The global freelance workforce has reached 1.57 billion people, nearly 47% of the total global workforce according to World Bank and Statista data.
For companies hiring contractors across borders, one question increasingly determines whether those relationships succeed: can you pay them in the currency they actually want?
Paying contractors in their local currency eliminates exchange rate risk on the recipient’s end, reduces the friction that causes payment disputes, and in many cases is the difference between a contractor accepting or declining a contract.
Yet most companies still default to USD wire transfers that arrive days late, lighter than expected, and loaded with fees the contractor never agreed to.
Key Takeaways
- Local currency payment is a retention tool, not just an operational preference
- The method matters as much as the currency: wire transfers, digital wallets, and stablecoin rails carry vastly different cost and speed profiles
- Compliance and currency are linked, the platform handling payments should also handle classification, contracts, and tax documentation
Why Local Currency Matters to Contractors
The case for paying in local currency is straightforward. When a contractor in Colombia invoices $5,000 and receives a USD wire transfer, they lose money twice: once to the intermediary bank fees on the sending side, and again to the FX conversion markup when the funds hit their local bank.
Depending on the corridor, that combined loss can reach 4% to 7% of the payment, $200 to $350 on a single invoice.
For contractors earning $3,000 to $5,000 per month, that leakage adds up to $2,400 to $4,200 per year in costs they never budgeted for. In regions where local currency volatility compounds the problem: Argentina, Nigeria, Turkey, the timing of conversion can swing the received amount by an additional 5% to 10% depending on the week.
Paying in local currency shifts the FX conversion to the employer’s side, where it can be managed at scale with better rates and more transparent pricing. The contractor receives exactly what they invoiced, in the currency they spend.
Payment Methods Compared
Not all local currency payment methods are equal. The table below compares the most common options for paying international contractors in their preferred currency.
| Method | Speed | Cost | Currency coverage | Compliance support |
| International wire (SWIFT) | 2–5 business days | $25–$50 + 2–3% FX | Limited by bank corridors | None |
| PayPal | Instant to 1 day | 3.49% + 1.5% international + FX | 160+ countries | None |
| Wise | 1–2 business days | 0.5–1.5% transparent fee | 59 countries, 40+ currencies | None |
| Payroll platforms (EOR/AOR) | Same-day to 2 days | Platform fee + FX varies | 100–190+ countries | Full (contracts, tax docs, classification) |
| Stablecoin rails | Minutes | Under 0.5% | Global (wallet-based) | Varies by platform |
The critical distinction is between payment-only tools and platforms that combine payment with compliance. PayPal and Wise solve the currency problem but do nothing for contractor agreements, tax documentation, classification risk, or invoice management.
For companies managing five or more international contractors, the compliance gap becomes the operational risk that a payment tool alone cannot address.
How Rise Handles Local Currency Payments
Rise has built the most flexible contractor payment infrastructure available in 2026, combining local currency delivery across 90+ fiat options with hybrid payment rails that no legacy provider matches.
The workflow is designed around contractor choice:
- Companies fund payroll through traditional bank transfers, stablecoins like USDC and USDT, or cryptocurrency.
- Contractors then choose their own withdrawal method and currency each pay cycle: local currency, stablecoins, or any of 100+ supported cryptocurrencies.
- The employer controls funding; the contractor controls withdrawal.
This separation eliminates the friction of forcing every contractor through the same payment rail regardless of their preference or location.
Rise processes contractor payments across 190+ countries with automated onboarding, KYC/AML verification, compliant contractor agreements, and tax documentation including 1099s and W-8BENs. The platform’s Agent of Record service adds a classification layer that handles worker assessment, reducing misclassification exposure for companies scaling contractor teams internationally.
Rise surpassed $1 billion in total payroll volume in late 2025, with SOC 2 certification and FinCEN registration as a Money Service Business.
“The old approach of paying every contractor the same way, a USD wire that takes five days and loses 5% to fees, was never a system designed for the contractor,” said Hugo Finkelstein, CEO of Rise. “In 2026, contractors choose where they work and who they work for. The companies that give them control over how they get paid are the ones building the most loyal contractor networks.”
What to Look for in a Payment Solution
Companies evaluating how to pay international contractors in local currency should assess five factors: currency coverage across the countries where they hire, FX transparency and spread disclosure, compliance infrastructure for contracts and tax documentation, payment speed and settlement reliability, and the flexibility for contractors to choose their own withdrawal method.
The platforms that combine it all (payment delivery, compliance, and contractor choice), are the ones eliminating the operational fragmentation that comes from using separate tools for contracts, payments, and tax documentation.
That consolidation is what allows companies to scale contractor teams from five to fifty to five hundred without the payroll stack breaking.
FAQs:
1. What is the best way to pay international contractors in local currency?
The most effective method is using a payroll platform that combines local currency delivery with compliance infrastructure, handling contracts, tax documentation, and classification alongside payment. Rise supports payments across 190+ countries in 90+ fiat currencies with contractor-controlled withdrawals each pay cycle.
2. Why should I pay contractors in their local currency instead of USD?
Paying in local currency eliminates FX conversion costs on the contractor’s side, which can reach 4–7% per payment through traditional banking channels. It also removes payment disputes caused by fluctuating exchange rates and improves contractor satisfaction and retention.
3. How much does it cost to pay international contractors?
Costs vary by method. International wire transfers cost $25–$50 plus 2–3% in FX markups. PayPal charges 3.49% plus 1.5% for international transactions. Payroll platforms charge a monthly per-contractor fee but typically include compliance and tax documentation. Stablecoin rails cost under 0.5%.
4. Can contractors choose to receive stablecoins instead of local currency?
Yes, on platforms like Rise. Contractors select their withdrawal method each pay cycle, local fiat, USDC, USDT, or other supported cryptocurrencies. The employer funds payroll in their preferred currency and the contractor controls how they receive it.
5. Do I need to handle tax documentation when paying international contractors?
Yes. Companies typically need to collect W-8BEN forms from foreign contractors for U.S. tax reporting purposes and maintain compliant contractor agreements in each jurisdiction. Platforms like Rise automate this documentation as part of the onboarding workflow.






