Email Script Pack: Announcing EOR Employment to Your Filipino Freelancers

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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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Email Script Pack: Announcing EOR Employment to Your Filipino Freelancers

Author: Martin English, CEO & Founding Partner
Updated: June 1, 2026

Disclosure: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice.

Moving Filipino freelancers into Employer of Record employment is not just an HR or compliance task. It is a trust moment.

If you explain the change badly, people may worry that their pay will drop, their flexibility will disappear, or they are being replaced. If you explain it clearly, the transition can feel like an upgrade: same work, same team, clearer employment status.

This script pack gives you copy-ready emails for announcing EOR employment to Filipino freelancers, inviting them to 1:1 calls, confirming next steps, and handling people who are not ready to convert yet.

Need the full conversion process? Start here:
Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

TL;DR: How do you announce EOR employment to Filipino freelancers?

To announce EOR employment to Filipino freelancers, lead with a simple message:

You are staying with the same team and doing the same work. We are moving your role into a clearer employment structure through a Philippines Employer of Record so payroll, benefits, 13th month, statutory contributions, and employment records are handled properly.

Your announcement should explain:

  1. Why the change is happening — the role has become long-term, core, or employee-like.
  2. What stays the same — manager, team, tools, day-to-day work, and expectations.
  3. What changes — employment status, payroll, payslips, statutory contributions, benefits, and 13th month treatment.
  4. How payroll will work — final freelancer invoice date, first payroll date, gross salary, deductions, and expected net pay.
  5. What happens next — 1:1 call, documentation, EOR onboarding, payroll start date, and support contact.

The goal is to reduce uncertainty before it becomes resistance.

Who this script pack is for

This guide is for founders, COOs, CFOs, HR leaders, People teams, and operations leads who are moving Filipino freelancers, contractors, VAs, support agents, developers, or remote team members into EOR employment.

Use it if you are asking:

  • How do we announce EOR employment to Filipino freelancers?
  • How do we explain contractor-to-employee conversion?
  • How do we move Filipino freelancers onto payroll?
  • What should we say about misclassification risk?
  • How do we explain benefits, 13th month, and statutory contributions?
  • What do we say if someone is hesitant?

Before you send the email: what you need to confirm

Do not announce an EOR transition until you can answer the practical questions people will ask.

Confirm:

Area What to prepare
Reason for change Why the company is converting freelancers now
Who is affected Which freelancers or contractors are being invited to convert
Employment pathway EOR partner, own entity, or other local employment route
Timeline Announcement date, 1:1 calls, document deadline, payroll start date
Pay Salary, gross-to-net estimate, payroll frequency, deductions
Benefits HMO, leave, allowances, and other benefits if offered
13th month How it will be handled under the employment package
Payroll transition Final freelancer invoice date and first EOR payroll date
Documents IDs, bank details, tax/government information, signed employment documents
Contact person Named company contact and EOR contact

If these are not ready, the announcement will create more questions than confidence.

Why companies move Filipino freelancers into EOR employment

Companies usually move Filipino freelancers into EOR employment when the relationship has become long-term, full-time, core to the business, or employee-like in practice.

Contractor misclassification risk increases when a freelancer:

  • works fixed hours
  • works full-time or close to full-time
  • works mainly or only for one company
  • uses company tools and systems
  • reports to company managers
  • attends recurring internal meetings
  • follows company KPIs or performance reviews
  • performs core recurring work
  • receives a fixed monthly payment
  • has worked with the company for many months or years

An EOR helps formalise the relationship. The EOR becomes the local legal employer in the Philippines, while the client company continues managing the person’s day-to-day work.

For the full conversion pathway, read:
Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

Scripts at a glance

Script Use this when Best sender
1. Initial announcement You are announcing the move from freelancer to EOR employment Founder, COO, HR, or People lead
2. 1:1 call invite You want to discuss pay, benefits, timeline, and concerns individually HR, Ops, or direct manager
3. Manager reassurance email The message should come from someone the freelancer trusts Direct manager
4. Payroll and benefits follow-up You need to explain salary, deductions, benefits, and 13th month HR, Finance, or EOR lead
5. Confirmation after they agree The freelancer has accepted the EOR pathway HR, Ops, or EOR transition owner
6. Not ready to convert The freelancer is hesitant or wants more time Founder, HR, or Ops lead

Script 1: Initial announcement email

Use when: You are ready to announce the overall plan.

Subject line options:

  • Important update: moving your role into EOR employment
  • Upcoming change: from freelancer to EOR employee in the Philippines
  • Next step in how we work together

Email body:

Hi [First Name],

I’m writing to share an important update about how we work together.

Over the last [X months/years], you have become an important part of our team. In practice, your role is ongoing, closely connected to our day-to-day work, and important to how we operate.

Right now, you are still set up as a freelancer or contractor. To make the relationship clearer and more stable, we are planning to move your role into employment through a Philippines Employer of Record.

This means:

Your day-to-day work stays the same
You will continue working with the same team, manager, tools, and responsibilities.

Your employment status becomes clearer
You will be employed locally in the Philippines through our EOR partner.

Your payroll becomes more structured
You will receive payroll documentation, payslips, and a clearer payment schedule.

Your employment package will be explained properly
We will walk through salary, expected net pay, statutory contributions, benefits, 13th month treatment, and any HMO or allowances that apply.

You will have support during the transition
We will schedule a 1:1 conversation, share written details, and give you a clear contact person for questions.

Our goal is simple: we want you to stay, and we want to formalise the work you already do in a way that is clearer, more stable, and better documented.

Next steps:

  • 1:1 discussion: [date/time or scheduling process]
  • EOR documents and onboarding: [timeline]
  • Target payroll start date: [date]
  • Main contact for questions: [name/email]

Thank you for everything you do for [Company]. We are looking forward to continuing the relationship in a more structured way.

Best,
[Name]
[Title]

Script 2: 1:1 call invite email

Use when: You want to walk through the change personally.

Subject line options:

  • Quick call to discuss your EOR employment transition
  • Let’s talk through your move to EOR employment
  • 1:1 discussion: your EOR employment details

Email body:

Hi [First Name],

Following our update about moving your role into EOR employment, I’d like to schedule a 1:1 call to walk through what this means for you.

On the call, we’ll cover:

  • what stays the same in your role
  • what changes under EOR employment
  • salary and expected net pay
  • payroll schedule and payslips
  • statutory contributions
  • 13th month treatment
  • benefits or HMO, if applicable
  • documents needed
  • target start date
  • any concerns or questions you have

Our goal is to make this clear before anything moves forward.

Would any of these times work for you?

  • [Option 1 — Date & Time, PH time]
  • [Option 2 — Date & Time, PH time]
  • [Option 3 — Date & Time, PH time]

If none of these work, please send two or three times that are convenient for you.

Thanks again for everything you do with us. We want this transition to feel clear, fair, and respectful.

Best,
[Name]

Script 3: Manager reassurance email

Use when: The direct manager should reinforce trust.

Subject line options:

  • Quick note about the EOR transition
  • What this means for your role with our team
  • Reassurance on your EOR employment transition

Email body:

Hi [First Name],

I wanted to personally follow up on the EOR employment transition because I know changes like this can raise questions.

From my side, the most important thing I want you to know is this:

We want you to stay.

This transition is not about replacing you or changing the value of your work. It is about giving the role a clearer employment structure in the Philippines.

Day to day, we expect the core parts of your role to stay the same:

  • same team
  • same manager
  • same tools
  • same responsibilities
  • same working relationship with us

The main changes are around employment status, payroll, documentation, benefits, 13th month treatment, and statutory contributions.

We’ll make sure you have time to review the details and ask questions before anything is final.

Thanks again for the work you do. You are an important part of the team, and we want this next step to feel stable and clear.

Best,
[Manager Name]

Script 4: Payroll and benefits follow-up

Use when: You are ready to explain the package more concretely.

Subject line options:

  • Your EOR employment package: payroll and benefits overview
  • Follow-up: pay, benefits, and 13th month under EOR
  • Your EOR payroll transition details

Email body:

Hi [First Name],

Following our conversation about EOR employment, I wanted to summarise the payroll and benefits details we discussed.

Here is the proposed setup:

  • Target EOR start date: [Date]
  • Final freelancer invoice date: [Date]
  • First EOR payroll date: [Date]
  • Gross monthly salary: [Amount]
  • Payroll frequency: [Monthly / twice monthly]
  • Expected net pay estimate: [Amount or “to be confirmed”]
  • Statutory contributions: SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG
  • 13th month treatment: [Explain briefly]
  • Benefits or HMO: [Details, if applicable]
  • Allowances: [Details, if applicable]
  • Payslip access: [How they will receive payslips]

Please note that EOR employment changes how pay is processed. Instead of freelancer invoices, you will be paid through payroll and receive payslips.

We will also explain any deductions clearly so you understand how gross pay becomes net pay.

Next steps:

  1. Review the summary above.
  2. Send any questions by [date].
  3. Complete EOR onboarding documents by [date].
  4. Join the EOR payroll from [date].

If anything is unclear, please ask before signing or submitting documents. We would rather walk through the details properly than rush the transition.

Best,
[Name]

Script 5: Confirmation email after they agree

Use when: The freelancer has agreed to move to EOR employment.

Subject line options:

  • Confirmed: next steps for your EOR employment
  • Welcome to the next step of your EOR employment transition
  • Your EOR employment onboarding details

Email body:

Hi [First Name],

Thank you for confirming that you would like to proceed with the EOR employment transition.

We’re happy to continue working with you in a clearer and more stable structure.

Here is what happens next:

1. EOR documentation

Our Employer of Record partner in the Philippines will send you the required employment documents and onboarding checklist.

This may include:

  • employment agreement
  • employee information form
  • government ID information
  • bank details
  • tax or payroll information
  • emergency contact
  • benefits or HMO forms, if applicable
  • policy acknowledgements

2. Timeline

  • Target EOR start date: [Date]
  • Document submission deadline: [Date]
  • First payroll date: [Date]

3. Payroll and benefits

As discussed, your package will include:

  • gross salary: [Amount]
  • payroll schedule: [Schedule]
  • statutory contributions: SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG
  • 13th month treatment: [Details]
  • benefits or HMO: [Details, if applicable]
  • allowances: [Details, if applicable]

If anything in the EOR paperwork is unclear, please contact [Company Contact] or [EOR Contact] before signing.

Thank you again for trusting us through this transition. We’re looking forward to continuing our work together.

Best,
[Name]

Script 6: Email for freelancers who are not ready to convert

Use when: Someone is hesitant or wants to stay as a freelancer.

Subject line options:

  • Your questions about EOR employment
  • Following up on your EOR transition concerns
  • Your options around the EOR employment transition

Email body:

Hi [First Name],

Thank you for being open about your questions and concerns around moving from freelancer status to EOR employment.

We understand this is a meaningful change.

To recap, the main reasons we are offering EOR employment are:

  • a clearer long-term structure
  • more stable payroll
  • proper employment documentation
  • statutory contributions
  • 13th month treatment
  • benefits or HMO, where applicable
  • better compliance for the company as we grow

At the same time, we understand that you may want more clarity before deciding.

Here are the next options:

Option A: Proceed with EOR employment
We move to the documentation and onboarding stage.

Option B: Schedule another call
We walk through your questions about pay, benefits, flexibility, taxes, or timeline.

Option C: Discuss what staying freelance would mean
If you do not want to move into EOR employment, we need to discuss whether the current freelancer setup can continue and under what terms.

Our goal is to handle this professionally and respectfully. We want you to have the information you need before making a decision.

Please let us know which option you prefer by [date].

Best,
[Name]

What to say about contractor misclassification risk

Avoid making the message sound accusatory or overly legal.

Do not say:

You are misclassified, so we have to fix this immediately.

Say:

Your role has become long-term and team-based, so we want the structure to better match how we already work together.

Or:

As the company grows, we need a clearer employment setup for long-term roles in the Philippines.

This explains the reason without making the worker feel like they caused a problem.

What to say about payroll transition

Be direct. Pay is usually the biggest concern.

Explain:

  • final freelancer invoice date
  • first EOR payroll date
  • payroll frequency
  • gross salary
  • expected net pay
  • statutory deductions
  • payslip access
  • support contact
  • what happens if there is an error

Use this phrase:

Your day-to-day work is not changing, but the way your pay is processed will become more formal. We will show you the payroll schedule, deductions, payslips, and expected net pay before the transition.

What to say about benefits and 13th month

Explain benefits in practical terms.

Say:

Under the EOR setup, your package will include clearer employment documentation, payslips, statutory contributions, and 13th month treatment. If HMO or other benefits apply to your role, we will explain the coverage, start date, dependents, and claims process before the transition.

Avoid vague promises like:

You’ll get better benefits.

Be specific about what is included and what is not included.

Contractor-to-employee conversion checklist

Before sending any script, prepare the conversion details.

Area What to confirm
Worker list Names, roles, managers, tenure, current pay, schedule
Risk review Who is long-term, full-time, exclusive, or employee-like
Employment pathway EOR, own entity, or other local structure
Pay package Salary, expected net pay, payroll frequency, allowances
Benefits HMO, leave, 13th month, statutory contributions
Documents Current agreement, IDs, bank details, onboarding forms
Timeline Announcement date, call dates, document deadline, payroll start
Support Company contact, EOR contact, payroll contact
Proof pack Old agreement, new employment agreement, payroll records, acknowledgements

This preparation prevents vague emails and inconsistent answers.

Proof pack: what to keep after the announcement

After the EOR transition is announced and accepted, keep a proof pack.

Include:

  • old freelancer or contractor agreement
  • announcement email
  • 1:1 notes or acknowledgement
  • new employment agreement
  • salary and benefits summary
  • final freelancer invoice
  • payroll start date
  • first payslip
  • statutory setup confirmation
  • 13th month treatment
  • HMO or benefits confirmation
  • employee acknowledgement
  • internal approval record

This helps HR, finance, legal, founders, investors, and auditors understand what changed and why.

How Smart Outsourcing Solution helps

Smart Outsourcing Solution helps companies move Filipino freelancers and contractors into compliant EOR employment with clear communication, payroll transition support, and local Philippines HR administration.

SOS supports:

  • contractor conversion planning
  • EOR transition communication
  • payroll transition planning
  • employment documentation
  • benefits and HMO coordination
  • 13th month treatment
  • statutory contribution administration
  • onboarding support
  • proof pack preparation
  • local HR support in the Philippines

For companies that want to formalise long-term Filipino freelancers without opening a Philippine entity, SOS provides a practical EOR pathway.

Start with the full guide:
Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

Final takeaway

Announcing EOR employment to Filipino freelancers should not feel like a legal shock.

It should feel like a clear next step:

Same work. Same team. Clearer employment status.

Use the scripts in this pack to explain why the change is happening, what stays the same, what changes, how payroll and benefits will work, and who can answer questions.

The better your communication, the easier the conversion becomes.

Next step:
Read the full guide: Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

Or speak with Smart Outsourcing Solution about preparing an EOR transition script pack for your Filipino freelancers.

FAQs

How do you announce EOR employment to Filipino freelancers?

Announce EOR employment by explaining that the freelancer will keep the same work, team, and manager while moving into a clearer employment structure through a Philippines Employer of Record. Explain pay, benefits, 13th month treatment, payroll dates, documents, and next steps.

What should an EOR employment announcement email include?

It should include the reason for the change, what stays the same, what changes, payroll timing, benefits, 13th month treatment, documents needed, the EOR partner’s role, and a contact person for questions.

How do I convert Filipino contractors into employees?

Start by identifying contractors who work like employees, choose an EOR or local entity pathway, confirm the employment package, prepare documents, move the person onto payroll, set up benefits and statutory contributions, and keep a conversion proof pack.

How do I move Filipino freelancers onto payroll?

Confirm the final freelancer invoice date, first payroll date, salary package, expected net pay, payroll frequency, bank details, tax or government information, benefits, 13th month treatment, and employment documents before the first payroll cycle.

What is contractor misclassification risk in the Philippines?

Contractor misclassification risk is the risk that someone labelled as a freelancer or contractor is treated like an employee in practice. It increases when the person works fixed hours, performs core work, uses company tools, reports to managers, and depends mainly on one company.

Will freelancers lose flexibility when they move to EOR employment?

Not necessarily. Remote work or flexible schedule arrangements may continue if agreed with the manager. The EOR transition mainly changes employment status, payroll, benefits, documentation, and local HR administration.

How should we explain 13th month pay in the announcement?

Explain that 13th month treatment will be included in the employment package and that the company or EOR will show how it is calculated, accrued, or paid before the transition begins.

What if a freelancer does not want to convert?

Schedule a follow-up call to understand their concerns. If they still do not want to convert, discuss whether the current freelancer arrangement can continue, whether the role should be restructured, or whether a transition plan is needed.

What proof should we keep after announcing EOR employment?

Keep the announcement email, 1:1 notes, old freelancer agreement, final invoice, new employment agreement, salary and benefits summary, payroll start date, first payslip, statutory setup confirmation, 13th month treatment, and employee acknowledgement.

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