EOR Costs & Compliance in the Philippines – 2026 Guide for Australian Businesses
Author: Philip Murphy, COO & Founding Partner
Reviewed by: Martin English, CEO & Founding Partner
Updated: May 28, 2026
Disclosure: Informational only. Not legal, tax, or financial advice.
TL;DR
Australian businesses can hire employees in the Philippines through an Employer of Record without setting up a local Philippine entity.
A Philippines EOR usually handles:
| Area | What the EOR Handles |
| Local employment | Philippine employment contracts and onboarding |
| Payroll | Salary calculation, payroll processing, payslips, deductions |
| Statutory contributions | SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG administration |
| 13th-month pay | Accrual, calculation, payment, and payroll records |
| HR compliance | Leave, holidays, documentation, offboarding support |
| Compliance proof | Contracts, payslips, payroll records, remittance evidence |
| Local support | Employee questions, HR coordination, Philippine employment guidance |
For Australian businesses, the main cost formula is:
Total monthly cost = Philippine salary + employer statutory load + 13th-month accrual + EOR fee + optional benefits / allowances / equipment
Typical EOR fee positioning for Philippine hires:
| Provider Type | Typical EOR Fee for PH Hires | Best For |
| Local Philippine EOR, such as SOS | Around AU$295 per employee/month | Australian businesses hiring mainly or only in the Philippines |
| Global EOR platform | Often AU$750–AU$1,100+ per employee/month | Companies hiring across many countries through one global platform |
| Enterprise workforce platform | Quote-only, often higher | Large multinationals with complex global HR stacks |
For Australian companies focused on the Philippines, a local Philippine EOR can usually provide a lower per-employee service fee than global EOR platforms while still handling Philippine contracts, payroll, statutory contributions, payslips, 13th-month pay, and compliance documentation.
For the full buyer guide, see EOR for Australian Companies Hiring in the Philippines.
Quick Answer
The cost of using an EOR in the Philippines for Australian businesses depends on salary, statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, equipment, and the EOR provider’s monthly service fee.
For a Philippine employee earning the AUD equivalent of AU$2,000/month, a simple cost model may look like this:
| Cost Component | Local PH EOR Example | Global EOR Example |
| Base salary | AU$2,000 | AU$2,000 |
| Employer statutory load + 13th-month accrual | AU$300 | AU$300 |
| EOR fee | AU$295 | AU$850 |
| Estimated monthly total | AU$2,595 | AU$3,150 |
| Estimated annual total | AU$31,140 | AU$37,800 |
In this example, the global EOR option costs about AU$6,660 more per employee per year, driven mainly by the higher EOR fee.
At 10 employees, that fee difference can become about AU$66,600 per year.
Who This Guide Is For
This guide is for Australian businesses evaluating EOR hiring in the Philippines, especially:
- founders hiring their first Philippine employee
- CFOs modelling offshore headcount in AUD
- COOs comparing local EOR vs global EOR costs
- HR and People leaders reducing contractor risk
- Australian SMEs building customer support, admin, finance, marketing, data, or development teams in the Philippines
- boards reviewing whether AU–PH hiring is compliant and financially defensible
It answers:
- How much does EOR cost for Australian businesses in the Philippines?
- What is included in an EOR fee?
- What compliance proof should an EOR provide?
- Is a local Philippine EOR cheaper than a global EOR?
- Do Australian companies need a Philippine entity to hire staff?
- How should Australian companies compare EOR providers?
What Is an EOR in the Philippines?
An Employer of Record is a local legal employer that hires employees in the Philippines on behalf of a foreign company.
The EOR becomes the legal employer in the Philippines. The Australian company usually manages the employee’s daily work, role, tools, KPIs, and performance.
| Responsibility | Australian Company | Philippines EOR |
| Selects the worker | Yes | Supports onboarding |
| Manages daily work | Yes | No |
| Sets role, tools, KPIs, and workflow | Yes | No |
| Employs the worker locally | No | Yes |
| Issues Philippine employment contract | No | Yes |
| Runs payroll | No | Yes |
| Handles statutory contributions | No | Yes |
| Provides payslips | No | Yes |
| Manages 13th-month pay | No | Yes |
| Provides compliance documentation | Reviews | Yes |
| Supports offboarding | Coordinates | Yes |
An EOR is useful when an Australian company wants Philippine employees but does not want to open a Philippine company yet.
How Australian Companies Can Hire Employees in the Philippines
Australian businesses generally have four options.
| Hiring Model | Best For | Main Risk / Trade-Off |
| Philippine EOR | Dedicated employees without local entity setup | You still manage performance and workflow |
| Contractor / freelancer | Short-term, independent work | Misclassification and weak payroll proof if role becomes employee-like |
| BPO / outsourcing provider | Managed function or process | Less direct control over individual workers |
| Own Philippine entity | Large long-term operation | Higher setup, legal, HR, payroll, and admin complexity |
For most Australian SMEs building a small to mid-sized Philippine team, EOR is often the fastest compliant route.
Use an EOR when:
- the role is ongoing or full-time
- the worker follows your schedule or tools
- the worker is embedded in your team
- you want payroll records and payslips
- you need statutory contribution handling
- you want stronger documentation than contractor invoices
- you do not yet need your own Philippine entity
EOR Cost Formula for Australian Businesses
The simplest cost formula is:
Total monthly EOR cost = salary + employer statutory load + 13th-month accrual + EOR service fee + optional benefits and allowances
| Cost Layer | What It Covers | How to Model It |
| Philippine salary | Gross monthly employee salary | Convert PHP salary to AUD using a sensible FX assumption |
| Employer statutory contributions | Employer-side SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG | Model as part of the employer load |
| 13th-month pay | Mandatory annual benefit for eligible employees | Accrue monthly as 1/12 of basic salary |
| EOR service fee | Local employment, payroll, HR admin, compliance support | Use provider’s quoted AUD monthly fee |
| Optional benefits | HMO, allowances, bonuses, training, equipment | Add based on your employee package |
| FX and invoicing | Currency conversion and payment structure | Confirm whether the provider invoices in AUD and whether fees include FX markups |
Do not compare EOR providers only by base salary. Compare fully loaded cost.
Cost Components Summary
| Component | Included in Salary? | Included in EOR Fee? | Usually Passed Through? |
| Gross salary | Yes | No | Yes |
| Employer statutory contributions | No | Administered by EOR | Yes |
| 13th-month pay | No | Administered by EOR | Yes |
| Payroll processing | No | Yes | No |
| Payslip generation | No | Yes | No |
| Employment contract | No | Yes | No |
| SSS / PhilHealth / Pag-IBIG filing support | No | Yes | Contributions are passed through |
| Optional HMO | No | Administered if selected | Yes |
| Equipment | No | Usually not included | Yes |
| EOR account management | No | Yes | No |
| Compliant offboarding support | No | Usually included | No or case-dependent |
A transparent EOR quote should separate service fees from employee salary, statutory costs, benefits, and equipment.
Local Philippine EOR vs Global EOR Platform
| Factor | Local Philippine EOR | Global EOR Platform |
| Best for | Philippines-only or Philippines-heavy teams | Multi-country hiring |
| EOR fee for PH hires | Often lower | Often higher |
| Local nuance | Stronger if the provider is Philippines-focused | Varies by partner model |
| Currency | May offer AUD invoicing | May invoice in USD or other currencies |
| Support | Direct local escalation | Platform-led support, sometimes multi-layered |
| HR software | Usually lighter | Usually stronger global HR platform |
| Best buyer | Australian SME, startup, scaleup hiring mainly in PH | Company hiring across many countries |
A global EOR can be useful if the Australian company plans to hire across multiple countries and wants one global system.
A local Philippine EOR is usually the stronger cost fit when the hiring plan is focused mainly on the Philippines.
EOR Fee Comparison for Philippine Hires
| Provider Type | Typical Monthly EOR Fee | Notes for Australian Buyers |
| Local Philippine EOR, such as SOS | Around AU$295 per employee/month | Flat, predictable, Philippines-focused, usually better for PH-only or PH-heavy hiring |
| Global EOR platforms | Often AU$750–AU$1,100+ per employee/month | Useful for multi-country HR consolidation |
| Enterprise workforce platforms | Quote-only, often higher | Better suited to large multinationals and complex HR stacks |
If your company is only hiring in the Philippines, the global platform premium may not be necessary.
If your company is hiring in 10 countries at once, the global platform may be easier operationally even if the Philippines fee is higher.
Worked Example: One Philippine Employee
Assumptions:
| Item | Value |
| Role | Mid-level customer support lead |
| Gross salary | AU$2,000/month |
| Employer statutory load + 13th-month accrual | 15% of salary |
| Local EOR fee | AU$295/month |
| Global EOR fee | AU$850/month |
| Cost Item | Local PH EOR | Global EOR |
| Gross salary | AU$2,000 | AU$2,000 |
| Employer load | AU$300 | AU$300 |
| EOR fee | AU$295 | AU$850 |
| Estimated monthly total | AU$2,595 | AU$3,150 |
| Estimated annual total | AU$31,140 | AU$37,800 |
| Annual fee-driven difference | — | AU$6,660 more |
The salary is the same. The main difference is the EOR fee.
Worked Example: 10-Person AU–PH Team
Assumptions:
- 10 employees
- average gross salary: AU$2,000/month
- employer load: 15%
- local EOR fee: AU$295/month
- global EOR fee: AU$850/month
| Cost Item | Local PH EOR | Global EOR |
| Monthly salary total | AU$20,000 | AU$20,000 |
| Employer load | AU$3,000 | AU$3,000 |
| EOR fees | AU$2,950 | AU$8,500 |
| Estimated monthly total | AU$25,950 | AU$31,500 |
| Estimated annual total | AU$311,400 | AU$378,000 |
| Annual difference | — | AU$66,600 more |
For Australian CFOs and boards, this is why EOR fee structure matters. The difference becomes material as headcount grows.
What the EOR Fee Should Include
A good EOR fee should cover the employment and compliance administration layer.
| Included Area | What to Expect |
| Legal employer function | EOR acts as the Philippine employer of record |
| Employment contracts | DOLE-aligned employment agreements |
| Onboarding | Employee documentation and setup |
| Payroll processing | Salary calculation, deductions, payroll cycle |
| Payslips | Employee-facing payroll records |
| Statutory administration | SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG handling |
| 13th-month pay administration | Accrual, calculation, and payment support |
| Leave tracking | Leave and holiday administration |
| HR support | Local employee questions and employment guidance |
| Offboarding | Final pay, documentation, access coordination support |
| Compliance documentation | Payroll records, remittance evidence, contract records |
The fee should not be treated as salary. It is the provider’s service fee for acting as the local employer and running the employment infrastructure.
What Usually Costs Extra
| Extra Cost | Why It May Be Separate |
| Salary | Passed through to employee |
| Employer statutory contributions | Paid to local schemes |
| 13th-month pay | Employee entitlement, usually accrued monthly |
| HMO upgrades | Optional benefit |
| Internet allowance | Optional or agreed employee benefit |
| Equipment | Laptop, monitor, headset, peripherals |
| Bonuses | Role-specific or performance-based |
| Training | Courses, certifications, professional development |
| Special legal advice | May require external legal counsel |
| Complex offboarding or disputes | May be case-dependent |
When comparing providers, ask for a line-item quote.
Compliance Requirements in the Philippines
A Philippine EOR should manage local employment compliance for Philippine employees.
| Compliance Area | What It Means |
| Employment contract | Local contract aligned with Philippine employment requirements |
| Payroll | Accurate salary, deductions, net pay, and records |
| SSS | Social security contribution administration |
| PhilHealth | Health insurance contribution administration |
| Pag-IBIG | Housing fund contribution administration |
| 13th-month pay | Mandatory annual benefit for eligible employees |
| Leave and holidays | Local leave and holiday treatment |
| Payslips | Employee-facing payroll documentation |
| Remittance proof | Evidence or summaries showing statutory handling |
| Offboarding | Final pay, documentation, and local process support |
A strong EOR should be able to show proof, not only say that compliance is “handled.”
Compliance Proof Australian Businesses Should Request
Before choosing an EOR, ask for proof samples.
| Proof Item | Why It Matters |
| Sample employment contract | Shows local employment structure |
| Sample payslip | Shows payroll transparency |
| Payroll register format | Helps finance review monthly payroll |
| SSS / PhilHealth / Pag-IBIG remittance sample or summary | Shows statutory process exists |
| 13th-month pay calculation approach | Shows accrual and payment handling |
| Offboarding process | Shows final pay and exit documentation |
| Data privacy summary | Shows handling of employee and company data |
| Escalation process | Shows who handles HR and payroll issues |
| Invoice sample | Shows salary, statutory costs, benefits, and EOR fee clearly |
| AUD billing approach | Shows FX and currency assumptions |
Australian finance and HR teams should be able to audit the structure from documentation.
Australian Considerations: Super, PAYG, Fair Work, and Contractor Risk
Australian companies usually ask four questions when hiring in the Philippines.
Do we need to pay Australian superannuation?
If the worker is employed locally in the Philippines by a Philippine EOR, they are typically covered by Philippine statutory schemes rather than Australian superannuation. However, Australian companies should confirm their own tax and legal position with an Australian advisor.
Do we run PAYG payroll?
A Philippine EOR employee is usually not placed on Australian PAYG payroll as a local Australian employee. The Australian company usually receives an invoice from the EOR.
Does Fair Work apply?
The main risk is not the EOR model itself. The risk is informal offshore work that looks like employment but is labelled as contracting. Using a Philippine EOR creates a clearer local employment structure, but Australian businesses should still get advice for group-level employment and tax risk.
Is this safer than contractor hiring?
For ongoing, full-time, managed roles, EOR employment is usually more defensible than informal contractor setups because there is a local employment contract, payroll, statutory contributions, payslips, and documentation.
EOR vs Contractor for Australian Businesses
| Factor | Contractor | Philippine EOR Employee |
| Best for | Short-term independent work | Ongoing employee-like work |
| Payroll proof | Invoice only | Payslips and payroll records |
| Statutory benefits | Usually not provided | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, 13th-month handling |
| Local employment contract | No | Yes |
| Misclassification risk | Higher if role is full-time and managed | Lower when properly employed locally |
| Benefits | Usually none | Can include statutory and optional benefits |
| Offboarding | Contract-based | Local employment offboarding process |
| Best use case | Project work | Long-term team building |
If the role is full-time, follows your company’s schedule, uses your tools, and reports to your managers, EOR employment is usually cleaner.
EOR vs Opening a Philippine Entity
| Factor | EOR | Own Philippine Entity |
| Setup speed | Faster | Slower |
| Upfront legal work | Lower | Higher |
| Payroll infrastructure | Provided by EOR | Must be built or outsourced |
| HR compliance | Supported by EOR | Company-owned |
| Best for | Testing or scaling early teams | Large long-term local operation |
| Control | High day-to-day control | Full legal and operational control |
| Admin burden | Lower | Higher |
| Exit flexibility | Higher | Lower |
For many Australian businesses, EOR is best for the first 1–30 Philippine employees. Opening an entity becomes more relevant when the company has larger headcount, local management, permanent infrastructure, and long-term Philippine expansion plans.
How to Choose the Best EOR for Australian Companies Hiring in the Philippines
Use this decision framework.
| Decision Factor | What to Ask |
| Philippine entity | Does the provider employ staff through a Philippine-registered entity? |
| AUD pricing | Can they invoice in AUD and explain FX treatment? |
| EOR fee | Is the monthly fee flat, percentage-based, or quote-only? |
| Contract proof | Can they show sample local employment contracts? |
| Payroll proof | Can they show sample payslips and payroll reports? |
| Statutory proof | Can they show SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG remittance evidence or summaries? |
| 13th-month handling | Is it accrued and shown clearly? |
| Australian buyer experience | Do they understand AU–PH hiring expectations? |
| Support model | Who handles payroll, HR, and escalation? |
| Lock-ins | Are there minimum seats, long contracts, or exit penalties? |
| Data protection | How do they protect employee and client data? |
| Scaling fit | Can they support 1 employee and 50 employees? |
The best EOR is not just the cheapest. It is the provider that gives the strongest combination of cost, local compliance, documentation, support quality, and fit for your hiring plan.
Why SOS Fits Australian Businesses Hiring in the Philippines
Smart Outsourcing Solution is a strong fit for Australian businesses that want a Philippines-focused EOR with predictable pricing and clear compliance support.
SOS can support:
- EOR hiring in the Philippines for Australian companies
- flat local EOR fee positioning around AU$295 per employee/month
- AUD invoicing
- Philippine employment contracts
- payroll administration
- payslips and payroll records
- SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG handling
- 13th-month pay handling
- remittance evidence or summaries
- employee onboarding and offboarding
- local HR support
- AU–PH team scaling
SOS is strongest when the Australian company is hiring mainly or only in the Philippines and wants a local EOR anchor rather than a multi-country global platform.
SOS may be less suitable if the company needs one global EOR provider for many countries from day one and prefers a unified global HR dashboard over Philippines-specific cost efficiency.
Cost and Compliance Checklist for Australian Businesses
Before signing with an EOR, confirm:
| Checklist Item | Confirmed? |
| EOR fee quoted in AUD | |
| Salary, statutory costs, benefits, and EOR fee separated | |
| 13th-month pay treatment explained | |
| SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG handling explained | |
| Sample employment contract reviewed | |
| Sample payslip reviewed | |
| Sample payroll report reviewed | |
| Remittance proof or summary process explained | |
| Offboarding and final pay process explained | |
| Data privacy process explained | |
| Lock-ins, minimum seats, and exit terms reviewed | |
| Local vs global EOR cost comparison completed | |
| Australian tax or legal advisor consulted where needed |
This gives Australian founders, CFOs, and boards a clean basis for comparison.
FAQs
How much does EOR cost in the Philippines for Australian businesses?
EOR cost in the Philippines includes the employee’s salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay accrual, optional benefits, equipment or allowances, and the EOR provider’s monthly service fee. A local Philippine EOR such as SOS may charge around AU$295 per employee per month, while global EOR platforms can often charge AU$750–AU$1,100+ per employee per month for Philippine hires.
What is included in an EOR fee in the Philippines?
A typical EOR fee covers the legal employer function, employment contracts, onboarding, payroll processing, payslips, statutory administration, HR support, leave tracking, compliance documentation, and offboarding support. Salary, statutory contributions, benefits, equipment, and allowances are usually additional pass-through costs.
What is the best EOR for Australian companies hiring in the Philippines?
The best EOR for Australian companies hiring in the Philippines is usually the provider that combines Philippine employment expertise, transparent AUD pricing, strong payroll documentation, statutory handling, employee support, and clear compliance proof. For Philippines-only or Philippines-heavy hiring, a local Philippine EOR such as SOS can be a strong fit.
How can Australian companies hire employees in the Philippines?
Australian companies can hire employees in the Philippines through a Philippine EOR, a contractor model, a BPO or outsourcing provider, or their own Philippine entity. For long-term dedicated employees without local entity setup, EOR is often the cleanest route.
Do Australian companies need to open a Philippine entity to hire employees?
No. If an Australian company uses a Philippine EOR, the EOR acts as the local legal employer. This allows the Australian company to work with Philippine employees without setting up its own Philippine entity.
Do Australian companies need to pay superannuation for Philippine EOR employees?
Philippine EOR employees are typically employed locally in the Philippines and covered by Philippine statutory schemes such as SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG rather than Australian superannuation. Australian companies should still confirm their own tax and legal position with an Australian advisor.
Are Philippine EOR employees on Australian PAYG payroll?
Usually, no. Philippine EOR employees are generally paid through the Philippine EOR’s local payroll, and the Australian company receives an invoice from the EOR. Australian companies should confirm their own tax and reporting position with an advisor.
What compliance proof should a Philippines EOR provide?
A Philippines EOR should provide DOLE-aligned employment contracts, payroll records, payslips, SSS contribution evidence, PhilHealth contribution evidence, Pag-IBIG contribution evidence, 13th-month pay records, remittance receipts or summaries, and final pay or offboarding documentation when needed.
Is a local Philippine EOR cheaper than a global EOR for Australian businesses?
For Philippines-only or Philippines-heavy hiring, a local Philippine EOR is often cheaper because the per-employee monthly EOR fee is usually lower. Global EOR platforms may be better if the company needs one provider across many countries.
How should Australian businesses compare EOR quotes?
Compare salary, employer statutory costs, 13th-month accrual, EOR service fee, benefits, equipment, FX treatment, invoicing currency, compliance documentation, support model, lock-ins, and exit terms. Do not compare only the headline EOR fee.
Turn EOR Costs & Compliance Into an AU–PH Hiring Plan
If you are an Australian business planning to hire in the Philippines, build a simple 12–24 month cost and compliance model before choosing an EOR.
Ask for:
- role-by-role salary assumptions
- full monthly cost in AUD
- EOR fee breakdown
- statutory contribution handling
- 13th-month pay treatment
- sample employment contract
- sample payslip
- remittance proof process
- onboarding timeline
- offboarding process
- local vs global EOR comparison
Read the pillar: EOR for Australian Companies Hiring in the Philippines
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