Global EOR Services in Indonesia

Find, Hire & Pay Employees in Indonesia

Indonesia is Southeast Asia’s largest economy and a rapidly growing digital hub with thriving sectors in technology, e-commerce, fintech, manufacturing, creative industries, tourism, agriculture, logistics, and business process outsourcing. With a population exceeding 275 million and a young, tech-savvy workforce, Indonesia offers exceptional opportunities for global companies seeking talent in software development, digital marketing, customer support, finance, design, and operational roles.

However, hiring employees in Indonesia requires full compliance with complex labor regulations, including the omnibus Job Creation Law (UU Cipta Kerja), strict employment contract requirements, mandatory social security contributions, severance obligations, and detailed payroll tax procedures. Setting up a legal entity also involves significant capital requirements, lengthy registration processes, and ongoing corporate compliance obligations.

A Global Employer of Record (EOR) enables you to hire employees in Indonesia legally, quickly, and without establishing a local company. The EOR acts as the legal employer, handling payroll, taxes, benefits, compliance, and employment contracts while you manage the employee’s daily tasks and productivity.

🇮🇩 Global Employer of Record (EOR) Services in Indonesia

Quick market entry without incorporation – hire in days, not months
Fully compliant hiring – aligned with Indonesian labor codes and regulations
Payroll, tax & social insurance management – BPJS, income tax, and statutory deductions handled
Locally compliant benefits administration – THR bonuses, leave, severance compliance
Reduced legal risk with proper employment contracts and termination processes
Scalable workforce solutions – expand or reduce headcount flexibly
No capital investment required – avoid the IDR 10 billion minimum for PT PMA

🇮🇩 Country Overview: Indonesia – A Comprehensive Guide to Employment and Labor Practices

Official Name: Republic of Indonesia

Capital: Jakarta

Currency: Indonesian Rupiah (IDR)

Official Language: Bahasa Indonesia

Population: ~275 million

Time Zones: WIB (GMT+7), WITA (GMT+8), WIT (GMT+9)

Major Industries: Technology & IT services, e-commerce, fintech, manufacturing, tourism & hospitality, agriculture, oil & gas, textiles, creative industries, BPO & customer support, logistics

Indonesia offers deep talent pools across roles such as:

HR specialists and operational managers

Software developers and engineers

Digital marketers and content creators

Customer service representatives

Finance and accounting professionals

Product managers and designers

Sales and business development teams

Laws and Policies in Indonesia

Employment Contracts in Indonesia

Employment laws in Indonesia are primarily governed by Law No. 13 of 2003 on Manpower (as amended by the Job Creation Law No. 11 of 2020 and subsequent implementing regulations). These create a comprehensive framework covering contracts, wages, working conditions, termination, and worker protections.

Contract Requirements

All employment contracts must be in writing and include:

  • Employer and employee full legal names and addresses
  • Job title, position, and detailed responsibilities
  • Work location (office-based, remote, or hybrid)
  • Salary structure (base salary, fixed allowances, variable components)
  • Working hours and overtime arrangements
  • Probation period (if applicable)
  • Contract duration (for fixed-term contracts)
  • Leave entitlements
  • Notice period requirements
  • Termination conditions and severance obligations
  • Social security registration details (BPJS)

Employment contracts must be signed within 30 days of the employment start date.

Types of Contracts

1. PKWTT (Perjanjian Kerja Waktu Tidak Tertentu) – Indefinite/Permanent Contracts

  • Standard employment relationship for ongoing roles
  • No predetermined end date
  • May include probation period
  • Requires cause and severance for termination

2. PKWT (Perjanjian Kerja Waktu Tertentu) – Fixed-Term Contracts

  • Limited to specific project-based or seasonal work
  • Cannot be used for permanent operational roles
  • Maximum duration: 5 years (including extensions)
  • Automatically converts to PKWTT if extended beyond legal limits
  • No probation period allowed
  • Compensation required upon contract completion

3. Outsourcing/Contract Workers

  • Regulated through licensed outsourcing companies
  • Permitted only for support functions (not core business)
  • Workers still entitled to benefits and protections

Probation Period

For PKWTT (permanent contracts) only:

  • Maximum probation: 3 months
  • Must be clearly stated in employment contract
  • Wages during probation cannot be below minimum wage
  • Full benefits apply during probation (BPJS registration required)

Note: Probation periods are not permitted for PKWT (fixed-term contracts).

An EOR ensures all employment contracts comply with Indonesian labor law, Job Creation Law amendments, and Ministry of Manpower regulations.


Working Hours in Indonesia

Working hour regulations are designed to protect employee wellbeing while providing flexibility for different industries.

Standard Working Hours

Option 1: 5-day work week

  • 8 hours per day
  • 40 hours per week
  • Common in office/tech sectors

Option 2: 6-day work week

  • 7 hours per day
  • 40 hours per week
  • 5 hours on the 6th day
  • Common in manufacturing/retail

Rest Periods

  • Daily rest: Minimum 30 minutes after 4 consecutive hours of work (not counted as working time)
  • Weekly rest: Minimum 1 full day per week (typically Sunday)
  • Between shifts: Minimum 12 hours rest between work shifts

Overtime Regulations

Overtime limits:

  • Maximum 4 hours per day
  • Maximum 18 hours per week

Overtime compensation rates:

Regular working days (Monday–Friday or working days):

  • First hour: 1.5× hourly wage
  • Hours 2–4: 2× hourly wage

Weekly rest days (e.g., Saturday or designated rest day):

  • Hours 1–7: 2× hourly wage
  • Hours 8 onwards: 3× hourly wage

Public holidays:

  • Hours 1–8: 2× hourly wage
  • Hours 9 onwards: 3× hourly wage

Calculation basis:

  • Hourly wage = (Monthly salary ÷ 173 hours)

Flexible Work Arrangements

Indonesia increasingly supports:

  • Remote and work-from-home arrangements
  • Hybrid work models (office + remote)
  • Flexible scheduling (with agreement)
  • Compressed work weeks (with proper structuring)

All arrangements must maintain the 40-hour weekly limit and proper overtime compensation.


Employee Leave in Indonesia

Indonesian labor law provides comprehensive leave entitlements to ensure work-life balance and employee wellbeing.

Annual Leave (Cuti Tahunan)

  • Minimum entitlement: 12 working days per year
  • Accrues after 12 months of continuous service
  • Unused leave may be carried forward (company policy varies)
  • Cash compensation for unused leave upon termination
  • Employer may schedule leave timing with employee agreement

Sick Leave (Cuti Sakit)

Paid sick leave with medical certificate:

  • Months 1–4: 100% of salary
  • Months 5–8: 75% of salary
  • Months 9–12: 50% of salary
  • Beyond 12 months: unpaid (unless company policy extends)

Short-term sick leave (1–2 days) may not require medical certificate depending on company policy.

Maternity Leave (Cuti Melahirkan)

  • Total duration: 3 months (90 days)
  • Before delivery: 1.5 months (45 days)
  • After delivery: 1.5 months (45 days)
  • 100% paid by employer
  • Additional leave possible for medical complications (with certificate)
  • Miscarriage leave: 1.5 months fully paid

Menstruation Leave (Cuti Haid)

  • 2 days per month for female employees experiencing pain during menstruation
  • Employee may take leave on day 1 and/or day 2 of cycle
  • Fully paid
  • Medical certificate not typically required

Paternity Leave (Cuti Melahirkan Suami)

  • 2 days paid leave when wife gives birth
  • Must be taken around the time of birth

Marriage Leave (Cuti Pernikahan)

  • 3 days paid leave for employee’s own marriage
  • May require marriage certificate/proof

Bereavement Leave (Cuti Duka)

  • 2 days paid leave for immediate family member deaths
  • Typically includes: spouse, children, parents, siblings, parents-in-law

Religious Pilgrimage Leave (Cuti Ibadah)

  • Available for religious obligations (e.g., Hajj)
  • Duration varies by company policy
  • May be unpaid or partially paid

Public Holidays (Hari Libur Nasional)

Indonesia observes 15–17 public holidays annually, including:

  • National holidays (Independence Day, Pancasila Day, New Year’s Day)
  • Religious holidays (Eid al-Fitr, Eid al-Adha, Christmas, Vesak, Nyepi, Chinese New Year)
  • Joint leave days (cuti bersama) – additional days off surrounding major holidays

If work is required on public holidays, employees receive 2× regular daily wage.


Employee Benefits in Indonesia

Mandatory Statutory Benefits

1. BPJS Ketenagakerjaan (Employment Social Security)

BPJS-TK provides four programs:

A. JKK (Work Accident Insurance) – Jaminan Kecelakaan Kerja

  • Employer contribution: 0.24% – 1.74% of gross salary (based on industry risk level)
  • Employee contribution: 0%
  • Covers workplace injuries and occupational diseases

B. JKM (Death Insurance) – Jaminan Kematian

  • Employer contribution: 0.30% of gross salary
  • Employee contribution: 0%
  • Provides death benefits to beneficiaries

C. JHT (Old Age Savings) – Jaminan Hari Tua

  • Employer contribution: 3.70% of gross salary
  • Employee contribution: 2.00% of gross salary
  • Lump-sum payment upon retirement or after job loss

D. JP (Pension Insurance) – Jaminan Pensiun

  • Employer contribution: 2.00% of gross salary
  • Employee contribution: 1.00% of gross salary
  • Monthly pension payments after retirement age (56–65)

Total BPJS-TK employer cost: ~6.24% – 7.74%
Total employee deduction: ~3.00%

2. BPJS Kesehatan (Health Insurance)

  • Employer contribution: 4.00% of gross salary
  • Employee contribution: 1.00% of gross salary
  • Total: 5.00%
  • Covers employee and up to 4 family members
  • Includes hospitalization, outpatient care, maternity, dental

Maximum salary base: IDR 12,000,000/month (contributions capped at this amount)

3. THR (Tunjangan Hari Raya) – Religious Holiday Allowance

  • 1 month’s salary paid before major religious holiday (typically Eid al-Fitr)
  • Mandatory for all employees (including those with <12 months service on pro-rata basis)
  • Payment timing:
    • <12 months service: proportional to months worked
    • ≥12 months service: full month salary
  • Must be paid 7 days before the holiday

Calculation:

  • THR = Basic salary + fixed allowances (exclude variable pay)

4. Severance Pay (Pesangon)

Required upon termination (except for resignation or gross misconduct).

Severance calculation includes three components:

A. Severance Pay (Uang Pesangon) – Based on tenure:

  • <1 year: 1 month salary
  • 1–2 years: 2 months
  • 2–3 years: 3 months
  • 3–4 years: 4 months
  • 4–5 years: 5 months
  • 5–6 years: 6 months
  • 6–7 years: 7 months
  • 7–8 years: 8 months
  • ≥8 years: 9 months

B. Service Appreciation Pay (Uang Penghargaan Masa Kerja):

  • 3–6 years: 2 months
  • 6–9 years: 3 months
  • 9–12 years: 4 months
  • 12–15 years: 5 months
  • 15–18 years: 6 months
  • 18–21 years: 7 months
  • 21–24 years: 8 months
  • ≥24 years: 10 months

C. Compensation for Rights (Uang Penggantian Hak):

  • Unused annual leave
  • Return transportation costs
  • Other agreed-upon entitlements

Multipliers vary by termination reason:

  • Company-initiated without fault: 100% severance + 100% appreciation + rights
  • Mutual agreement: typically 100%/100% (negotiable)
  • Efficiency/restructuring: 100%/100%
  • Resignation: no severance (only unused leave)
  • Gross misconduct after process: reduced or zero

Severance is calculated based on basic salary + fixed allowances.

5. Minimum Wage Compliance

  • Minimum wage varies by province and regency/city
  • Reviewed annually (typically increases 3–8% based on inflation and economic growth)
  • Examples (2024):
    • Jakarta (DKI): ~IDR 5,067,381/month
    • Banten: ~IDR 3,139,275/month
    • West Java: varies by city (IDR 1,986,670 – IDR 4,940,120)
  • All employees must earn at least local minimum wage
  • Sectoral minimum wages may apply in certain industries

Common Additional Benefits Provided by Employers

To remain competitive, many Indonesian employers offer:

  • Private health insurance (top-up beyond BPJS)
  • Transportation allowance (fuel/commute reimbursement)
  • Meal allowance (daily food stipend or cafeteria)
  • Mobile phone/internet allowance (especially for remote workers)
  • Annual performance bonuses (13th month, 14th month bonuses)
  • Professional development (training, courses, certifications)
  • Life and accident insurance (beyond BPJS coverage)
  • Work-from-home equipment (laptop, monitor, chair)
  • Gym memberships or wellness programs
  • Employee assistance programs (EAP)

An EOR ensures all mandatory statutory benefits are calculated accurately, deducted properly, and remitted on time to government agencies.


Payroll & Tax in Indonesia

Payroll Currency

  • All salaries must be paid in Indonesian Rupiah (IDR)

Payroll Cycle

  • Most employers follow a monthly payroll cycle
  • Common pay dates: 25th–30th of each month or 1st–5th of following month
  • Payslips must be provided (physical or electronic)

Personal Income Tax (PPh 21)

Indonesia uses a progressive tax system for individual income:

Annual Taxable Income (IDR)Tax Rate
0 – 60,000,0005%
60,000,001 – 250,000,00015%
250,000,001 – 500,000,00025%
500,000,001 – 5,000,000,00030%
Above 5,000,000,00035%

Personal tax allowance (PTKP):

  • Single taxpayer: IDR 54,000,000/year
  • Married: additional IDR 4,500,000
  • Each dependent (max 3): additional IDR 4,500,000

Employer responsibilities:

  • Withhold PPh 21 (income tax) monthly from employee salary
  • Remit to tax authorities by 10th of following month
  • Provide annual tax summary (Form 1721-A1)
  • File monthly tax returns (SPT Masa PPh 21)

Tax calculation methods:

  • Gross method: Employee bears own tax (deducted from salary)
  • Nett method: Employer pays tax on behalf of employee (grossed-up)

Employer Payroll Responsibilities

Indonesian employers must:

  • Register all employees for NPWP (tax ID number)
  • Calculate and withhold PPh 21 (income tax)
  • Calculate and remit BPJS Kesehatan (health insurance)
  • Calculate and remit BPJS Ketenagakerjaan (employment insurance)
  • Pay THR (religious holiday allowance) annually
  • Maintain detailed payroll records for 5 years
  • Submit monthly BPJS contribution reports
  • Submit monthly tax withholding reports
  • Issue annual tax certificates to employees
  • Comply with minimum wage regulations
  • Process final settlements for terminated employees

Monthly Payroll Deductions

From employee gross salary:

  • PPh 21 (income tax) – progressive rates
  • BPJS Kesehatan employee portion (1%)
  • BPJS-TK JHT employee portion (2%)
  • BPJS-TK JP employee portion (1%)

Net salary = Gross salary – All deductions

Annual Tax Filing

  • Employees must file SPT Tahunan (annual tax return) by March 31
  • Employers provide Form 1721-A1 summarizing annual income and tax withheld
  • Employers file annual reconciliation (SPT Tahunan PPh 21)

An EOR handles all payroll calculations, tax withholdings, BPJS remittances, government reporting, and compliance filings.


Employment Laws & Compliance in Indonesia

Key Compliance Areas

1. Written Employment Contracts

  • Mandatory within 30 days of start date
  • Must comply with PKWT or PKWTT requirements
  • Clear termination and severance terms

2. Job Creation Law (Omnibus Law) Compliance

  • Enacted 2020, substantially amended labor regulations
  • Implementing regulations continue to evolve
  • Covers contracts, outsourcing, severance, minimum wage

3. Minimum Wage Requirements

  • Must meet provincial/city minimum wage
  • Annual reviews and increases
  • Sectoral wage requirements where applicable

4. Social Security (BPJS) Registration

  • Must register employees within 30 days of hire
  • Both health and employment programs mandatory
  • Penalties for non-compliance

5. Working Hours and Overtime

  • 40-hour maximum work week
  • Proper overtime calculation and payment
  • Rest period compliance

6. Leave Entitlements

  • Annual leave after 12 months service
  • Maternity, menstruation, sick leave
  • Public holiday compensation

7. THR Payment

  • Must pay by deadline (7 days before holiday)
  • Correct calculation (1 month salary)
  • Pro-rata for employees <1 year

8. Termination and Severance

  • Proper cause and process required
  • Severance calculation accuracy
  • Bipartite negotiation attempts
  • Industrial relations court procedures

9. Health and Safety

  • Workplace safety standards (K3)
  • Accident reporting
  • Insurance coverage (BPJS JKK)

10. Data Privacy

  • Personal Data Protection Law (UU PDP) – enacted 2022, enforcement from October 2024
  • Employee data security and consent
  • Cross-border data transfer restrictions

11. Tax Compliance

  • Accurate PPh 21 withholding
  • Timely monthly remittances
  • Annual reporting and reconciliation

Termination & Notice Periods

Notice Period Requirements

Standard notice periods (by agreement or custom):

  • Probation period: 7 days notice (either party)
  • Permanent employees: 30 days notice (more common)
  • Senior/management: 30–90 days (per contract)

Under Indonesian law:

  • Either party may terminate with proper notice
  • Employer termination requires valid reason + process
  • Employee resignation requires notice per contract

Valid Reasons for Employer-Initiated Termination

  1. Company efficiency/restructuring
  2. Company closure
  3. Company merger/acquisition
  4. Company losses (sustained over time)
  5. Employee misconduct (after proper process)
  6. Continuous poor performance (after warnings)
  7. Employee long-term illness (>12 months)
  8. Mutual agreement

Termination Process Requirements

For misconduct terminations:

  1. Written warning letters (typically 3: verbal, written, final warning)
  2. Bipartite negotiation (employer-employee discussion)
  3. If unresolved, proceed to mediation or Industrial Relations Court
  4. Cannot summarily dismiss (except extreme gross misconduct)

For business reasons (efficiency, closure):

  1. Notify employee in writing
  2. Attempt bipartite negotiation
  3. Calculate and offer proper severance
  4. Reach mutual termination agreement
  5. If disputed, proceed to mediation/court

Severance Payment Obligations

See detailed severance calculation in Benefits section above.

Payment must include:

  • Severance pay (uang pesangon)
  • Service appreciation pay (uang penghargaan)
  • Compensation for rights (unused leave, etc.)

Timing: Must be paid within reasonable timeframe (typically within 7–14 days of termination)

Resignation by Employee

  • Employee provides notice per contract (typically 30 days)
  • No severance pay due from employer
  • Employee entitled to:
    • Final salary (pro-rated to last day)
    • Unused annual leave cash-out
    • Outstanding benefits
    • Pro-rated THR (if applicable)

Non-Discrimination and Equal Treatment

Indonesian law prohibits discrimination based on:

  • Gender
  • Religion
  • Race or ethnicity
  • Disability
  • Political affiliation
  • Marital status
  • Pregnancy

Employers must provide:

  • Equal pay for equal work
  • Equal opportunities for promotion
  • Non-discriminatory hiring practices
  • Reasonable accommodations for disabilities

Foreign Workers

Hiring foreign nationals requires:

  • IMTA (Izin Mempekerjakan Tenaga Kerja Asing) – Foreign Worker Employment Permit
  • RPTKA (Rencana Penggunaan Tenaga Kerja Asing) – Foreign Worker Utilization Plan
  • KITAS (Kartu Izin Tinggal Terbatas) – Limited Stay Permit
  • Work permit (ITAS) – Temporary Stay Permit
  • Sponsoring employer must be registered Indonesian entity
  • Positions restricted; some roles reserved for Indonesian nationals
  • Compensation fund required (DKP-TKA)

An EOR with Indonesian entity can sponsor foreign workers on your behalf.


Opening a Legal Entity in Indonesia

If your company plans long-term, significant operations in Indonesia, you may choose to establish a local legal entity.

Common Legal Structures

1. PT PMA (Perseroan Terbatas Penanaman Modal Asing) – Foreign-Owned Limited Liability Company

Most common structure for foreign investment.

Key characteristics:

  • Limited liability company with foreign ownership
  • Can conduct full commercial operations
  • Must comply with Indonesia’s investment regulations
  • Subject to foreign ownership restrictions by sector

Capital requirements:

  • Authorized capital: Minimum IDR 10 billion (~USD 650,000)
  • Paid-up capital: At least 25% of authorized (IDR 2.5 billion minimum)
  • Higher capital may be required for specific sectors
  • Must be deposited into Indonesian bank account

Ownership restrictions:

  • Foreign ownership limits vary by sector (Indonesia Negative Investment List / DNI)
  • Some sectors: 100% foreign ownership allowed
  • Some sectors: 49%, 51%, 67% foreign ownership caps
  • Some sectors: closed to foreign investment entirely

Requirements:

  • Minimum 1 director (can be foreign national)
  • Minimum 1 commissioner (supervisory board)
  • Company secretary often recommended
  • Registered office address in Indonesia

2. PT (Perseroan Terbatas) – Local Limited Liability Company

Indonesian-owned company:

  • Requires Indonesian shareholders
  • Lower capital requirements
  • Suitable for JV with local partners

3. Representative Office (KPPA – Kantor Perwakilan Perusahaan Asing)

Characteristics:

  • Cannot generate revenue in Indonesia
  • Limited to liaison, market research, promotional activities
  • Cannot sign contracts or conduct sales
  • Simpler setup than PT PMA
  • Lower costs and capital requirements

Best for: Market research, liaison, preparing for future entity setup

4. Branch Office (KP3A)

  • Extension of foreign parent company
  • Can conduct limited business activities
  • Parent company remains fully liable
  • Less common than PT PMA

PT PMA Registration Process

Step 1: Company Name Reservation

  • Submit name application to Ministry of Law and Human Rights
  • Check availability and obtain approval
  • Timeline: 1–2 weeks

Step 2: Investment Approval via OSS System

  • Register on OSS (Online Single Submission) platform
  • Obtain NIB (Nomor Induk Berusaha) – Business Identification Number
  • NIB serves as:
    • Company registration number
    • Tax registration (TDP)
    • Import license (if applicable)
  • Timeline: 1–3 days (online)

Step 3: Notarial Deed of Establishment

  • Draft Articles of Association
  • Notarize company establishment documents
  • Include shareholder structure, capital, directors
  • Timeline: 1–2 weeks

Step 4: Ministry of Law Approval

  • Submit deed to Ministry of Law and Human Rights (MOLHR)
  • Obtain approval and company registration number
  • Timeline: 2–4 weeks

Step 5: Tax Registration

  • Obtain NPWP (Nomor Pokok Wajak Pajak) – Tax Identification Number
  • Register for VAT (if applicable)
  • Timeline: 1–2 weeks

Step 6: Business Licenses

  • Obtain sector-specific licenses via OSS
  • Examples: trading license, manufacturing permit, tourism license
  • Requirements vary by business activity
  • Timeline: 2–8 weeks (varies by sector)

Step 7: Capital Deposit

  • Open corporate bank account
  • Deposit minimum paid-up capital (IDR 2.5 billion+)
  • Obtain bank confirmation letter
  • Timeline: 1–2 weeks

Step 8: Social Security Registration

  • Register company with BPJS Kesehatan
  • Register company with BPJS Ketenagakerjaan
  • Timeline: 1–2 weeks

Step 9: Immigration Permits (for foreign directors/workers)

  • Apply for IMTA (work permit)
  • Obtain RPTKA approval
  • Process KITAS and work visa
  • Timeline: 4–8 weeks

Total Timeline for PT PMA Setup

Minimum: 3–4 months
Realistic: 4–6 months (accounting for delays, sector-specific approvals)


Ongoing Entity Compliance Requirements

Once established, PT PMA must maintain:

Annual obligations:

  • Annual financial audit (by registered Indonesian auditor)
  • Annual General Meeting (AGM) of shareholders
  • Corporate income tax filing (PPh Badan) – 25th April annually
  • Annual activity report to BKPM (Investment Coordinating Board)
  • Financial statement submission to Ministry of Law
  • Company domicile re-verification

Monthly/quarterly obligations:

  • Monthly PPh 21, 23, 25, VAT filings
  • Quarterly investment activity reports
  • BPJS contribution payments and reports

Other requirements:

  • Maintain registered office
  • Keep statutory records and minutes
  • Update shareholder/director changes with authorities
  • Renew business licenses periodically

Costs:

  • Annual audit fees: USD 3,000–10,000+
  • Accounting and bookkeeping: USD 500–2,000/month
  • Legal compliance: USD 1,000–3,000/year
  • Tax consulting: USD 2,000–5,000/year
  • Office rental and overhead

Challenges of Entity Setup

  • High capital requirements (IDR 10 billion minimum)
  • Complex, multi-agency approvals
  • Lengthy timeline (4–6 months)
  • Ongoing compliance burden (audit, tax, reporting)
  • Foreign ownership restrictions in certain sectors
  • Bureaucratic complexity (central + regional requirements)
  • Local director requirements (many foreign companies hire local nominee)
  • Language barriers (documents must be in Bahasa Indonesia)

For companies hiring a small team initially, an EOR is far more efficient and cost-effective.


Why Use a Global EOR in Indonesia?

Key Advantages

✅ Rapid Market Entry

  • Hire employees in 1–2 weeks vs. 4–6 months for entity setup
  • No need to navigate complex incorporation process
  • Immediate access to Indonesian talent

✅ No Capital Investment Required

  • Avoid IDR 10 billion (~USD 650,000) minimum capital requirement
  • No office rental or infrastructure costs
  • Pay-as-you-go model scales with headcount

✅ Full Legal Compliance

  • EOR ensures contracts comply with Job Creation Law
  • Accurate PKWT vs. PKWTT determination
  • Proper probation, notice periods, termination clauses

✅ Payroll and Tax Management

  • Accurate PPh 21 (income tax) calculation and withholding
  • BPJS Kesehatan and BPJS Ketenagakerjaan registration and remittance
  • Monthly government reporting and filings
  • Annual tax certificate issuance
  • Minimum wage compliance across provinces

✅ Benefits Administration

  • THR (religious holiday bonus) calculation and payment
  • Annual leave tracking and cash-out
  • Sick leave, maternity leave processing
  • Severance calculation for terminations

✅ Risk Mitigation

  • EOR assumes employment liability
  • Handles termination procedures and severance disputes
  • Ensures compliance with evolving regulations
  • Reduces risk of labor court disputes

✅ Scalability and Flexibility

  • Easily scale workforce up or down
  • Test Indonesian market before full commitment
  • Expand to multiple provinces without additional entities
  • Hire remote workers anywhere in Indonesia

✅ Local Expertise

  • EOR provides in-country HR and legal knowledge
  • Navigates provincial wage differences
  • Advises on market-standard benefits
  • Supports employee relations

✅ Focus on Core Business

  • Eliminate administrative burden of compliance
  • Your team manages daily work and productivity
  • EOR handles backend HR, payroll, legal requirements

Ideal Use Cases for EOR in Indonesia

Perfect for companies:

  • Hiring first 1–50 employees in Indonesia
  • Testing market viability before entity investment
  • Building remote/distributed teams across Indonesia
  • Hiring specialized roles (developers, marketers, support)
  • Short-to-medium term projects (6 months–3 years)
  • Avoiding regulatory complexity and capital requirements
  • Needing quick expansion into Southeast Asia

Common roles hired via EOR:

  • Software engineers and developers
  • Product managers and designers
  • Customer success and support teams
  • Digital marketing specialists
  • Finance and accounting professionals
  • Sales and business development
  • HR and operations managers
  • Content creators and writers

Transition Path: EOR → Local Entity

Many global companies follow this strategy:

Phase 1 (Year 1): Use EOR to hire 5–20 employees, test market, establish operations

Phase 2 (Year 2–3): Once product-market fit proven and team grows to 30–50+, establish PT PMA

Phase 3 (Year 3+): Transfer employees from EOR to own entity, continue scaling

Benefits of this approach:

  • Minimize upfront risk and capital
  • Validate business model before major investment
  • Build team and revenue to justify entity costs
  • Seamless employee transition when ready

EOR providers often support entity setup and employee transfer when you’re ready.


Getting Started with an EOR in Indonesia

Simple process:

  1. Partner with reputable EOR provider with Indonesian entity and expertise
  2. Share job descriptions and candidate profiles
  3. EOR drafts compliant employment contracts (PKWT or PKWTT)
  4. Candidates undergo onboarding (NPWP, BPJS registration, banking)
  5. Employees start work – you manage daily tasks
  6. EOR handles payroll, taxes, benefits – monthly invoicing to you
  7. Scale as needed – add or remove employees flexibly

Typical EOR service fees:

  • Monthly fee per employee (often USD 200–500/employee depending on provider and service level)
  • Covers all compliance, payroll, benefits administration, legal support
  • No setup fees with many providers

Summary: EOR vs. PT PMA Entity Setup

FactorEOR ServicePT PMA Setup
Time to hire1–2 weeks4–6 months
Upfront capitalNoneIDR 10 billion (~USD 650K)
Setup complexitySimple (provider handles)High (multi-agency process)
Ongoing complianceEOR managesCompany responsible
Monthly costsPer-employee feeAudit, accounting, legal, overhead
LiabilityEOR assumes employment riskCompany assumes all risk
FlexibilityHigh (scale easily)Lower (committed investment)
Foreign worker sponsorshipEOR can sponsorEntity sponsors directly
Termination/severanceEOR handlesCompany handles
Best for1–50 employees, market testing50+ employees, long-term investment

Conclusion

Indonesia offers exceptional talent and growth opportunities for global companies, but navigating employment law, payroll compliance, BPJS contributions, and entity setup can be complex and time-consuming.

A Global Employer of Record (EOR) enables you to:

  • Hire top Indonesian talent quickly and compliantly
  • Avoid the IDR 10 billion capital requirement and 4–6 month setup process
  • Ensure full compliance with the Job Creation Law, BPJS, tax regulations, and labor codes
  • Provide competitive benefits including THR bonuses, proper leave, and statutory insurance
  • Minimize legal risk and administrative burden
  • Scale your team flexibly as your business grows

Whether you’re hiring software developers in Jakarta, customer support teams in Bali, or marketing specialists in Surabaya, an EOR provides the fastest, most cost-effective path to building your Indonesian workforce.

Ready to hire in Indonesia? Partner with a trusted EOR provider and start building your team today.

Join us! It will only take a minute

Popular Global EOR Providers Supporting Indonesia

(They often partner with in-country firms for local compliance.)

Explore how Global EOR Services can transform your global workforce management.

Contact us today to learn more about our tailored solutions and how we can support your business goals.

Compliant.
Global. Hiring.

Simplify Global Expansion with Global EOR Services – Fast, Compliant, and Risk-Free Hiring. Scale your Business across 170+ Countries Global EOR Services for Payroll, Compliance & HR.

Global Workforce without Setting Up Entities –Find, Hire, Pay & Manage International Teams with Global EOR Services

© 2025 Global EOR Services™. All Rights Reserved.