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When building a global team or hiring remote talent, deciding how to employ workers is just as important as who to hire. Two of the most common models you’ll come across are direct employment and Employer of Record (EOR). In this post, we’ll break down the differences, pros and cons, use cases, and key considerations — and I’ll also show you how platforms like Deel and Papaya Global fit into this landscape (full disclosure: I’m using partner links below).


What Is Direct Employment?

Direct employment (sometimes called “in-house employment” or “traditional employment”) refers to the standard model where your company is the legal employer of record. That means:

  • You hire the employee under your own entity (your company’s legal entity in that country).
  • You’re responsible for all employment obligations: contracts, payroll, taxes, social security, benefits, compliance, termination, etc.
  • You have direct control over the employment relationship, including HR policies, benefits packages, performance management, and culture embedding.

Because of this, direct employment is often preferred when:

  • You have (or plan to set up) a legal entity in the region or country.
  • You want full control of HR, benefits, perks, and corporate culture.
  • The scale or cost justifies internal HR and legal infrastructure.

However, direct employment also carries burdens:

  • You must manage local compliance, which can be complex and risky in foreign jurisdictions
  • Administrative overhead is high (payroll, tax filings, benefits, etc.)
  • Setting up a legal entity in a new country can be expensive, time-consuming, and requires local legal expertise

What Is an Employer of Record (EOR)?

An Employer of Record (EOR) is a third-party provider that legally employs workers on your behalf, handling payroll, benefits, taxes, and compliance, while your company retains operational control and direction of day-to-day tasks. Wikipedia+2Employ Borderless+2

Here’s how it works in a nutshell:

  • You select a candidate, and the EOR signs the employment contract with them (in the local jurisdiction).
  • The EOR handles payroll, withholding and remitting taxes, social security, statutory benefits, local labor law compliance, insurance, etc.
  • Your company manages the employee’s tasks, performance, goals, etc.
  • If the employee needs to be terminated or moved, the EOR coordinates or executes that under local law.

Because the EOR becomes the legal employer, your company is insulated from many of the legal and compliance liabilities (though you still must act responsibly and coordinate with the EOR). Employ Borderless+2Omnipresent+2

This model is especially attractive when you want to expand into new markets without creating local entities. Some benefits:

  • Faster time-to-hire in foreign jurisdictions
  • Avoids entity setup costs and legal filings
  • Offloads compliance, payroll, benefits burdens
  • Flexibility: easier to scale up or down

On the flip side:

  • Less control over benefits/insurance design
  • EOR fees can be significant
  • Depending on the jurisdiction, some compliance risk or coordination overhead may still fall back on you
  • For very large scale in one market, it may become more cost-effective to form your own entity

Direct Employment vs. EOR: Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature / DimensionDirect EmploymentEmployer of Record (EOR)
Legal employmentYour company is the legal employerThe EOR is the legal employer
Entity requirementYou need a legal entity in that countryYou do not need a local entity (the EOR handles it)
ControlMaximum control over employment terms, benefits, HR policiesYou control work, projects, day-to-day management; EOR controls compliance/legal side
Compliance burdenOn your company (local labor law, tax, benefits, terminations)On the EOR (they manage local compliance)
Time to hire abroadSlower (entity setup, legal registration)Faster — often days or weeks, if EOR has existing local presence
Cost structureInternal HR, legal, payroll teams, entity maintenanceEOR fees + local salary costs, but you avoid entity setup costs
ScalabilityGood once entity is strong; adding more employees is incrementalExcellent for experimenting, scaling globally with minimal upfront risk
Long-term in-market presenceVery suitable if you plan to commit long-termMay be more of a bridge until you set up your own entity if scale justifies it
Liability & riskHigh — all legal liabilities lie with youEOR shoulders many compliance risks (but not always zero)

These differences are well summarized in industry comparisons. Omnipresent+2Employ Borderless+2


When to Use Direct Employment — and When to Use EOR

Here are some practical signals and use cases:

Use direct employment if:

  1. You already have or plan to establish a legal entity in the country.
  2. Your headcount in that country is large enough that entity costs can be amortized.
  3. You want full control over benefits, perks, and employment terms.
  4. You are deeply committed to that market long term.
  5. The administrative & legal burden is manageable (you have or can hire local legal/HR support).

Use EOR if:

  1. You don’t have (or don’t want to manage) a local entity.
  2. You are testing or piloting hiring in a new market.
  3. You need to hire quickly and compliantly.
  4. Your team is distributed across multiple geographies and you want a unified solution.
  5. You want to offload compliance risk and reduce administrative burden.

Note: As your presence in a market grows, many companies start with an EOR for flexibility and then transition to direct employment via entity when scale justifies the investment.


How Platforms Like Deel & Papaya Global Fit In

Modern global payroll and employment platforms have made EOR (and hybrid) solutions far more accessible and efficient. Two standout names are Deel and Papaya Global — and you can use the following links if you’d like to explore or sign up:

  • Deel — check out their global hiring and EOR solutions via this link
  • Papaya Global — see their global employment platform and EOR offerings here: Papaya Global partner link

These platforms simplify many of the challenges we discussed:

  • They maintain or partner with local entities, so you don’t have to build your own.
  • They automate payroll, tax withholding, local benefit compliance, and reporting.
  • They provide dashboards and transparency so you can see costs, schedules, and compliance status.
  • They offer local HR support, contract templates compliant with local laws, and offboarding support.

In many cases, using a platform like Deel or Papaya Global gives you the advantages of EOR with less friction and more technological support.


Key Risks & Considerations (Don’t Overlook These)

  1. Hidden costs & markups
    EOR providers often charge more than base salary costs — markups, service fees, exchange rate spreads, or administration fees may apply. Always read the fine print.
  2. Local labor law anomalies
    Even with an EOR, certain jurisdictions might impose co-employer risks or require certain compliance actions from your company. The EOR might not shoulder everything.
  3. Benefit and insurance standardization vs customization
    EORs may only allow benefit plans that are standard in that country; you might have limited ability to provide special perks.
  4. Data, control, and audit rights
    Make sure your contract with the EOR gives you sufficient access to audit, data, and control over decisions that affect your employees.
  5. Exit and transition costs
    If you decide later to set up your own entity and move employees under direct employment, the transition must be managed carefully (compensation, local law, benefit continuity).
  6. Scalability threshold
    There’s usually a “crossover point” where having your own entity is more cost-effective than paying EOR fees for many employees — run the math.
  7. Jurisdiction coverage & depth of support
    Not all EORs have deep expertise in every country. Make sure the provider covers your target countries with high quality.

Summary & Recommendations

  • Direct employment gives you maximum control but comes with heavy administrative, legal, and compliance responsibilities.
  • Employer of Record (EOR) offers you a way to hire, pay, and manage employees in jurisdictions where you lack a legal entity, outsourcing compliance and reducing risk.
  • Many companies begin with EOR when entering a new market, then transition to direct employment when their presence justifies it.
  • Using modern platforms like Deel or Papaya Global can make EOR-based hiring easier, more transparent, and more scalable (feel free to check them out via my links above).