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Employer of Record Pricing: What You Actually Pay & How to Choose Right

You’ve decided to expand your startup into three new countries. The business case is solid. But then you look at the costs: legal compliance in each region, local payroll systems, tax withholding, benefits administration, currency conversions. The spreadsheet balloons. Suddenly, “going global” feels like hiring three people just to manage the hiring.

Enter the Employer of Record (EOR).

An EOR handles all of that – local compliance, payroll, taxes, employee benefits – in exchange for a straightforward fee. But what does employer of record pricing actually look like? And more importantly, which model fits your company’s budget and growth plans?

This guide breaks down EOR costs in real terms. We’ll look at what you’ll actually pay, how it stacks up against traditional hiring, and the framework for choosing an EOR that makes financial sense for your situation.

What Does an Employer of Record Actually Cost?

EOR providers aren’t uniform. Their pricing structures vary based on several factors, and understanding these will help you avoid surprise bills down the line.

The Main Cost Components

Setup and onboarding fees typically run $500–$2,000+ per employee, depending on the country and complexity. These cover contract creation, compliance verification, and system integration. Some EORs bundle this into your monthly cost; others charge separately.

Per-employee monthly fees are the bread and butter of EOR pricing. These typically range from $200 to $800+ per employee per month, depending on the provider, country, and service complexity. Hiring in straightforward markets (UK, Canada, Australia) costs less; complex jurisdictions (Brazil, France, Germany, Japan) command premium rates.

Country complexity tiers are how most EORs structure this. Tier 1 (UK, Canada, Australia) is the lowest cost; Tier 2 (France, Germany, Japan) is moderate; Tier 3 (India, Brazil, UAE) is the highest cost. Your per-employee fee depends on which tier the country lands in.

Some providers also use percentage-based pricing: 10–15% of payroll is standard, though some go to 20%. This scales with salary and can get expensive for high-paid roles.

Real Numbers: What Global EOR Fees Actually Cost

Let’s model 10 people across four countries with mid-range flat-fee pricing (EOR fees only, excluding salaries):

  • 3 in the UK (Tier 1): ~$1,200/month
  • 2 in Germany (Tier 2): ~$1,200/month
  • 3 in India (Tier 3): ~$1,500/month
  • 2 in the US: ~$1,000/month

Total: ~$4,900/month, or $58,800 annually. Add onboarding: $7,500. First-year total: ~$66,300.

What you’re NOT paying: legal retainers for international labor lawyers, accountants in multiple countries, or internal HR overhead to manage this complexity.

Country Complexity Tiers: Pricing Examples

Country Complexity Tiers Pricing Examples

Example: Hiring 1 engineer per tier for 12 months (fees only) = Tier 1: $4,850/year | Tier 2: $7,800/year | Tier 3: $9,550/year | Total: $22,200/year

Employer of Record Pricing vs. Traditional Hiring

The Traditional Approach (Direct Entity Setup)

Setting up a local entity costs $15,000–$50,000 per country in legal/registration fees plus 3–6 months of wait time. For 10 employees across 4 countries:

Legal setup: $60,000–$200,000
Accountants/compliance: $40,000–$100,000/year
HR/Ops: $30,000–$50,000/year
Consultation: $10,000–$20,000/year
Year 1 Total: $140,000–$370,000

The EOR Approach

Year 1: ~$66,300 | Year 2+: ~$58,800/year | Savings: $73,700–$303,700 in Year 1 alone.

The ROI is substantial. EOR is the clear choice for early-stage international expansion.

EOR vs. PEO vs. Direct Entity: Comparison

EOR vs PEO vs Direct Entity Comparison

Bottom line: For global hiring, EOR wins on cost and speed. For US-only growth, a PEO is simpler. For roughly 25+ employees in one country long-term, a direct entity becomes cost-justified.

How to Choose the Right EOR for Your Budget

Step 1: Assess Your Hiring Footprint

Where are you hiring? Single country? Multi-country, mostly Tier 1 or Tier 3? How many people – under 5, 5–25, or 25+? This determines EOR efficiency and negotiating power.

Step 2: Budget Calculator

Budget Calculator

Example math: (5 × $80,000 salaries) + (5 × $600 × 12 EOR fees) + (5 × $1,000 setup) = $400,000 + $36,000 + $5,000 = $441,000.

Does this fit your budget? If not, start with fewer countries or phased hiring. Remember: direct entities generally only become cost-competitive around 25 employees per market.

Step 3: Questions to Ask Any EOR

  1. What’s included in the monthly fee? (Payroll, tax filing, benefits, compliance audits?)
  2. Country-specific add-ons? (Visas, permits, training, compliance?)
  3. How do you price different countries? (Transparent tiering or case-by-case?)
  4. Does termination cost more? (Severance admin fees?)
  5. Volume discounts? (What’s your best rate at 25+ employees?)
  6. How transparent are invoices? (Line-item or black-box charge?)

Common EOR Pricing Mistakes

Mistake #1: Comparing apples to oranges. EOR A: $500/month. EOR B: $650/month. A seems cheaper until you realize B includes statutory benefits administration. Always ask: what’s included?

Mistake #2: Underestimating country complexity. You assume all of Europe is Tier 1. Then you hire in France and discover extensive mandatory contributions. Your cost jumps 40%. Ask for per-country estimates.

Mistake #3: Ignoring variable costs. Hidden costs (FX, setup, visas, termination, audits) can inflate your bill by 20–30%. Get itemized quotes upfront.

Mistake #4: Choosing based purely on price. The cheapest EOR sometimes has poor compliance, slow payroll, or bad support. Prioritize transparent pricing + reliable operations + responsive support.

Mistake #5: Locking into multi-year deals too early. Test them first. Run payroll through full cycles. Test support. Lock in only after you’re confident.

Real-World Budget Scenarios

Here’s what different hiring strategies actually cost in Year 1 (EOR fees only, excluding salaries). Use these scenarios to find your stage:

Real-World Budget Scenarios

Key insight: At roughly 25+ employees in a single market, direct entity setup becomes cost-competitive. But EOR still wins on speed and simplicity.

Understanding EOR Pricing Models

EOR providers use different pricing approaches. The most common are flat-fee ($200–$650/month), tiered by country complexity, percentage-based (10–20% of salary), and hybrid models combining a base fee with variable charges.

For how EOR pricing compares to every alternative hiring model – contractors, staffing agencies, PEOs, and direct entities – see our guide: Employer of Record vs. Alternatives: Which Model is Right for Your Global Hiring?

The key is transparency: demand itemized quotes that show exactly which costs are included in the monthly fee and which are add-ons.

Why Transparency Matters in EOR Pricing

The most common hidden cost surprise? Providers who quote $500/month but don’t mention currency conversion (1–3% of payroll), termination administration ($500–$1,500 per departure), or compliance audits ($1,000–$3,000 annually).

When evaluating an EOR, prioritize:

  1. Itemized quotes that list every cost category upfront
  2. Written confirmation of what’s included in the monthly fee vs. what’s charged separately
  3. Per-country pricing breakdowns so you can predict costs by region
  4. References who can speak to their actual invoices and whether they match initial estimates

This is how you avoid surprise bills and build confidence in your hiring budget.

Next Steps: From Calculation to Decision

  1. Use the budget calculator above to estimate your Year 1 EOR spend based on headcount, countries, and salary assumptions.
  2. Download Compunnel’s EOR Evaluation Checklist – a 27-point scorecard covering legal employment, contracts and compliance, payroll and tax, employee experience, and support infrastructure – to standardize how you evaluate proposals.
  3. Request itemized quotes from 3–5 EOR providers using the 6 questions from Step 3 above.
  4. Compare total cost of ownership: EOR Year 1 cost vs. direct entity setup cost plus ongoing overhead.
  5. Reference check with existing customers to validate that actual invoices match the quoted pricing model.

Ready to move forward? The right EOR isn’t the cheapest – it’s the one that’s transparent, reliable, and grows with you.

The Bottom Line

Employer of Record pricing ranges widely because complexity varies wildly. By using this framework – the country tiers, the budget calculator, the scenario comparisons, and the transparency checklist – you can predict your actual costs, avoid surprises, and make a confident decision about whether EOR is right for your global hiring strategy.

For comprehensive EOR services, compliance support, and customized pricing tailored to your expansion plan, visit Compunnel’s Employer of Record Services page or request a consultation with our global hiring experts.

 Employer of Record vs. Alternatives: Which Model is Right for Your Global Hiring? – Full model comparison: contractor, staffing agency, PEO, and EOR.

 Global Payroll Compliance: Avoid the Penalties That Could Shut Down Your International Hiring – What non-compliance costs.

 Multi-Country Payroll: A Complete Guide to Managing Global Employees – What your EOR fee is actually covering.

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