Home Compare
109 providers from 299$ per employee per month
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø fee per employee per month, first year
GP Outsourcing Asia
$0
Ø fee per employee per month, first year
A one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
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Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Average
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Software Tier Basic
-
Min. Commitment None
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
30+ requests this month
CDP Group
-
Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Average
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Software Tier Basic
-
Min. Commitment None
$0
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
30+ requests this month
ContinueA one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
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Presence -
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Highlight Office in São Paulo
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Pricing Transparency Good
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Software Tier No Software
-
Min. Commitment None
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
25+ requests this month
Wide Brazil
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Presence -
-
Highlight Office in São Paulo
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Pricing Transparency Good
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Software Tier No Software
-
Min. Commitment None
$0
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
25+ requests this month
ContinueA one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
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Presence -
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Pricing Transparency Poor
-
Software Tier Basic
-
Min. Commitment 6 months
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
10+ requests this month
BIPO
-
Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Poor
-
Software Tier Basic
-
Min. Commitment 6 months
$0
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
10+ requests this month
ContinueA one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
-
Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Limited
-
Software Tier No Software
-
Min. Commitment None
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
15+ requests this month
Second Talent
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Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Limited
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Software Tier No Software
-
Min. Commitment None
$405
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
15+ requests this month
ContinueA one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
-
Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Good
-
Software Tier No Software
-
Min. Commitment None
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
15+ requests this month
Acclime
-
Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Good
-
Software Tier No Software
-
Min. Commitment None
$500
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
15+ requests this month
ContinueA one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
-
Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Good
-
Software Tier Enterprise
-
Min. Commitment None
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
- No Setup Fee
35+ requests this month
Employment Hero
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Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Good
-
Software Tier Enterprise
-
Min. Commitment None
A one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø fee per employee per month, first year
Global Expansion
$540
Ø fee per employee per month, first year
A one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø fee per employee per month, first year
JAC Outsourcing
$0
Ø fee per employee per month, first year
A one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
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Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Good
-
Software Tier Basic
-
Min. Commitment None
The all-in average monthly cost per employee in year one. We blend the base EOR rate, setup fee amortised across 12 months, and any mandatory service charges into one number, so providers are compared on real first-year cost rather than their advertised headline rate.
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
35+ requests this month
TopSource
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Presence -
-
Pricing Transparency Good
-
Software Tier Basic
-
Min. Commitment None
$628
Ø Fee per Employee per Month, First Year
35+ requests this month
ContinueA one-time fee charged to set up a new employment and cover onboarding costs. Increasingly, many EORs no longer charge this fee as industry practice evolves.
The advertised monthly rate per employee used to attract customers. Actual fees often vary by country and may exclude additional costs like taxes or local charges.
A fee charged by the EOR to process international bank transfers. Some providers include this in pricing, while others bill it separately.
A security deposit held by the EOR to cover potential employment-related liabilities. Typically charged before onboarding and refunded after offboarding, this is a common practice, though some EORs operate without requiring one.
Charge for handling employee expense reimbursements, though most EORs include this for free.
Fee for adding variable pay items (like bonuses); usually already included in standard monthly EOR fee and done free of charge.
Monthly fee for administering benefits such as health insurance or pension plans.
Fee for submitting payroll changes after the cut-off date so they still appear in the current payroll run.
Charge for updating the employment contract, such as changes to salary, role, or title.
One-time charge for ending an employee’s employment, including processing final pay and required paperwork. Some providers might only charge you a fee for a termination but handle a resignation free of charge.
A fee some EORs apply when a contract is cancelled before the minimum commitment term, typically triggered by early employee offboarding.
FX markups are a common hidden fee when EORs invoice you in one currency but run payroll in another. Some charge 3–10%, significantly inflating your monthly payroll. Always compare the EOR’s rate to a benchmark (e.g. Wise). If the spread is high, negotiate it down or chose another EOR.
