FAQ: “Will My Take-Home Pay Change?” – Explaining EOR Pay & Benefits to Filipino Staff

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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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FAQ: “Will My Take-Home Pay Change?” – Explaining EOR Pay & Benefits to Filipino Staff

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.

When Filipino freelancers or contractors move into EOR employment, the first question is almost always about pay:

“Will my take-home pay change?”

It is a fair question. Freelancers are used to invoices, retainers, or direct payments. EOR employees are paid through payroll, with payslips, statutory contributions, tax handling, 13th month treatment, and possibly benefits or HMO.

This FAQ explains how EOR pay works, why net pay may change, what benefits are added, and how companies should explain the transition clearly.

For companies planning the full conversion process, start here:
Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

TL;DR: Will take-home pay change under EOR employment?

Take-home pay may stay similar, increase, or decrease depending on how the company structures the EOR employment package.

When a Filipino freelancer becomes an EOR employee:

  • the old invoice or retainer is replaced by a gross salary
  • payroll deductions may now appear
  • SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and tax handling become part of the payroll process
  • payslips are issued
  • 13th month treatment should be included in the package
  • benefits or HMO may be added, depending on the offer
  • the employee gains clearer employment records and proof of income

The key message is:

You are not simply “losing money to deductions.” Your old freelance payment is being converted into a formal employment package with payroll, contributions, 13th month treatment, and benefits where applicable.

Companies should show each worker a simple before-and-after comparison before the first payroll cycle.

Who this FAQ is for

This FAQ is for:

  • Filipino freelancers becoming EOR employees
  • Filipino contractors being moved onto payroll
  • VAs, support agents, developers, finance assistants, marketers, and remote staff
  • companies explaining EOR payroll to Filipino contractors
  • HR, finance, and operations teams preparing a contractor-to-employee transition

It answers:

  • Will my take-home pay change?
  • Why are deductions appearing now?
  • What happens to 13th month pay?
  • What benefits do I get under EOR?
  • How does payroll replace invoices?
  • What is contractor misclassification risk?
  • How do companies move Filipino freelancers onto payroll?

1. Why does pay look different under EOR employment?

Pay looks different because the worker is moving from a freelancer payment model to an employee payroll model.

Before: freelancer or contractor

A freelancer may receive:

  • invoice payments
  • retainers
  • project fees
  • hourly payments
  • platform payments
  • direct transfers

The full amount may feel like “take-home pay,” even if taxes or contributions still need to be handled separately.

After: EOR employee

An EOR employee usually receives:

  • gross salary
  • payslip
  • payroll deductions
  • statutory contribution handling
  • tax or withholding handling
  • 13th month treatment
  • benefits or HMO, if offered

That means the numbers look different, even when the total package is fair or better over the year.

2. Will my take-home pay go down?

It depends on how the company structures the package.

There are three common approaches.

Approach What it means Employee impact
Net-protection approach Company sets gross salary so net pay stays close to the old freelancer amount Take-home pay remains similar while benefits and records improve
Balanced approach Company balances net pay, benefits, statutory contributions, and total cost Net may change slightly, but total package becomes stronger
Cost-cap approach Company keeps total cost per person within a fixed budget Net may be lower, but employment benefits and protections are added

The fairest approach is to show the worker:

  • old invoice or retainer
  • new gross salary
  • expected deductions
  • expected net pay
  • 13th month treatment
  • benefits or HMO
  • total annual package

Do not compare only one month of freelance pay to one month of employee net pay. Include 13th month and benefits.

3. What new line items will appear on my payslip?

A typical EOR payslip may include:

  • basic salary
  • allowances, if any
  • overtime or premiums, if applicable
  • SSS employee share
  • PhilHealth employee share
  • Pag-IBIG employee share
  • withholding tax, if applicable
  • other agreed deductions, if any
  • net pay

The EOR or company should explain each line item before the first payroll cycle.

Workers should also know who to contact if a payslip looks wrong.

4. Why are taxes and contributions deducted now?

As a freelancer, the worker may have handled taxes and contributions personally, or may not have had a structured contribution process.

As an EOR employee, payroll becomes more formal.

That means:

  • statutory contributions are handled through payroll
  • tax or withholding may be handled through payroll
  • payslips provide a clearer income record
  • employment records become easier to prove
  • the worker has a more formal employment setup

The message should be practical:

These deductions are part of moving from informal or contractor-style payments into formal payroll.

5. What happens to 13th month pay?

13th month treatment should be clearly explained before conversion.

Under an EOR employment package, workers should be told:

  • whether 13th month is included
  • how it is calculated
  • when it is paid
  • how partial-year service is handled
  • whether it is accrued or paid at a set time

A simple way to explain it:

Instead of everything being bundled into a freelance rate, your employment package separates regular salary, deductions, statutory contributions, benefits, and 13th month treatment.

When comparing old and new pay, include the annual value of 13th month.

6. What benefits might be added under EOR employment?

Benefits depend on the company and the package offered.

The package may include:

  • statutory contribution handling
  • 13th month treatment
  • paid leave
  • HMO or health benefits
  • dependent coverage, if offered
  • internet or WFH allowance
  • night differential or shift allowance, if applicable
  • training or performance incentives
  • HR support
  • certificate of employment support

Do not promise benefits vaguely.

A good explanation says exactly what is included, when it starts, and who to contact.

7. Is EOR pay better than freelancing?

It depends on what the worker values.

Freelancing may feel better if the worker wants maximum short-term cash and prefers handling everything independently.

EOR employment may be better if the worker values:

  • payslips
  • employment records
  • 13th month treatment
  • statutory contribution handling
  • benefits or HMO
  • stability
  • HR support
  • clearer proof of income
  • long-term role security

For companies, EOR can also reduce contractor misclassification risk when a freelancer already works like an employee.

8. 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.

This risk increases when a worker:

  • 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 internal meetings
  • follows company KPIs or performance reviews
  • performs core recurring work
  • receives a fixed monthly payment

When this happens, the company may decide to move the worker into EOR employment so the legal, payroll, and HR structure better matches the working relationship.

For the full process, read:
Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

9. How do companies move Filipino freelancers onto payroll?

Moving Filipino freelancers onto payroll requires a clear payroll cutover.

Before the first payroll cycle, confirm:

  • final freelancer invoice date
  • first EOR payroll date
  • payroll cut-off period
  • gross salary
  • expected net pay
  • payroll frequency
  • allowances
  • statutory deductions
  • bank details
  • tax or government information
  • SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG details
  • benefits or HMO eligibility
  • 13th month treatment
  • payslip access
  • payroll contact person

This should be explained in writing before the worker signs or starts under payroll.

10. What should a before-and-after pay comparison include?

A useful comparison should show the full package, not just monthly net pay.

Old freelancer setup New EOR employment setup
Invoice or retainer amount Gross salary
Direct payment Payroll
No payslip or informal record Payslip
Taxes and contributions self-managed Contributions handled through payroll
No structured 13th month 13th month treatment explained
Benefits may be separate or absent Benefits or HMO included if offered
Proof may be limited to invoices Employment records and payslips

The comparison should include:

  • old monthly invoice
  • new gross salary
  • expected deductions
  • expected net pay
  • annual 13th month value
  • benefits value
  • allowances
  • total annual compensation

This helps avoid the common mistake of comparing old monthly invoice to new monthly net pay without context.

11. How should companies explain EOR pay to staff?

Companies should keep the message simple, honest, and specific.

Use this framing:

Your day-to-day work is not changing, but your pay will now be processed through formal payroll. We will show you the gross salary, expected deductions, net pay, 13th month treatment, and benefits before the transition starts.

Avoid saying:

Nothing changes.

Because something does change: pay format, documentation, deductions, and employment structure.

Better wording:

The work relationship stays familiar, but the payroll and employment structure becomes clearer.

12. What if net pay is lower than before?

If net pay is lower, explain why clearly.

Possible reasons include:

  • statutory deductions now appear
  • tax or withholding is being handled through payroll
  • benefits are being added
  • 13th month is separated from monthly salary
  • the company is using a cost-cap structure

Companies should explain:

  • monthly net difference
  • annual 13th month impact
  • benefits or HMO value
  • statutory contribution value
  • whether gross salary can be adjusted
  • whether a transition allowance is available
  • who the worker can speak to

For sensitive cases, use a 1:1 conversation rather than a group announcement.

13. What if net pay is higher than before?

If net pay is higher, still explain the full structure.

Clarify:

  • gross salary
  • deductions
  • payroll schedule
  • 13th month treatment
  • benefits or HMO
  • allowances
  • whether the increase is permanent
  • whether it is tied to a new role, schedule, or responsibilities

Workers should understand why the number changed and how payroll will work going forward.

14. What documents are needed for EOR payroll?

Typical payroll and onboarding documents may include:

  • valid ID
  • bank details
  • tax or government information
  • SSS details
  • PhilHealth details
  • Pag-IBIG details
  • emergency contact
  • signed employment agreement
  • employee information form
  • benefits or HMO forms, if applicable
  • policy acknowledgements
  • confidentiality or data protection documents

The EOR should provide a clear checklist.

15. What should companies keep as proof after conversion?

Companies should keep a conversion proof pack showing what changed.

Include:

  • old contractor or freelancer agreement
  • final invoice or payment record
  • pay comparison
  • new employment agreement
  • salary and benefits summary
  • payroll start date
  • first payslip
  • statutory setup confirmation
  • 13th month treatment
  • HMO or benefits confirmation
  • worker acknowledgement
  • internal approval record

This helps HR, finance, legal, founders, investors, and auditors understand the transition.

How Smart Outsourcing Solution helps

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

SOS supports:

  • contractor conversion planning
  • pay comparison modelling
  • gross-to-net review
  • payroll transition planning
  • employment documentation
  • benefits and HMO coordination
  • 13th month treatment
  • statutory contribution administration
  • worker communication support
  • proof pack preparation
  • local HR support in the Philippines

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

Start with the full guide:
Convert Contractors to Employees Philippines

Final takeaway

The question “Will my take-home pay change?” deserves a clear answer.

Sometimes net pay stays similar. Sometimes it changes. What matters is that the worker sees the full package: gross salary, deductions, net pay, 13th month treatment, benefits, HMO, payslips, and employment records.

For companies, the goal is not to hide deductions or rush the conversation. The goal is to make the move from freelancer to EOR employee clear, fair, and easy to understand.

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

Or speak with Smart Outsourcing Solution about modelling EOR pay and benefits for your Filipino team.

FAQs

Will my take-home pay change when I become an EOR employee?

It may stay similar, increase, or decrease depending on how the company structures your gross salary, deductions, benefits, and 13th month treatment. Ask for a written before-and-after comparison before the first payroll cycle.

Why does my EOR gross salary look different from my old freelancer invoice?

A freelancer invoice is usually a service payment. EOR gross salary is payroll income before deductions, statutory contributions, tax handling, and benefits. The two numbers are not directly comparable unless you include net pay, 13th month, and benefits.

What deductions will appear on my EOR payslip?

Your payslip may show SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, withholding tax if applicable, and any agreed deductions. It should also show gross salary, allowances if any, and net pay.

Will I receive 13th month pay under EOR employment?

13th month treatment should be included in your employment package. Ask how it is calculated, when it is paid, and how partial-year service is handled.

Will I get HMO or benefits as an EOR employee?

You may receive HMO or other benefits depending on the company’s package. Ask what is included, when coverage starts, whether dependents are included, and who handles claims.

How do I move from freelancer invoices to payroll?

Confirm your final freelancer invoice date, first payroll date, gross salary, expected net pay, payroll frequency, bank details, government information, benefits, 13th month treatment, and payslip access before the transition.

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 works mainly for one company.

How do companies convert Filipino contractors into employees?

Companies convert Filipino contractors by identifying employee-like roles, choosing an EOR or entity pathway, defining the employment package, preparing documents, moving the worker onto payroll, setting up benefits and statutory contributions, and keeping a conversion proof pack.

What should a pay comparison show?

A pay comparison should show old invoice amount, new gross salary, expected deductions, estimated net pay, 13th month treatment, benefits or HMO value, allowances, and total annual compensation.

What if my net pay is lower after conversion?

Ask the company to explain why. A lower net may reflect payroll deductions, tax handling, statutory contributions, benefits, or a cost-cap approach. The comparison should include annual value, not just one month’s net pay.

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