EOR vs PEO vs Entity Setup: Which Is Best for Hiring International Employees? (2026 Guide)
Author: Martin English, CEO & Founding Partner
Updated: May 27, 2026
TL;DR
If you want to hire international employees, the best model depends on whether you already have a local entity, how fast you need to hire, how much control you need, and how large the team will become.
| Model | Best For | Local Entity Required? | Legal Employer | Typical Use Case |
| EOR | Hiring employees in a country where you do not have an entity | No | EOR provider | Fast, compliant international hiring |
| PEO | Outsourcing payroll and HR when you already have a local entity | Yes | Your company | Payroll and HR administration support |
| Entity Setup | Building a long-term local operation | Yes | Your company | Large, stable teams needing full control |
For the Philippines, use an EOR if you want to hire legally without setting up a local company. Use a PEO if you already have a Philippine entity and need payroll or HR administration. Consider entity setup when your Philippine team is stable, long-term, and large enough to justify fixed local overhead.
Smart Outsourcing Solution charges a flat US$190 per employee per month for Philippines EOR service. This fee covers the EOR service layer, while salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, optional benefits, allowances, and equipment are separate.
For the Philippines-specific decision model, read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
Quick Answer: Which Is Better — EOR, PEO, or Entity Setup?
The best option depends on your hiring situation.
| Situation | Best Model |
| You want to hire in the Philippines without opening a company | EOR |
| You need to hire quickly in a new country | EOR |
| You are testing an international hiring market | EOR |
| You are converting contractors into employees | EOR |
| You already have a local entity and need payroll / HR support | PEO |
| You want to outsource payroll while remaining the legal employer | PEO |
| You are building a large long-term team in one country | Entity setup |
| You need full local HR, payroll, banking, and employer-brand control | Entity setup |
For most companies hiring their first employees in the Philippines, EOR is usually the fastest and lowest-friction option. PEO only applies if the company already has a local entity. Entity setup becomes more relevant once the team is large, stable, and long-term.
What Is an Employer of Record?
An Employer of Record is a third-party provider that legally employs workers on behalf of another company.
The EOR becomes the legal employer. The client company manages the employee’s daily work, tools, tasks, role, and performance.
| EOR Handles | Client Company Handles |
| Employment contracts | Day-to-day work |
| Payroll processing | Role scope |
| Payslips | Performance management |
| Statutory administration | Tools and systems |
| Compliance workflows | Work priorities |
| 13th-month handling | Team integration |
| HR documentation | Business outcomes |
The current SOS article explains that an EOR manages employment contracts, payroll and tax compliance, statutory benefits, government contributions, and HR administration, while the client company manages day-to-day work and performance.
When Should You Use an EOR?
Use an EOR when:
- You do not have a local entity
- You want to hire employees internationally
- You need to hire quickly
- You are testing a new country before incorporation
- You are converting contractors into employees
- You want local payroll and statutory administration handled for you
- You want to avoid local company registration until headcount is proven
- You want a clearer monthly provider fee
For the Philippines, EOR is usually the right starting point when you want to hire employees legally without opening a local company.
What Is a PEO?
A Professional Employer Organization is an HR outsourcing model for companies that already have a local entity.
Unlike an EOR, a PEO does not replace the need for your own company in the country. Your entity remains the legal employer. The PEO supports payroll, HR administration, benefits, and compliance workflows.
| PEO Handles | Your Company Still Owns |
| Payroll administration | Legal employer responsibility |
| Payslip support | Employment decisions |
| HR documentation | Final HR policies |
| Benefits administration support | Employee relationships |
| Statutory workflow support | Payroll funding |
| Reporting | Compliance accountability |
The current SOS page states that a PEO requires the company to already have a registered legal entity in the country and that the company remains the legal employer.
When Should You Use a PEO?
Use a PEO when:
- You already have a Philippine entity
- You want to outsource payroll and HR administration
- You want help with statutory workflows
- You want support with benefits administration
- You want payslips, reporting, and HR documentation handled more efficiently
- You are not trying to avoid local entity setup because you already have one
PEO is usually not the right option if your main question is: “How can I hire in the Philippines without a local entity?” For that, you usually need an EOR.
What Is Entity Setup?
Entity setup means registering your own local company in the country where you want to hire.
In the Philippines, this means your company becomes the legal employer and directly owns employment, payroll, tax, HR, statutory filings, accounting, corporate maintenance, and compliance obligations.
| Entity Setup Requires |
| Local company registration |
| Payroll infrastructure |
| Employment contracts |
| Statutory registrations and filings |
| Accounting and tax support |
| Local HR administration |
| Banking and finance operations |
| Corporate maintenance |
| Legal and compliance support |
Entity setup can provide the most control, but it also creates the most operational responsibility.
When Should You Set Up Your Own Entity?
Consider entity setup when:
- You expect a stable team in the Philippines for several years
- You are building a large long-term operation
- You need direct employer control
- You want your own local employer brand
- You need local banking, contracts, vendor relationships, or office operations
- You have payroll, tax, HR, accounting, and legal support
- Your fixed entity overhead becomes lower than ongoing EOR service fees
For the detailed Philippines break-even model, read EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
EOR vs PEO vs Entity Setup: Key Differences
| Factor | EOR | PEO | Entity Setup |
| Local entity required | No | Yes | Yes |
| Legal employer | EOR provider | Your company | Your company |
| Best for | Hiring without a local company | HR and payroll outsourcing after entity setup | Long-term local operations |
| Setup speed | Fastest | Moderate | Slowest |
| Upfront complexity | Low | Medium | High |
| Ongoing admin load | Lower | Medium | Higher |
| Payroll management | EOR | PEO support | Internal or outsourced |
| Statutory administration | EOR-supported | PEO-supported | Company-owned |
| Control | Moderate | High | Highest |
| Compliance responsibility | EOR supports employment layer | Shared support, company remains employer | Company owns direct responsibility |
| Best Philippines use case | First hires, contractor conversion, market testing | Existing PH entity needing payroll support | Larger stable PH team |
The simple rule: EOR avoids entity setup, PEO supports an existing entity, and entity setup gives full control but adds responsibility.
EOR vs PEO vs Entity Setup Cost Comparison
The cost comparison should not only look at provider fees. You need to compare salary, statutory costs, benefits, provider fees, and operating overhead.
| Cost Layer | EOR | PEO | Entity Setup |
| Employee salary | Client funds through EOR | Company funds | Company funds |
| Employer statutory contributions | Billed separately | Company funds | Company funds |
| 13th-month pay | Accrued / processed through EOR | Company funds, PEO may administer | Company funds and administers |
| Benefits / HMO | Optional pass-through | Company funds, PEO may administer | Company funds and administers |
| Provider service fee | EOR fee | PEO admin fee | Not applicable |
| Local entity setup cost | Not required | Already required | Required |
| Payroll infrastructure | Included in service layer | Supported by PEO | Built or outsourced |
| Accounting / tax / corporate maintenance | Not required for local hiring | Required because entity exists | Required |
| Compliance responsibility | EOR-supported | Company remains employer | Company-owned |
Opening an entity does not remove salary, statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, or payroll work. It changes who owns the legal employer layer.
Philippines EOR Cost Example
Smart Outsourcing Solution charges a flat US$190 per employee per month for its Philippines EOR service. The SOS pricing page states that the fee includes employment, payroll, statutory filings, compliant contracts and payslips, reporting, and dedicated support. Salary and employer statutory contributions are billed separately.
| Cost Item | Example Treatment |
| Monthly salary | Based on role and seniority |
| Employer statutory contributions | Calculated separately |
| 13th-month pay accrual | Accrued separately |
| Optional benefits | HMO, equipment, or allowances if offered |
| SOS EOR service fee | US$190 per employee/month |
| Estimated monthly total | Salary + statutory costs + 13th-month accrual + benefits + US$190 |
For full pricing, see EOR Pricing Philippines.
Local vs Global EOR Providers
If you choose EOR, you still need to decide between a local Philippines EOR and a global EOR platform.
| Factor | Local Philippines EOR | Global EOR Platform |
| Best for | Philippines-only or Philippines-heavy hiring | Multi-country hiring |
| Provider fee | Often lower | Often higher |
| Local payroll knowledge | Usually stronger for Philippines-specific issues | Varies by country and operating model |
| Platform depth | Usually simpler | Usually stronger |
| Country coverage | Philippines-focused | Many countries |
| Support model | More local and direct | More platform-led |
| Best buyer | Cost-conscious companies hiring in the Philippines | Companies hiring across many countries |
A global EOR may be worth it if you need one platform for multiple countries. A local EOR may be a better fit if your hiring is focused on the Philippines and you care most about local payroll support, direct service, and lower provider fees.
EOR Provider Fee Benchmark
| Provider / Model | Published or Stated EOR Fee | Best Fit | Notes |
| Smart Outsourcing Solution | US$190 per employee/month | Philippines-focused hiring | Local EOR service with flat 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 coverage |
| Remote | US$599 annually / US$699 monthly per employee/month | Global hiring | Global EOR platform |
| Own entity | Fixed overhead, not an EOR fee | Larger long-term teams | Requires incorporation, payroll, accounting, HR, tax, and compliance support |
Multiplier lists EOR pricing from US$400 per month and says the plan covers employment contracts, multi-country payroll, multi-currency payments, benefits and insurance administration, leave and expense management, local HR/legal support, and employee payslips. Deel lists standard EOR from US$599 per employee per month, with legal employment, onboarding and compliance, benefits enrollment, managed payroll, tax filings, reporting, HR/legal expertise, and support. Remote lists EOR at US$599 per employee/month annually or US$699 monthly, including hiring without a local entity, onboarding support, local payroll, compliance protections, localised benefits, and in-house expert support.
For Philippines-only hiring, SOS’s flat US$190 per employee/month fee is the clearest local benchmark.
Salary and Total Employment Cost Benchmarks
Whether you use EOR, PEO, or your own entity, salary is usually the largest cost.
| 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 |
The real cost is not salary alone. Build your model using salary, employer statutory contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, equipment, allowances, and either EOR fees, PEO fees, or entity overhead.
Related guide: Talent & Salary Benchmarks.
Decision Criteria: Which Model Should You Choose?
Use this decision table.
| Question | If Yes | Likely Fit |
| Do you need to hire without opening a local company? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you need to hire in weeks, not months? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you testing a new country? | Yes | EOR |
| Are you converting contractors into employees? | Yes | EOR |
| Do you already have a Philippine entity? | Yes | PEO or entity-managed payroll |
| Do you need payroll and HR support for an existing entity? | Yes | PEO |
| Do you expect a large stable team for several years? | Yes | Compare EOR vs entity |
| Do you need full employer-brand, policy, banking, and HR control? | Yes | Entity setup |
| Can you manage payroll, accounting, tax, HR, and local compliance? | Yes | Entity setup may fit |
The best model is the one that matches your stage, not the one that looks cheapest on paper.
Philippines-Specific Decision Guide
For companies hiring in the Philippines:
| Stage | Recommended Model |
| First Philippine hire | EOR |
| 2–10 employees | Usually EOR |
| 10–25 employees | EOR is still common; start modelling entity setup if team is stable |
| 25–40+ employees | Compare EOR vs entity seriously |
| Existing Philippine entity | PEO may fit |
| Large long-term local operation | Entity setup may fit |
For the deeper headcount, cost, and control model, see EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines.
When EOR Is Better Than PEO or Entity Setup
Choose EOR if:
- You do not have a Philippine entity
- You want to hire legally without incorporation
- You want fast onboarding
- You are testing the Philippines as a hiring market
- You are moving contractors or freelancers into employment
- You want contracts, payroll, payslips, statutory administration, and compliance workflows handled locally
- You want to avoid fixed entity overhead
- You want a clear monthly service fee
EOR is the cleanest model when your main goal is compliant hiring without opening a company.
When PEO Is Better Than EOR or Entity Setup
Choose PEO if:
- You already have a Philippine entity
- Your company is the legal employer
- You want help with payroll, payslips, benefits, HR records, and statutory workflows
- You want to reduce administration without giving up employer control
- You do not need an EOR because your entity already exists
PEO is not a substitute for EOR if you do not have a local entity.
When Entity Setup Is Better Than EOR or PEO
Choose entity setup if:
- You are committed to the Philippines long term
- You expect a large stable team
- You want full local control
- You want your own Philippine employer brand
- You need local banking or vendor contracts
- You can manage local payroll, accounting, tax, HR, legal, and compliance responsibilities
- Your fixed operating cost becomes more efficient than ongoing EOR fees
Entity setup offers the most control, but it also creates the most responsibility.
Why Smart Outsourcing Solution Fits the EOR Use Case
Smart Outsourcing Solution is a strong fit for companies that want to hire in the Philippines without setting up a local entity.
SOS is especially relevant if you want:
- Philippines-focused EOR support
- Transparent flat-fee pricing
- A local alternative to global EOR platforms
- Clear separation between salary, statutory costs, and provider fees
- Payroll, payslips, contracts, statutory administration, reporting, and 13th-month handling
- Support for remote teams, contractor conversion, and early-stage Philippines hiring
SOS charges US$190 per employee per month for EOR service, separate from salary and employer statutory contributions.
For the full pricing model, see EOR Pricing Philippines.
How This Page Should Avoid Cannibalising the Pillar
This page should stay focused on the three-way model comparison: EOR vs PEO vs entity setup.
The pillar page should own:
- EOR vs entity setup Philippines
- Headcount break-even analysis
- When to stop using EOR
- Cost, control, and operational readiness
- Entity transition decision-making
Prominent pillar link:
EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines
FAQs
Which is better: EOR, PEO, or entity setup?
EOR is better when you want to hire in a country without opening a local company. PEO is better when you already have a local entity and want payroll or HR administration support. Entity setup is better for large, stable, long-term operations that need full local control.
What is the difference between EOR and PEO?
An EOR becomes the legal employer and lets you hire without a local entity. A PEO supports payroll and HR administration for a company that already has a local entity. With PEO, your company remains the legal employer.
What is the difference between EOR and entity setup?
With EOR, the provider legally employs workers on your behalf. With entity setup, your own local company becomes the legal employer. EOR is faster and simpler. Entity setup gives more control but adds payroll, tax, accounting, HR, and compliance responsibility.
How can I hire in the Philippines without a local entity?
You can hire in the Philippines without a local entity by using an Employer of Record. The EOR legally employs the worker and handles employment contracts, payroll, payslips, statutory administration, and compliance workflows.
Should I use an EOR or open an entity in the Philippines?
Use an EOR if you are hiring your first employees, testing the Philippines, converting contractors, or avoiding incorporation. Consider opening an entity if you expect a stable long-term team, need full control, and have enough headcount to justify fixed overhead.
When should I use a PEO in the Philippines?
Use a PEO if you already have a Philippine entity and need help administering payroll, payslips, statutory workflows, benefits, HR records, and reporting. PEO is not the right model if you do not have a local entity.
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 benefits, equipment, and allowances are separate.
What are typical EOR fees?
Typical EOR fees vary by provider and country scope. Global EOR platforms commonly publish fees from about US$400 to US$599+ per employee per month, while 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, employment contracts, payroll processing, payslips, statutory administration, 13th-month handling, compliance support, reporting, and account coordination. Salary and statutory employer costs are usually separate.
Can a company switch from EOR to its own entity later?
Yes. Many companies use EOR first to hire quickly and validate the market, then move to their own entity once the team becomes large, stable, and long-term.
Compare EOR, PEO, and Entity Setup for Your Philippines Team
Send us your target country, current entity status, headcount, salary ranges, and timeline.
We’ll help compare:
- EOR vs PEO vs entity setup fit
- Salary and statutory costs
- 13th-month accrual
- Benefits and allowances
- EOR provider fees
- Entity setup decision points
- When to stay with EOR vs open your own entity
Speak with a specialist and get a quote
Read the EOR vs Entity Setup Philippines Guide
View EOR Pricing Philippines
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- EOR Pricing Philippines
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- Talent & Salary Benchmarks Philippines