PEO vs EOR
PEO or EOR — Which One Is Right for You?
Two different structures, two different problems they solve. Here’s how to think about which one fits your situation — and what to do when you need both.
PEO
Professional Employer Organization
Best for: U.S.-based businesses that want to offer competitive benefits, reduce HR admin, and stay compliant without building an internal HR team.
How it works: The PEO becomes the co-employer of your domestic workforce for tax and insurance purposes. You keep control of day-to-day management; the PEO handles payroll, benefits, compliance, and HR administration.
Requires: A U.S. legal entity. Typically works best for businesses with 5–500 employees.
Key benefit: Access to Fortune 500-level health benefits and HR infrastructure at small-business prices — and potentially lower workers’ compensation costs through the PEO’s group purchasing power.
EOR
Employer of Record
Best for: Businesses that want to hire employees in countries where they don’t have a registered legal entity.
How it works: The EOR becomes the legal employer of your international hires. They handle local payroll, taxes, benefits, and compliance — in the employee’s country — while your team member works for you day-to-day.
Requires: Nothing. No local entity, no incorporation. The EOR handles the legal structure entirely.
Key benefit: Hire globally — compliantly and quickly — without months of setup or five-figure legal costs.
The Short Version
If your workforce is in the U.S. and you want better benefits and less HR overhead — you probably want a PEO.
If you want to hire someone in another country and don’t have a legal entity there — you probably want an EOR.
If you have both domestic and international employees — you may need both, and there are providers that offer combined solutions.
Not sure which applies to you? That’s a straightforward question I can answer in about five minutes. Reach out and let’s talk it through.
Common Questions
Can I use both a PEO and an EOR at the same time?
Yes — many businesses do. Some PEOs have EOR capabilities built in. Others are purely domestic. I can help you identify which providers cover both if that’s relevant to your situation.
Is an EOR the same as a staffing agency?
No. A staffing agency recruits and places workers. An EOR employs workers you’ve already found, handling the legal and compliance infrastructure so you don’t have to set up a foreign entity.
What does an EOR cost?
EOR pricing varies by provider and country. Most charge a flat monthly fee per employee or a percentage of gross salary — typically $300–$600/month per employee, though rates vary significantly. I can get you real quotes for your specific situation.
When should I set up my own local entity instead of using an EOR?
Generally when you have enough employees in one country (typically 10+) that the EOR fees exceed the cost of incorporation and local payroll management. I can help you run that analysis.
Still not sure which structure fits?
Tell me about your situation and I’ll give you a straight answer — PEO, EOR, both, or neither. Free, no obligation.