When Should You Stop Using an EOR in the Philippines and Open Your Own Entity? (Headcount, Cost, Control)

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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When Should You Stop Using an EOR in the Philippines and Open Your Own Entity? (Headcount, Cost, Control)

Author: Martin English, CEO & Founding Partner
Updated: May 27, 2026

TL;DR

Use an Employer of Record in the Philippines when you want to hire employees without setting up a local company.

Consider opening your own Philippine entity when:

Trigger What It Means
Stable long-term team You expect to keep a Philippine team for 2–3+ years
Higher headcount Your team is large enough that entity overhead may be cheaper than EOR fees
More local control You need your own bank account, entity, contracts, benefits, job titles, and local brand
More internal HR capacity You can manage payroll, statutory filings, accounting, compliance, and HR operations
Lower long-term admin cost Your fixed entity cost becomes lower than your EOR service fees

As a working rule of thumb, many companies should start reviewing the EOR-to-entity decision around 15–25 employeesand model it seriously by 25–40+ employees.

Smart Outsourcing Solution charges a flat US$190 per employee per month for Philippines EOR service. At that rate, EOR remains simple and cost-effective for many smaller or growing teams. Once headcount becomes stable and large enough, your own entity may become more cost-effective.

For a full EOR cost breakdown, see EOR Pricing Philippines.

Quick Answer: When Should You Stop Using an EOR in the Philippines?

You should consider moving from EOR to your own Philippine entity when the cost, control, and long-term certainty of having your own company outweigh the simplicity of EOR.

In practice, that usually means:

Situation Recommended Model
1–10 employees Usually EOR
10–20 employees Usually EOR, but start modelling entity costs
20–40 employees Compare EOR vs entity carefully
40+ employees Entity may become more cost-effective if the team is stable
Short-term or uncertain hiring plan EOR
Long-term, stable, expanding Philippine team Entity may make sense
No internal HR/payroll/legal support EOR
You can manage local operations Entity may make sense

The correct answer is not based on headcount alone. It depends on fixed entity costs, payroll complexity, support needs, compliance risk, control requirements, and how long you expect the team to stay in the Philippines.

EOR vs Own Entity in the Philippines

Factor Employer of Record Own Philippine Entity
Local company required No Yes
Legal employer EOR provider Your company
Setup speed Faster Slower
Upfront setup cost Lower Higher
Monthly admin complexity Lower Higher
Payroll administration Handled by EOR Managed by your team or local providers
Statutory filings Administered by EOR Owned by your company
Employment contracts EOR employment structure Your own contracts
Local bank account Not required for hiring Usually required
Control over policies Moderate High
Best for Testing, early hiring, smaller teams, contractor conversion Long-term scale, larger teams, local brand, direct control

EOR is usually better when you want speed and simplicity. Your own entity is usually better when you need control and long-term scale.

The Simple Break-Even Formula

Use this model to compare EOR against your own entity:

Formula
Monthly EOR Admin Cost = Number of Employees × Monthly EOR Fee
Monthly Entity Cost = Fixed Entity Overhead + Per-Employee Admin Cost

For SOS:

Item Amount
SOS EOR fee US$190 per employee/month

Example:

Headcount EOR Admin Cost at US$190 / Employee / Month
5 employees US$950/month
10 employees US$1,900/month
20 employees US$3,800/month
30 employees US$5,700/month
40 employees US$7,600/month
50 employees US$9,500/month

If your own entity would cost US$4,000–US$7,000/month to run properly, including payroll admin, accounting, filings, HR support, and compliance support, the break-even point may fall somewhere in the 20–40+ employee range.

This is why headcount matters, but fixed overhead matters more.

Example Break-Even Scenarios

Scenario 1: Small Team

Item Example
Headcount 8 employees
EOR fee US$190/employee/month
Monthly EOR admin cost US$1,520
Estimated entity overhead US$4,000–US$7,000/month
Likely better model EOR

For small teams, EOR usually remains simpler and cheaper than opening and maintaining a local entity.

Scenario 2: Scaling Team

Item Example
Headcount 25 employees
EOR fee US$190/employee/month
Monthly EOR admin cost US$4,750
Estimated entity overhead US$4,000–US$7,000/month
Likely better model Compare both

At this stage, the decision depends on payroll complexity, support needs, benefits, compliance risk, and how stable the team is.

Scenario 3: Larger Stable Team

Item Example
Headcount 45 employees
EOR fee US$190/employee/month
Monthly EOR admin cost US$8,550
Estimated entity overhead US$4,000–US$7,000/month
Likely better model Own entity may make sense

For larger long-term teams, your own entity may become more cost-effective if you have the operational capacity to manage it.

What Is Included in SOS EOR Pricing?

Smart Outsourcing Solution’s EOR pricing is designed for companies hiring employees in the Philippines without setting up a local entity.

The flat US$190 per employee per month EOR fee includes the employment and compliance service layer.

Included in SOS EOR Fee What It Covers
Legal employment support Employ staff in the Philippines without opening a local entity
Payroll processing Monthly payroll, salary processing support, and records
Statutory administration SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, withholding, and payroll compliance support
Employment contracts Locally compliant employment contracts and employee records
Payslips Employee payslip preparation and documentation
13th-month handling Accrual and processing support
Reporting Payroll summaries and finance-ready records
Account support Philippines-based EOR coordination

Salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, optional HMO, equipment, allowances, and pass-through costs are separate from the EOR fee.

What Costs Continue Whether You Use EOR or Your Own Entity?

Some costs do not disappear when you open your own entity. You still need to fund the employee and statutory layers.

Cost EOR Own Entity
Employee salary Yes Yes
Employer statutory contributions Yes Yes
13th-month pay Yes Yes
Benefits / HMO If offered If offered
Equipment If provided If provided
Allowances If offered If offered
Payroll administration Included in EOR service layer Managed internally or by provider
Employment contracts EOR-supported Owned by your company
Compliance responsibility Shared through provider model Directly owned by your company

Opening an entity does not remove salary, benefits, statutory contributions, or 13th-month pay. It mainly changes who acts as legal employer and who owns the administration.

EOR Fee Benchmark: SOS vs Global EOR Providers

If your hiring is focused only on the Philippines, compare EOR provider fees separately from salary and statutory costs.

Provider Published / Stated EOR Fee Best Fit Pricing Note
Smart Outsourcing Solution US$190 per employee/month Philippines-focused hiring Local EOR support with flat monthly pricing
Multiplier From US$400/month Multi-country hiring Global EOR platform
Deel From US$599 per employee/month Global hiring Global platform with EOR across many countries
Remote US$599 per employee/month annually, US$699 monthly Global hiring Global EOR platform

Deel publishes EOR pricing from US$599 per employee per month, Remote lists Employer of Record pricing at US$599 per employee/month on annual pricing and US$699 monthly, while Multiplier describes EOR as part of its global workforce platform. 

The important comparison is not only “which provider has the biggest global platform?” It is:

Which provider gives you compliant Philippine employment, reliable payroll, clear statutory handling, and the lowest practical cost for your specific team size?

Cost Comparison: EOR vs Entity by Headcount

Headcount SOS EOR Admin Cost at US$190 / Employee / Month Entity Decision Signal
5 US$950/month EOR likely simpler and cheaper
10 US$1,900/month EOR usually still practical
15 US$2,850/month Start modelling entity overhead
20 US$3,800/month Compare EOR vs entity if team is stable
30 US$5,700/month Entity may become competitive
40 US$7,600/month Entity may be worth serious review
50 US$9,500/month Entity may be more cost-effective if managed well

This table compares the EOR service layer only. It excludes salary, statutory costs, 13th-month pay, benefits, equipment, and allowances, because those costs usually exist under both models.

Salary and Hiring Cost Benchmarks

Whether you use EOR or open your own entity, salary remains the main cost driver.

Role Typical Monthly Salary Benchmark Notes
Virtual Assistant US$600–US$1,800 Admin, inbox, scheduling, CRM, executive support
Customer Support Specialist US$700–US$2,200 Email, chat, phone, SaaS, technical support
Bookkeeper US$800–US$3,000 AP, AR, reconciliation, reporting, Xero / QuickBooks
UI/UX Designer US$1,200–US$5,000 Product design, web design, UX, design systems
Software Developer US$1,500–US$6,000 Front-end, back-end, full-stack, DevOps

Use salary benchmarks as planning ranges only. Final pay depends on seniority, English communication, technical skill, shift schedule, industry experience, and retention risk.

Related guide: Talent & Salary Benchmarks

When EOR Is the Better Choice

Stay with an EOR when:

  • You have fewer than 15–20 employees in the Philippines
  • You are still testing the Philippine hiring market
  • You do not want to set up a local company yet
  • You need to hire quickly
  • You are converting contractors into employees
  • You do not have local HR, payroll, accounting, and compliance support
  • Your team size may change
  • You want simple monthly administration
  • You prefer lower operational complexity over full local control

EOR is especially useful when speed, simplicity, and compliance coverage matter more than full entity control.

When Opening Your Own Entity Makes Sense

Consider opening your own Philippine entity when:

  • You expect a stable team for 2–3+ years
  • Your headcount is moving toward 25–40+ employees
  • You want your own local brand and employer presence
  • You need direct control over employment policies
  • You want to run your own benefits, job titles, performance systems, and internal HR structures
  • You have the budget for legal, accounting, tax, payroll, HR, and corporate administration
  • Your entity overhead is lower than your ongoing EOR service fees
  • You are committed to the Philippines as a long-term hiring market

An entity can be the right move when the business case is long-term and the company is ready for the operational responsibility.

Control: What You Gain With Your Own Entity

Opening your own entity can give you more control over:

Area Why It Matters
Employer brand You can hire under your own local company name
Employment policies You can design your own internal HR framework
Benefits You can negotiate and manage benefit packages directly
Local bank account You can manage local payments and finances directly
Job titles and org structure You have more control over employee classification and progression
Vendor relationships You can contract directly with local providers
Long-term operations You can build a permanent Philippine presence

This control is valuable, but it comes with direct employer responsibility.

Responsibility: What You Take On With Your Own Entity

An entity means your company owns more of the risk and workload.

You need to manage or outsource:

Responsibility Why It Matters
Incorporation and corporate maintenance Entity setup, renewals, registrations, filings
Payroll administration Payroll calculations, approvals, cutoffs, payslips
Statutory filings SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, BIR, and required submissions
Employment contracts Local contract drafting and updates
HR operations Onboarding, leave, records, employee relations
Termination process Compliance-sensitive employee exits
Accounting and tax Bookkeeping, tax filings, audit, corporate compliance
Benefits administration HMO, allowances, renewals, claims, employee questions
Legal support Employment disputes, policy changes, local compliance updates

Opening an entity can reduce EOR admin fees at scale, but it increases internal accountability.

Transition Path: EOR to Own Entity

A practical transition path looks like this:

  1. Use EOR to hire quickly and validate the Philippines as a talent market.
  2. Build the team and confirm long-term headcount.
  3. Model the break-even between EOR fees and entity overhead.
  4. Prepare entity setup, payroll, accounting, HR, and benefits infrastructure.
  5. Decide which employees will transfer and when.
  6. Communicate the change clearly to employees.
  7. Move payroll, contracts, benefits, and statutory records carefully.
  8. Keep EOR support during the transition period if needed.

Do not switch only because of headcount. Switch when the cost, control, compliance, and operational readiness all point in the same direction.

Decision Matrix: EOR or Own Entity?

Question If Yes Likely Model
Are you hiring fewer than 15 employees? Yes EOR
Are you unsure about long-term Philippines headcount? Yes EOR
Do you need to hire immediately? Yes EOR
Do you lack local HR/payroll/legal support? Yes EOR
Do you expect 25–40+ employees for several years? Yes Compare entity
Do you need full local employer control? Yes Entity may fit
Can you manage payroll, statutory filings, accounting, and HR? Yes Entity may fit
Is entity overhead lower than EOR service fees? Yes Entity may fit

The best model is the one that gives you the right balance of cost, compliance, speed, and control.

Why Smart Outsourcing Solution?

Smart Outsourcing Solution helps companies hire, manage, and transition Philippine employees through practical local employment support.

SOS is a strong fit if you want:

  • Philippines-focused EOR support
  • Transparent flat-fee pricing
  • Clear separation between salary, statutory costs, and provider fees
  • Local payroll, contracts, payslips, statutory administration, and 13th-month handling
  • Support for growing teams deciding between EOR, PEO, and entity setup
  • Help understanding when to stay with EOR and when to move toward your own entity

SOS’s EOR service fee is US$190 per employee per month, excluding salary, statutory employer costs, 13th-month pay, optional benefits, equipment, allowances, and other pass-through costs.

For the detailed fee model, see EOR Pricing Philippines.

FAQs

When should you stop using an EOR in the Philippines?

You should consider stopping EOR when your Philippine team is stable, long-term, large enough to justify fixed entity overhead, and your company is ready to manage local payroll, HR, accounting, statutory filings, and compliance. Many companies start modelling this decision around 15–25 employees and review it seriously by 25–40+ employees.

At what headcount does opening a Philippine entity make sense?

There is no single headcount rule. As a practical benchmark, EOR is often simpler for smaller teams, while entity setup may become worth reviewing around 25–40+ employees if the team is stable and expected to stay for several years.

How much does an EOR cost in the Philippines?

Smart Outsourcing Solution charges a flat US$190 per employee per month for Philippines EOR service. Salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, optional HMO, equipment, allowances, and other pass-through costs are separate.

What are typical EOR fees in the Philippines?

Typical EOR fees vary by provider. Some global EOR platforms publish fees from around US$400 to US$599 per employee per month. SOS charges US$190 per employee per month for Philippines-focused EOR service.

What is included in Philippines EOR pricing?

EOR pricing usually includes legal employment support, payroll processing, employment contracts, payslips, statutory administration, compliance support, reporting, and account coordination. Salary, statutory employer costs, 13th-month pay, benefits, and allowances are usually separate.

Is opening an entity cheaper than using an EOR?

It can be cheaper at higher headcount if your fixed entity overhead is lower than your monthly EOR service fees. But opening an entity also adds legal, accounting, payroll, HR, tax, banking, and compliance responsibilities.

What costs continue after opening your own entity?

Salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, equipment, allowances, payroll administration, HR operations, accounting, tax, and compliance costs continue after opening your own entity. The main change is that your company becomes the direct legal employer.

Should I use EOR first before opening an entity?

Often, yes. EOR lets you hire quickly, validate the talent market, and build the team before committing to incorporation. Once the team is stable and large enough, you can compare EOR against entity setup.

Can SOS help with the EOR-to-entity decision?

Yes. SOS can help model EOR costs, salary costs, statutory costs, 13th-month accrual, benefits, and the break-even point between EOR and opening your own Philippine entity.

Compare EOR vs Opening Your Own Philippine Entity

Send us your current headcount, target headcount, salary ranges, expected timeline, and control requirements.

We’ll help estimate:

  • EOR service costs
  • Salary and statutory costs
  • 13th-month accrual
  • Benefits and allowances
  • Entity break-even range
  • When it may make sense to stay with EOR or open your own entity

Speak with a specialist and get a quote
View EOR Pricing Philippines

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