefits where included. Their day-to-day role may stay the same.
What does my company still manage?
Your company still manages daily work, role expectations, tools, systems, performance, team culture, and business outcomes. The EOR handles the local employment and payroll infrastructure.
Which contractors should be converted first?
Start with contractors who are full-time, long-term, directly managed, economically dependent on your company, using internal systems daily, or important to business continuity.
How do I handle the final contractor invoice?
Confirm the contractor end date, final billing period, final invoice amount, approval process, and payment date before the EOR employment start date.
How do I avoid a payment gap?
Align the final contractor payment with the first EOR payroll date. Tell the worker clearly when the final invoice is paid and when salary payroll begins.
Is EOR more expensive than contractor hiring?
It can look more expensive because salary, statutory costs, 13th month pay, benefits, and EOR fees are visible. For employee-like roles, those visible costs may be safer than continuing with a contractor structure.
Can I convert contractors in phases?
Yes. Many companies convert the highest-risk or most important contractors first, then review the remaining contractor base.
When should I set up my own Philippine entity instead of using EOR?
Consider entity setup if you plan to build a large permanent Philippine operation and are ready to manage local HR, payroll, tax, legal, and compliance infrastructure yourself.
Final Thoughts
You can convert existing Filipino contractors into employees without setting up a Philippine entity by using an Employer of Record.
This page is about the practical transition: identifying employee-like contractors, deciding who to convert first, closing the final contractor invoice, issuing EOR employment documents, moving to payroll, validating the first payslip, and keeping a conversion proof pack.
The cleanest conversion is not just legally structured. It is operationally clear, well communicated, and payroll-ready.
Ready to convert existing Filipino contractors without opening an entity?
Already working with Filipino contractors who now operate like part of your team? Contact Smart Outsourcing Solution to review your entity-free contractor conversion plan, final invoice timing, EOR setup, payroll model, employee communication, and local employment support.