Payroll Transparency & Approval Process: Step-by-Step Guide for Full Buyer Control
Author: Philip Murphy, COO & Founding Partner
Reviewed by: Martin English, CEO & Founding Partner
Date Published: August 18, 2025
Updated: May 28, 2026
Disclosure: Informational only. Not legal, tax, or financial advice.
TL;DR
Payroll transparency means the buyer can see, review, approve, and audit every payroll line before money is released.
For a Philippines EOR team, payroll transparency should show:
| Payroll Item | What the Buyer Should See |
| Gross salary | Employee salary for the pay period |
| Allowances | Internet, equipment, night shift, transport, or role-specific allowances |
| Approved changes | Salary changes, bonuses, reimbursements, deductions, new hires, leavers |
| Employee deductions | Employee-side statutory deductions and approved deductions |
| Employer contributions | Employer-side statutory obligations |
| Net pay | Final pay to the employee |
| Payslips | Employee-facing payroll records |
| Payroll register | Buyer-facing payroll report |
| SSS evidence | Social security contribution handling |
| PhilHealth evidence | Health insurance contribution handling |
| Pag-IBIG evidence | Housing fund contribution handling |
| 13th-month accrual | Monthly tracking of mandatory annual pay |
| Remittance receipts or summaries | Proof that statutory payments are handled |
| Approval trail | Who reviewed, approved, corrected, and released payroll |
A transparent payroll approval process prevents surprise costs, payroll errors, statutory under-accruals, FX confusion, unapproved allowances, missed leavers, incorrect 13th-month treatment, and weak audit trails.
A compliant Philippines EOR should provide DOLE-aligned employment contracts, payroll records, payslips, SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG evidence, 13th-month pay records, remittance receipts or summaries, and final pay or offboarding records.
For the full compliance proof standard, see Philippines EOR Compliance.
Quick Answer
A payroll transparency and approval process gives the buyer full control by requiring payroll to be reviewed, corrected, approved, and documented before release.
The standard workflow is:
Payroll inputs → payroll register → manager review → finance review → buyer approval → payroll release → payslips → statutory remittance evidence → monthly payroll pack
For Philippines EOR teams, this process should cover salary, allowances, statutory deductions, employer contributions, 13th-month pay, benefits, reimbursements, new hires, leavers, final pay, and remittance evidence.
The goal is simple:
No payroll should run unless the buyer can see what changed, why it changed, who approved it, and what proof exists after payment.
Who This Guide Is For
This guide is for:
- CFOs reviewing EOR payroll controls
- founders hiring remote employees in the Philippines
- finance teams approving monthly EOR invoices
- HR leaders managing offshore payroll governance
- COOs scaling Philippine teams
- buyers comparing EOR providers
- companies moving from contractors to employees
- teams that need clean audit trails for investors, boards, or buyers
This is not a generic payroll software article. It is a buyer-control guide for companies using or evaluating a Philippines EOR.
What Payroll Transparency Means in an EOR Relationship
In an EOR relationship, the EOR handles local employment and payroll. But the buyer still needs visibility and approval rights.
| Area | EOR Handles | Buyer Controls |
| Employment contract | Issues local contract | Confirms role, salary, benefits, start date |
| Payroll calculation | Prepares payroll | Reviews and approves payroll before release |
| Statutory contributions | Calculates and remits | Reviews evidence or summaries |
| Payslips | Issues to employees | Confirms payslip format and accuracy |
| 13th-month pay | Calculates, accrues, pays | Reviews accrual and payment treatment |
| Allowances | Processes in payroll | Approves eligibility and amount |
| Benefits | Administers selected benefits | Approves package and cost |
| Final pay | Calculates and processes | Reviews leaver details and access removal |
| Payroll reports | Provides register and pack | Reviews variance, cost, and exceptions |
The buyer should not need to run payroll locally. But the buyer should be able to inspect payroll clearly.
Why Payroll Transparency Matters
Payroll transparency protects the buyer, employee, and EOR provider.
| Risk Without Transparency | What Can Go Wrong |
| Salary changes are not approved | Overpayments or employee disputes |
| Allowances are added informally | Cost creep and unclear entitlement |
| New hires are missed | Delayed first payroll |
| Leavers remain active | Overpayment and access risk |
| Statutory deductions are unclear | Compliance questions and employee confusion |
| 13th-month pay is not accrued | Surprise year-end cost |
| FX is not explained | Invoice totals feel inconsistent |
| Payslips are not visible | Employees lack payroll clarity |
| Remittance proof is unavailable | Buyer cannot verify statutory handling |
| No approval log exists | Audit trail is weak |
The Payroll Approval Workflow
A strong payroll approval process has seven steps.
| Step | Owner | Output |
| 1. Payroll inputs | EOR + buyer | New hires, leavers, salaries, allowances, reimbursements, deductions, bonuses |
| 2. Draft payroll register | EOR | Buyer-facing payroll report |
| 3. Manager review | Client manager | Confirms employees, work status, changes, leavers, allowances |
| 4. Finance review | Buyer finance | Confirms budget, invoice, FX, statutory costs, and variances |
| 5. Final buyer approval | Authorized approver | Written approval before release |
| 6. Payroll execution | EOR | Employee payment and payslips |
| 7. Proof pack | EOR | Payroll register, payslips, remittance evidence, 13th-month tracking, invoice backup |
A good provider should not treat payroll approval as optional. It should be part of the operating cadence.
Step 1: Define the Payroll Transparency Policy
Start with a short policy that explains who can change payroll and what evidence is required.
| Policy Element | What to Define |
| Payroll cut-off | Deadline for salary changes, allowances, reimbursements, overtime, deductions, and leavers |
| Approvers | Manager, finance, HR, executive, or founder approval rules |
| Change evidence | Offer letter, salary-change approval, allowance approval, reimbursement receipt, resignation notice |
| Confidentiality | Who can view salary, payroll, benefits, and employee records |
| Approval channel | Email, payroll platform, shared approval tracker, or ticketing system |
| Exception handling | How urgent changes, corrections, and off-cycle payroll are handled |
| Record retention | Where approval records and payroll reports are stored |
| Escalation | Who resolves payroll disputes or blocked approvals |
This policy prevents payroll from becoming a Slack-message or spreadsheet-only process.
Step 2: Create a Payroll Approval Matrix
A payroll approval matrix makes control visible.
| Payroll Item | Required Approval |
| New hire salary | Hiring manager + finance |
| Salary increase | Manager + finance + executive approver |
| Role change | Manager + HR/EOR + finance if pay changes |
| Allowance | Manager + finance |
| Reimbursement | Manager + finance with receipt |
| Bonus / commission | Manager + finance + executive approver |
| Overtime or premium pay | Manager + finance |
| Unpaid leave | Manager + EOR/payroll |
| Leaver / final pay | Manager + EOR + finance |
| Off-cycle payroll | Finance + executive approver |
The matrix should be simple enough to use every payroll cycle.
Step 3: Build a Clean Payroll Register
The payroll register is the buyer’s main control document.
A good payroll register should include:
| Field | Why It Matters |
| Employee name / ID | Identifies each worker |
| Role / department | Helps manager review |
| Start date / status | Confirms new hires, active employees, leavers |
| Gross salary | Main pay amount |
| Allowances | Internet, equipment, night shift, transport, or role-specific allowances |
| Bonuses / incentives | Confirms approved variable pay |
| Reimbursements | Shows one-off approved costs |
| Employee deductions | Statutory and approved deductions |
| Employer statutory contributions | Employer-side cost visibility |
| Tax withholding | Compensation tax handling where applicable |
| Net pay | Final employee payment |
| 13th-month accrual | Monthly accrual visibility |
| Variance vs prior payroll | Explains what changed |
| Notes / exceptions | Records corrections, leavers, one-off items |
If the register does not show variance and notes, finance will struggle to review payroll quickly.
Step 4: Run a Variance Review Before Approval
Variance review is where most payroll errors are caught.
| Variance Item | What to Check |
| New hires | Correct start date, salary, benefits, first payroll amount |
| Leavers | Correct final pay treatment and removal from future payroll |
| Salary changes | Approved amount and effective date |
| Allowances | Approved eligibility and amount |
| Reimbursements | Receipt and approval attached |
| Bonuses / commissions | Calculation basis and approval |
| Statutory deductions | Any unusual contribution changes |
| Net pay changes | Large differences explained |
| EOR fees | Correct headcount and service fee |
| FX / currency | Rate and currency treatment explained |
Variance review should happen before the buyer approves the payroll run.
Step 5: Approve Payroll Before Release
Payroll should not be released until approval is recorded.
A clean approval record should show:
| Approval Detail | Why It Matters |
| Payroll period | Confirms which payroll is approved |
| Payroll version | Prevents confusion after corrections |
| Total gross salary | Confirms salary total |
| Total statutory costs | Confirms employer-side obligations |
| Total benefits and allowances | Confirms added costs |
| Total EOR fees | Confirms service fee |
| Total invoice amount | Confirms amount payable |
| Approver name | Shows accountability |
| Approval date and time | Creates audit trail |
| Exceptions noted | Shows accepted issues or pending corrections |
Approval can be recorded through email, e-signature, payroll portal, ticketing system, or approval tracker. The format matters less than the audit trail.
Step 6: Issue Payslips and Employee-Facing Records
Payslips are the employee-facing proof of payroll.
A payslip should show the employee what was earned, deducted, and paid.
| Payslip Item | Why It Matters |
| Pay period | Confirms payroll coverage |
| Gross pay | Shows base earnings |
| Allowances | Shows added pay components |
| Deductions | Shows statutory and approved deductions |
| Tax withholding | Shows employee tax deduction where applicable |
| Net pay | Shows final paid amount |
| Employer or payroll entity | Confirms payroll source |
| Employee details | Confirms correct worker record |
Employees should not need to guess why their net pay changed.
Step 7: Collect the Monthly Payroll Proof Pack
After payroll is executed, the EOR should provide a monthly proof pack.
| Proof Pack Item | Why It Matters |
| Final payroll register | Finance and audit record |
| Payslip confirmation | Confirms employees received payroll records |
| Invoice breakdown | Separates salary, statutory costs, benefits, allowances, and EOR fee |
| SSS evidence or summary | Shows social security handling |
| PhilHealth evidence or summary | Shows health insurance contribution handling |
| Pag-IBIG evidence or summary | Shows housing fund contribution handling |
| 13th-month accrual report | Tracks mandatory annual pay |
| Remittance receipts or summaries | Supports statutory audit trail |
| Leaver / final pay record | Confirms exits are handled |
| Open issues log | Tracks corrections and unresolved payroll questions |
This proof pack is the difference between “payroll was processed” and “payroll can be audited.”
What Compliance Proof Should a Philippines EOR Provide?
A Philippines EOR should provide evidence, not only assurances.
| Proof Item | Why It Matters |
| DOLE-aligned employment contract | Shows local employment structure |
| Signed employee records | Confirms role, salary, start date, and employment terms |
| Payroll register | Shows salary, deductions, allowances, employer costs, and net pay |
| Payslips | Shows employee-facing payroll transparency |
| SSS evidence or summary | Shows social security contribution handling |
| PhilHealth evidence or summary | Shows health insurance contribution handling |
| Pag-IBIG evidence or summary | Shows housing fund contribution handling |
| 13th-month pay record | Shows mandatory annual pay is tracked and paid |
| BIR withholding and year-end process | Shows tax withholding documentation where applicable |
| Leave and holiday records | Shows local HR administration |
| Offboarding and final pay records | Shows proper employee exit handling |
| HR escalation process | Shows how employee issues are handled |
| Data protection and access process | Shows how company and employee data are protected |
For the full checklist, see Philippines EOR Compliance.
Payroll Compliance in the Philippines
Payroll compliance should show what was earned, deducted, contributed, paid, and documented.
| Payroll Item | What Should Be Documented |
| Gross salary | Agreed salary for the pay period |
| Allowances | Internet, equipment, night shift, transport, or role-specific allowances |
| Deductions | Statutory and approved deductions |
| Employee contributions | Employee-side statutory deductions |
| Employer contributions | Employer-side statutory obligations |
| Tax withholding | Compensation withholding where applicable |
| Net pay | Final amount paid to employee |
| Payslip | Employee-facing payroll record |
| Payroll register | Employer-facing payroll record |
| 13th-month accrual | Monthly accrual and annual payment treatment |
| Remittance evidence | SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and tax records or summaries |
| Approval trail | Review and sign-off before payroll release |
A buyer should be able to inspect the payroll register before release and inspect statutory evidence after remittance.
Statutory Benefits for Employees in the Philippines
Philippines-based employees generally require statutory contribution and payroll administration.
| Statutory / Payroll Item | Why It Matters |
| SSS | Social security contribution administration |
| PhilHealth | Health insurance contribution administration |
| Pag-IBIG | Housing fund contribution administration |
| 13th-month pay | Mandatory annual pay for covered employees |
| Payslips | Payroll transparency and documentation |
| Payroll records | Finance, audit, and employee support |
| Leave records | Workforce planning and HR documentation |
| Final pay records | Clean offboarding |
Optional benefits may include HMO, allowances, bonuses, equipment, training support, and enhanced leave depending on the role and package.
The key question is not only whether statutory benefits are “included.” The provider should be able to show how they are calculated, paid, and documented.
13th-Month Pay Control
13th-month pay should be tracked monthly, not discovered at year-end.
| Control Item | What to Check |
| Accrual method | Is 13th-month being accrued monthly? |
| Employee coverage | Which employees are included? |
| New hires | Is proration correct? |
| Leavers | Is prorated 13th-month included in final pay where applicable? |
| Salary changes | Are calculations updated after salary changes? |
| Payment timing | Is payment scheduled correctly? |
| Payroll proof | Is the payment visible in payroll records? |
13th-month pay is one of the most important buyer-control items because it affects both compliance and cash planning.
FX and Currency Transparency
For international buyers, payroll may be calculated in PHP and invoiced in USD, AUD, GBP, or another currency.
The approval process should show:
| FX Item | What to Confirm |
| Payroll currency | Whether employee payroll is calculated in PHP |
| Invoice currency | Currency used for buyer invoicing |
| FX rate | Rate used and date applied |
| FX markup | Whether any markup or spread applies |
| Timing | When conversion is calculated |
| Variance | Difference from prior payroll due to FX movement |
| Funding deadline | When buyer funds must be received |
Payroll Approval Timeline
A practical monthly payroll cycle may look like this:
| Timeline | Action |
| T-7 business days | Cut-off for salary changes, allowances, reimbursements, bonuses, and leaver updates |
| T-5 business days | EOR prepares draft payroll register |
| T-4 business days | Manager reviews headcount, role changes, allowances, and exceptions |
| T-3 business days | Finance reviews statutory costs, variance, invoice, and FX |
| T-2 business days | Buyer gives final approval |
| T-1 business day | EOR confirms payroll release |
| Payday | Employees are paid and payslips issued |
| Post-payroll | EOR provides payroll proof pack and open issues log |
The exact timing can vary, but the sequence should be clear.
Approval Roles and Responsibilities
| Role | Responsibility |
| Employee | Submits reimbursement, leave, or payroll queries on time |
| Manager | Confirms work status, allowances, changes, leavers, and exceptions |
| HR / People | Confirms role changes, benefits, leave, and employee records |
| Finance | Reviews budget, invoice, statutory costs, FX, and variance |
| Executive approver | Approves material changes or final payroll release where required |
| EOR payroll team | Prepares payroll register, calculates payroll, issues payslips, and handles remittance |
| EOR HR team | Handles employment records, employee questions, and offboarding support |
Buyer control does not mean the buyer does payroll. It means the buyer has review, approval, evidence, and escalation rights.
Tools for Payroll Transparency
The tool stack should be simple and auditable.
| Need | Possible Tools |
| Payroll register | EOR payroll system, secure spreadsheet, HRIS export |
| Approval tracking | Payroll portal, Jira, Asana, Trello, ClickUp, email approval thread |
| Document storage | Google Drive, SharePoint, Dropbox, secure HR folder |
| E-signature | DocuSign, Dropbox Sign, Adobe Sign |
| Finance review | Accounting software, ERP, spreadsheet, invoice approval system |
| Access control | Password manager, MFA, role-based document permissions |
| Payroll reporting | HRIS, payroll dashboard, finance tracker |
Avoid tool sprawl. The goal is a clear approval trail, not a complicated stack.
Common Payroll Transparency Mistakes
| Mistake | Result |
| Payroll approved only by invoice total | Hidden changes are missed |
| No variance report | Salary, allowance, or leaver errors slip through |
| No cut-off policy | Last-minute changes create errors |
| No backup approver | Payroll delays when one person is unavailable |
| No payslip visibility | Employees ask repeated payroll questions |
| No statutory evidence | Buyer cannot verify SSS, PhilHealth, or Pag-IBIG handling |
| No 13th-month accrual | Year-end cost surprise |
| No final pay review | Leavers may be overpaid or underpaid |
| No FX explanation | International invoice totals feel inconsistent |
| No approval log | Audit trail is weak |
Payroll Transparency KPIs
Track the process, not only the payment.
| KPI | Target |
| Payroll approval turnaround | Under 48 hours after draft register |
| Payroll error rate | Below 1% of payslips |
| Variance explanation completeness | 100% of material changes explained |
| Payslip release | Same day as payroll or according to agreed cadence |
| Remittance evidence delivery | Within agreed post-payroll timeline |
| Off-cycle payroll frequency | Low and explained |
| Employee payroll query response | Within agreed SLA |
| Final pay accuracy | 100% reviewed before release |
| 13th-month accrual accuracy | Reviewed monthly |
| Payroll pack completeness | 100% of required items included |
Red Flags in an EOR Payroll Process
| Red Flag | Why It Matters |
| No draft payroll register before release | Buyer cannot review payroll |
| No variance report | Changes are hard to detect |
| No payslip sample | Employee-facing transparency is weak |
| No statutory contribution evidence | Compliance proof is weak |
| No 13th-month tracking | Mandatory annual pay may be under-accrued |
| No payroll approval log | Audit trail is weak |
| No correction process | Errors may repeat |
| No final pay workflow | Leavers create payroll and access risk |
| No FX explanation | Invoice totals lack clarity |
| No named payroll owner | Escalation is slow |
A transparent EOR should welcome payroll review because it reduces disputes.
Why Smart Outsourcing Solution Fits This Use Case
Smart Outsourcing Solution is a strong fit for companies that want direct visibility into Philippine payroll, employment documentation, statutory handling, and EOR cost structure.
SOS can support:
- payroll transparency for Philippines EOR teams
- buyer approval workflows
- payroll registers
- payslips
- salary, allowance, and statutory breakdowns
- SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG handling
- 13th-month pay tracking
- remittance evidence or summaries
- DOLE-aligned employment documentation
- onboarding and offboarding records
- HR and payroll escalation support
- clean evidence packs for finance review
SOS is strongest when a company wants a Philippines-focused EOR partner with practical payroll visibility and compliance documentation.
When SOS May Not Be the Right Fit
SOS may not be the right fit if:
- you want a provider to hide payroll detail behind one bundled invoice
- you do not want to approve or review payroll
- you need one global EOR platform across many countries immediately
- you want to outsource the full business process instead of managing employees directly
- you only need short-term freelancers
- you are ready to own Philippine payroll through your own local entity
Payroll transparency works best when the buyer wants visibility, not just a single outsourced bill.
FAQs
What is payroll transparency?
Payroll transparency means the buyer can see, review, approve, and audit payroll before and after release. It includes payroll registers, payslips, salary changes, allowances, deductions, statutory contributions, 13th-month accruals, remittance evidence, and approval logs.
What is a payroll approval process?
A payroll approval process is the workflow used to confirm payroll inputs, review the draft payroll register, check variances, approve payroll release, issue payslips, and collect statutory remittance evidence after payment.
Why does payroll transparency matter in an EOR relationship?
In an EOR relationship, the provider runs payroll, but the buyer still needs visibility. Payroll transparency helps the buyer catch errors, control costs, verify statutory handling, approve changes, and keep audit-ready records.
What compliance proof should a Philippines EOR provide?
A Philippines EOR should provide DOLE-aligned employment contracts, payroll registers, payslips, SSS contribution evidence, PhilHealth contribution evidence, Pag-IBIG contribution evidence, 13th-month pay records, remittance receipts or summaries, and final pay or offboarding records.
How does payroll compliance work in the Philippines?
Payroll compliance should show gross salary, allowances, deductions, employee and employer contributions, tax withholding where applicable, net pay, payslips, payroll registers, statutory evidence, 13th-month accrual and payment, and payroll approval trails.
What statutory benefits do Philippines employees need?
Philippine employees generally require statutory contribution administration for SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG, plus 13th-month pay and proper payroll records. Depending on the role and employment package, employers may also provide HMO, allowances, bonuses, equipment, training, and enhanced leave.
What should be included in a payroll register?
A payroll register should include employee name or ID, role, department, status, gross salary, allowances, bonuses, deductions, employer contributions, tax withholding where applicable, net pay, 13th-month accrual, variance notes, and exceptions.
Should buyers approve payroll before release?
Yes. Buyers should review a draft payroll register before release, check variances, confirm new hires and leavers, approve salary or allowance changes, and keep a written approval record.
What is a monthly payroll proof pack?
A monthly payroll proof pack is a post-payroll evidence set that includes the final payroll register, payslip confirmation, invoice breakdown, statutory contribution evidence or summaries, 13th-month accrual, remittance evidence, leaver records, and open issue log.
Can SOS provide payroll transparency for Philippines EOR teams?
Yes. SOS can support payroll transparency for Philippines EOR teams through payroll registers, payslips, statutory handling, 13th-month tracking, remittance evidence or summaries, approval workflows, onboarding records, offboarding records, and buyer-facing payroll reporting.
Control Payroll Before It Runs
Before approving an EOR payroll run, ask for the payroll register, variance notes, statutory breakdown, 13th-month accrual, and approval trail.
Ask for:
- draft payroll register
- variance report
- payroll approval matrix
- payslip sample
- SSS handling
- PhilHealth handling
- Pag-IBIG handling
- 13th-month accrual report
- remittance evidence process
- final pay workflow
- monthly payroll proof pack
Read Philippines EOR Compliance
View the Payroll Compliance Proof Pack
Speak with a specialist and get a quote
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