Chile Hiring Guide

Hire compliantly in Chile. Compare EOR providers, navigate a pension system in the middle of a major reform and understand Latin America’s most stable employment market.

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Capital

Santiago

Language

Spanish

Average Salary

CLP 1,050,000

Payroll Cycle

Monthly

Employer Cost

5-8%

Paid Leave

15 days

Public Holidays

16 days

Tax Rates

0-40%

Chile

Chile Guides

Detailed guides on the employment topics that matter most when hiring in Chile. Independently researched, updated for 2026.

Average Salary in Chile: The 2026 Expert Guide

Chile's average salary is approximately CLP 1,050,000 to 1,120,000 per month (~$1,100 USD), with a median of ~CLP 800,000. Mining professionals in Antofagasta earn 2 to 3x the national average, while IT roles in Santiago pay $18,000 to $35,000 annually. Employer contributions are currently low at 5 to 8% but a new mandatory pension contribution starting in 2025 will escalate to 8.5% by 2033. The standard workweek drops to 42 hours from April 2026 under Ley 21.561, with no reduction in pay allowed.

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Minimum Wage in Chile: The Complete 2026 Guide

Chile raised its minimum wage to CLP 539,000/month (~USD 569) on 1 January 2026, completing a 54% increase since 2022. But the headline number is just one piece: Chile is also cutting the workweek to 42 hours in April 2026, adding new employer pension contributions (rising from 1% to 8.5% by 2035), and adjusting the legal gratification cap. This guide covers every number employers need.

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Best Employer of Record in Chile

We independently rank EOR providers based on their actual performance in Chile. The Best EOR in Chile guide evaluates providers across pricing transparency, local entity ownership, onboarding speed, in-country support and contract compliance.

Chile’s pension system is undergoing its biggest reform in decades. The new mandatory employer contribution started in August 2025 and will escalate through 2033. An EOR that isn’t tracking these phased changes will miscalculate payroll costs every year.

Best EORs in Chile
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Before You Hire in Chile

  • The workweek drops to 42 hours in April 2026. Chile is phasing down from 45 to 40 hours per week. The 42-hour limit takes effect April 2026, reaching 40 hours by 2028. Pay cannot be reduced as a result.
  • Most social security contributions fall on the employee. Unlike Europe, Chilean employees bear the bulk of pension (10% + commission) and health (7%) contributions. Employer costs are currently low but rising under the 2025 pension reform.
  • Gratificacion legal is mandatory profit-sharing. Employers must pay a legal bonus equivalent to 25% of annual salary, capped at 4.75 minimum monthly wages. This applies to all employers that generate profits.
  • Fixed-term contracts convert automatically after the second renewal. Chilean law allows a maximum of two fixed-term contract renewals. After that, the contract becomes indefinite. The total fixed-term duration cannot exceed 12 months (24 months for managers/professionals).

Why hire in Chile

Latin America's most stable economy

Chile has the highest credit rating in Latin America, low inflation, strong institutions and a legal system modeled on civil law traditions. For companies entering LATAM, Chile is the lowest-risk starting point.

Competitive talent costs with strong skill levels

Average salaries are 60-70% lower than the US for comparable tech and professional roles. Chile ranks first in Latin America for human capital development and digital readiness.

Strategic timezone for US collaboration

Santiago sits in the same timezone as US East Coast (ET) for most of the year. Real-time collaboration with no overnight handoffs.

Growing tech and services ecosystem

Santiago's startup ecosystem is expanding rapidly. Strong talent in software development, fintech, data science and customer success, supported by government programs like Start-Up Chile and CORFO.

Key Employment Facts

When you hire in Chile, the mandatory gratificacion (profit-sharing at 25% of salary), a recent reduction in working hours to 42/week from April 2026, and 18 weeks of maternity leave create employer obligations that are higher than they first appear on paper.

Key Employment Facts
Minimum Wage CLP 539,000/month (~USD 560)
Probation Period No statutory probation period
Standard Working Hours 42 hours/week (from April 2026)
Paid Annual Leave 15 working days
Notice Period 30 days (or payment in lieu)
Gratificacion Mandatory (25% of salary, capped)
Sick Leave Covered by health insurance from day 1
Maternity Leave 18 weeks (6 pre + 12 post birth)

Good to Know: Chile’s gratificacion is unique in Latin America. Employers must share 30% of net profits with employees, but most opt for the capped alternative: paying 25% of monthly salary up to a maximum of 4.75 Ingresos Minimos Mensuales per year (roughly CLP 2,560,250 in 2026). This cap makes it predictable but it is mandatory, not discretionary, and must be paid monthly or annually. The working week drops from 44 to 42 hours from April 2026 under Law 21.561, with a further reduction to 40 hours scheduled for 2028. Employers cannot reduce salaries to compensate for the shorter hours. Chile has no statutory probation period, meaning unfair dismissal protections apply from day one. Termination without justifiable cause (necesidades de la empresa) triggers severance of 30 days’ salary per year of service, capped at 11 years (330 days). Sick leave is covered by the employee’s health insurance provider (Fonasa or Isapre) from day one of certified illness, not by the employer.

What to Watch When Hiring Through an EOR in Chile

The pension reform changes employer costs every year

The new mandatory employer contribution started at 1% in August 2025 and rises annually to 8.5% by 2033. Your EOR must update payroll calculations each August. Last year's rates are wrong this year.

Gratificacion legal is a compliance trap

Many international employers miss the mandatory profit-sharing payment. It applies to all profitable companies and must be calculated correctly against the 4.75 minimum wage cap. Getting it wrong triggers back-pay claims.

No statutory probation period exists

Chile has no legal concept of probation. From day one, an employee has full termination protections and severance rights. Dismissal without cause still requires payment of severance (1 month per year of service, capped at 11 years).

Contract language matters legally

Employment contracts must be in Spanish to be enforceable. Bilingual contracts are common but the Spanish version prevails in any dispute. Ensure your EOR provides properly drafted Spanish-language contracts.

Employer Costs and Employee Taxes in Chile

When you hire in Chile, employer contributions of 5-8% are among the lowest in the world for a developed economy. But this number is rising every year. The 2025 pension reform adds a new mandatory employer contribution that started at 1% and will reach 8.5% by 2033, nearly doubling total employer costs over the next seven years.

Employer Contributions
Contribution Employer Rate
Unemployment Insurance (Seguro de Cesantia) 2.4% (indefinite contracts)
Work Accident Insurance (Ley 16.744) 0.93% base + 0-3.4% risk premium
New Pension Contribution (from Aug 2025) 1.0% (rising to 8.5% by 2033)
Disability/Survivor Insurance (SIS) ~1.5%
Total Employer Cost (2026) ~5 to 8% of gross
Employee Taxes
Tax / Contribution Employee Rate
Income Tax (IUSC) 0% to 40% (progressive, UTM-based)
Pension (AFP) 10% + ~1.5% commission
Health Insurance (FONASA/ISAPRE) 7%
Unemployment Insurance (employee share) 0.6%

Total employer cost in Chile currently runs 1.05x to 1.08x of gross salary, among the lowest in the world for a developed economy. However, by 2033 this will rise to approximately 1.13x to 1.17x as the new pension contributions phase in. Budget for annual increases when planning multi-year hiring.

Public Holidays in Chile (2026)

Chile has 16 national public holidays, one of the highest counts in Latin America. Several are irrenunciable (non-waivable), meaning employees cannot be required to work.

Date

Holiday

January 1

New Year’s Day (Ano Nuevo)

April 3

Good Friday (Viernes Santo)

April 4

Holy Saturday (Sabado Santo)

May 1

Labour Day (Dia del Trabajo)

May 21

Navy Day (Dia de las Glorias Navales)

June 20

National Day of Indigenous Peoples

June 29

Saints Peter and Paul (San Pedro y San Pablo)

July 16

Our Lady of Mount Carmel (Virgen del Carmen)

August 15

Assumption of Mary (Asuncion de la Virgen)

September 18

Independence Day (Fiestas Patrias)

September 19

Army Day (Dia de las Glorias del Ejercito)

October 12

Columbus Day (Dia de la Raza)

October 31

Reformation Day (Dia de las Iglesias Evangelicas)

November 1

All Saints’ Day (Dia de Todos los Santos)

December 8

Immaculate Conception (Inmaculada Concepcion)

December 25

Christmas Day (Navidad)

Labour Day (May 1), Independence Day (September 18), Army Day (September 19) and Christmas Day (December 25) are irrenunciable, meaning employers cannot require employees to work on these dates. If a holiday falls on a Tuesday, Monday is often declared a bridge day (sandwich day) by government decree.

Review the best providers in Chile

Multiplier
Multiplier

4.5 / 5.0

Deel
Deel

4.5 / 5.0

Remote
Remote

4.6 / 5.0

Ontop
Ontop

4.1 / 5.0

Biz Latin Hub
Biz Latin Hub

3.7 / 5.0