Argentina Hiring Guide

Hire in Argentina compliantly. Navigate Latin America’s most legally and economically distinctive employment market, with employer social contributions of 30-32%, the Modernización Laboral Law (Ley 27.802) reshaping probation periods to 6 months by default, severance now capped at three times the average CBA salary, the Fondo de Asistencia Laboral (FAL) introducing structured severance funding from 1 June 2026, and salary payment in foreign currency now explicitly authorised under post-reform rules.

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Capital

Buenos Aires

Language

Spanish

Average Salary

ARS 1,850,000

Payroll Cycle

Monthly

Employer Cost

30-32%

Paid Leave

14-35 days

Public Holidays

19 days

Tax Rates

0-35%

Argentina

Best Employer of Record in Argentina

Argentina’s 30-32% employer social contributions are mid-range for Latin America, but the structural complexity sits elsewhere: the Modernización Laboral Law (Ley 27.802) reshaped probation to 6 months by default, severance is now capped at three times the average CBA salary, the new Fondo de Asistencia Laboral introduces 1-2.5% monthly severance contributions, dollar payment mechanics are now permitted but operationally non-trivial, and Monotributo contractor misclassification remains the costliest compliance failure for foreign employers.

Our assessment of EOR providers in Argentina evaluates entity ownership, AFIP and ANSES registration handling, FAL administration capability, post-reform Ley 27.802 compliance fitness, dollar payment infrastructure, and onboarding speed.

Best EORs in Argentina
argentina south nature

Before You Hire in Argentina

  • Total employer cost is 130-135% of gross salary. Employer-side contributions in Argentina total approximately 30-32% of gross salary (SIPA, Asignaciones Familiares, Fondo Nacional de Empleo, Obra Social, INSSJP, ART, and the new FAL contribution from June 2026), plus the mandatory aguinaldo of one full month annually.
  • Probation extended to 6 months by default. Ley 27.802 (March 2026) replaced the historic 3-month probation with a 6-month default for indefinite contracts. Small and medium employers can extend to 8 months by collective agreement, and very small employers (up to 5 employees) to 12 months.
  • Contracts must be in Spanish. Argentine employment contracts must be drafted in Spanish under Ley 20.744. Bilingual or English-only contracts from foreign EOR providers without native Spanish drafting capability are not enforceable on the employer side.
  • CCTs override individual contracts on most material terms. Sector-specific Convenios Colectivos de Trabajo establish minimum wages, working time, end-of-year bonuses, and other terms above the statutory floor. Incorrect CCT classification is a frequent compliance failure for foreign employers and inexperienced EOR providers.
  • Termination cost is now capped at three times the average CBA salary. The post-reform severance formula is one month of the highest normal monthly remuneration per year of service, capped at three times the average CBA salary. The Vizzoti precedent on cap calculation is now codified into law.

Why hire in Argentina

Latin America's deepest English-fluent talent pool

Argentina has one of the highest English proficiency rankings in Latin America, anchored by a strong bilingual education system and extensive ties to North American and European technology markets. Buenos Aires consistently produces Spanish-English bilingual professionals at scale across software development, finance, customer success, and shared services functions.

Strong technology and software engineering ecosystem

Buenos Aires anchors a deep technology ecosystem with global outsourcing leaders like Globant and MercadoLibre headquartered there, alongside a rapidly growing fintech and crypto sector. Córdoba and Rosario offer strong engineering and software talent supply driven by University of Buenos Aires (UBA) and Universidad Nacional de Córdoba alumni networks.

Time-zone alignment with North America

Argentina sits in the GMT-3 zone, providing same-day overlap with Eastern, Central, and Mountain Time business hours in the US and Canada. This is a meaningful operational advantage for distributed teams compared to APAC or European hires, particularly for roles requiring real-time collaboration with North American counterparts.

Cost-effective senior talent compared to North American and European markets

Senior software engineers, designers, and product managers in Argentina typically earn 30-50% less than equivalent roles in the US or Western Europe at gross salary level, with the cost differential widening when total employer cost is compared. The post-reform foreign currency authorization makes it easier to retain senior talent at competitive USD-denominated compensation.

Key Employment Facts

Topic

Argentina Standard

Standard Working Week

48 hours (often reduced to 40-44 by CCT)

Maximum Daily Hours

8 hours (with banco de horas flexibility under post-reform rules)

Overtime Compensation

150% on weekdays and Saturday before 13:00, 200% on Saturday after 13:00, Sundays and public holidays

Probation Period

6 months default, up to 12 months for very small employers (post-reform)

Annual Leave

14-35 days (tenure-based scale)

Public Holidays

19 federal holidays (one of the highest in Latin America)

Aguinaldo (13th Salary)

One full month of salary, paid in two halves by 30 June and 18 December

Maternity Leave

90 days at full salary (45 before, 45 after birth, funded by social security)

Paternity Leave

2 days at full salary (some CCTs extend to 15+ days)

Sick Leave (under 5 years tenure)

Up to 3 months at 100% from employer

Sick Leave (5+ years tenure)

Up to 6 months at 100% from employer

Notice Period (under 5 years)

1 month

Notice Period (5+ years)

2 months

Statutory Severance

One month per year of service, capped at three times average CBA salary

Payroll Cycle

Monthly, typically last working day of month

Good to Know: Argentine sick leave is one of the most employer-favourable elements of the labour code by international standards. Employees with up to 5 years of tenure receive paid sickness absence for up to 3 months per year at full salary, and employees with more than 5 years receive up to 6 months. After the maximum sick leave period expires, the employee enters reserva de puesto (post-reservation) for up to one additional year, during which the employer is not required to pay salary but must hold the position. The mandatory aguinaldo is paid in two installments: the first half by 30 June (covering January to June) and the second half by 18 December (covering July to December). Under Ley 27.802, salary payment in foreign currency is now explicitly authorised, removing the prior need for complex peso-dollar conversion structures, though the ARS-equivalent must remain calculable for AFIP and CCT-floor compliance purposes.

What to Watch When Hiring in Argentina

Monotributo contractor misclassification is the most expensive compliance failure

Many foreign companies engage Argentine workers under Monotributo (the simplified contractor tax regime) rather than as employees. When the relationship is functionally an employment one, Argentine labour courts routinely reclassify contractors as employees, triggering retroactive social contributions, full severance liability, statutory damages, and AFIP back-payment claims.

CCT classification errors cascade into wrong wage floors and benefits

Each Convenio Colectivo de Trabajo has its own provisions governing minimum wages, working time, end-of-year arrangements, and supplementary benefits. The wrong CCT classification means the wrong wage floor and the wrong benefits package, with retroactive correction costs that can significantly exceed the original payroll savings.

FAL contribution miscalculation in the transition period

The Fondo de Asistencia Laboral becomes operational on 1 June 2026 with rates of 1% for large employers and 2.5% for SMEs. EOR providers vary materially in their FAL administration readiness, and miscalculation in the transition period produces both shortfalls (creating future severance funding gaps) and overpayments (locking up cash in employer-owned accounts withdrawable only for severance).

Dollar payment mechanics are operationally complex

Ley 27.802 (March 2026) authorised salary payment in foreign currency, but the mechanics require documented agreement, ARS-equivalent calculation for AFIP and CCT compliance, and structured handling of official, MEP, and unofficial exchange rate gaps.

Employer Costs and Employee Taxes in Argentina

Employer Contributions
Contribution Employer Rate
SIPA (Social Security Pension) 10.77-12.35% of gross
Asignaciones Familiares (Family Allowances) 4.44-5.40% of gross
Fondo Nacional de Empleo (Unemployment Fund) 0.89-1.08% of gross
Obra Social (Health Insurance) 6.00% of gross
INSSJP (Pensioners’ Health Insurance, PAMI) 1.50-1.62% of gross
ART (Work Accident Insurance) 0.5-8% (by industry risk)
FAL (Fondo de Asistencia Laboral, large employers, from 1 June 2026) 1.00% of gross
FAL (SMEs, from 1 June 2026) 2.50% of gross
Aguinaldo (13th Salary, amortized) ~8.33%
Total Mandatory Employer Cost ~30-32% above base salary (excluding aguinaldo)
Employee Contributions
Contribution Employee Rate
SIPA (Social Security Pension) 11.00% of gross
Obra Social (Health Insurance) 3.00% of gross
INSSJP (Pensioners’ Health Insurance) 3.00% of gross
Personal Income Tax (Impuesto a las Ganancias): bracket 1 5%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 2 9%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 3 12%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 4 15%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 5 19%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 6 23%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 7 27%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 8 31%
Personal Income Tax: bracket 9 35%
Total Mandatory Employee Deductions (mid-range earner) 25-40% of gross

Good to Know: Argentina’s total employment cost runs approximately 130-135% of gross salary once the 30-32% employer contributions, mandatory aguinaldo (one month of salary annually), and FAL contributions (1-2.5% from June 2026) are accounted for. For an employee on ARS 1,850,000/month gross (~ARS 22,200,000/year), the employer pays approximately ARS 28,800,000-30,000,000/year in total cost. Compare with Brazil (~140% of gross), Chile (~125%), or Mexico (~125-130%). Argentina’s tax-free thresholds for personal income tax are adjusted annually for inflation under post-reform rules. The ART rate varies materially by sector — office and professional roles typically run 0.5-1.5%, while construction, oil and gas, and mining sectors can reach 3-8%.

Public Holidays in Argentina (2026)

Date

Holiday

January 1

Año Nuevo (New Year’s Day)

February 16

Carnaval (Carnival Monday)

February 17

Carnaval (Carnival Tuesday)

March 24

Día Nacional de la Memoria por la Verdad y la Justicia

April 2

Día del Veterano y de los Caídos en la Guerra de Malvinas

April 3

Jueves Santo (Maundy Thursday, non-working day)

April 4

Viernes Santo (Good Friday)

May 1

Día del Trabajador (Labour Day)

May 25

Día de la Revolución de Mayo

June 17

Paso a la Inmortalidad del General Martín Miguel de Güemes

June 20

Paso a la Inmortalidad del General Manuel Belgrano (Flag Day)

July 9

Día de la Independencia (Independence Day)

August 17

Paso a la Inmortalidad del General José de San Martín

October 12

Día del Respeto a la Diversidad Cultural

November 20

Día de la Soberanía Nacional

December 8

Inmaculada Concepción de María

December 24

Christmas Eve (half-day, non-working from noon)

December 25

Navidad (Christmas Day)

December 31

New Year’s Eve (half-day, non-working from noon)

Good to Know: Argentina’s 19 federal public holidays make it one of the highest counts in Latin America, ahead of Brazil (12) and Chile (15). When a holiday falls on a Tuesday or Thursday, the government can declare a movable bridge day (día no laborable con fines turísticos) to create a long weekend, with the holiday effectively shifting to the adjacent Monday or Friday. The Carnival days in February and the Malvinas War commemoration on April 2 are distinctively Argentine. December 24 and 31 are not strictly public holidays but are typically half-days under most CCTs, with non-working time from noon onwards. Sectoral CCTs may add further days, particularly in industrial sectors, meaning effective time off varies by Convenio Colectivo de Trabajo classification.

Review providers in Argentina

Multiplier
Multiplier

4.5 / 5.0

Deel
Deel

4.5 / 5.0

G-P
G-P

3.8 / 5.0

Biz Latin Hub
Biz Latin Hub

3.7 / 5.0

Ontop
Ontop

4.1 / 5.0