Two terms come up constantly in discussions about international hiring: Employer of Record (EOR) and Professional Employer Organization (PEO). They’re often used interchangeably in marketing materials, which creates genuine confusion for businesses trying to figure out which model they need. The reality is that they describe different legal structures with different use cases, and choosing the wrong one can create compliance problems.
This guide breaks down the actual differences between EOR and PEO, explains when each model is appropriate, and helps you decide which one fits your situation.
The Core Difference
The key distinction comes down to who is the legal employer. In an EOR arrangement, the Employer of Record is the sole legal employer of the worker. In a PEO arrangement, the PEO and the client company share employer responsibilities under a co-employment agreement.
Co-employment is a concept recognized in the United States, where PEOs operate under a specific regulatory framework. In most other countries, co-employment either doesn’t exist as a legal concept or creates ambiguity that regulators don’t accept. For international hiring outside the US, EOR is almost always the correct model, because it gives the worker a single, clearly defined legal employer that is compliant with local law.
How PEOs Work (and Where They Work Well)
In a PEO arrangement, the client company retains significant employer responsibilities: they typically handle day-to-day HR decisions, set compensation, and manage performance. The PEO handles payroll administration, benefits enrollment, workers’ compensation, and regulatory compliance. Both parties are jointly responsible for the employment relationship.
This model works well in the United States, where it’s used by small and mid-sized businesses to access better benefits rates (through the PEO’s pooled buying power) and to reduce HR administrative burden. Several thousand PEOs operate in the US, covering millions of employees. The model is regulated at state level, and most states have clear legal frameworks for co-employment.
Why EOR Is the Standard for International Hiring
When you move outside the US, the co-employment model runs into problems. Most countries have a clear concept of who the employer is, and it needs to be one party with a registered presence in the country. If you try to use a co-employment structure in, say, Germany, France, or Vietnam, local labor law doesn’t accommodate it cleanly. The result is ambiguity about which party is responsible for compliance, taxes, and employee rights.
An EOR sidesteps this entirely. The EOR has a registered legal entity in the target country and becomes the employer of record for local employment law purposes. Your company is the client and retains operational control, but the legal employment relationship is clear and fully compliant.
Comparing EOR and PEO Side by Side
Legal Employer
EOR: The EOR provider is the sole legal employer. PEO: The PEO and the client company share employer status under a co-employment agreement.
Geographic Applicability
EOR: Works globally, including in countries where co-employment isn’t legally recognized. PEO: Primarily effective in the United States; less suitable for most international markets.
Client Company’s Entity Requirement
EOR: No local entity required. The EOR’s existing local entity is what makes the employment compliant. PEO: Typically requires the client company to already have a legal presence in the country.
Speed of Hire
EOR: Can hire within days or weeks, without any setup. PEO: Requires the client to have an entity first, which can take months to establish.
Compliance Responsibility
EOR: The EOR bears the compliance responsibility in the target country. PEO: Compliance responsibility is shared between the PEO and the client.
Cost
EOR: Per-employee monthly fee, typically ranging from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars depending on the country and salary level. PEO: Often a percentage of total payroll, which can be less expensive at scale for US operations.
Common Misconceptions
Misconception: EOR and PEO are the same thing
Many providers use the terms interchangeably in their marketing, which muddies the water. Always ask a provider specifically which model they operate and whether they have their own legal entity in the target country, or whether they use third-party aggregators.
Misconception: PEO works internationally
Some PEOs do offer international services, but when they do, they’re typically operating through an EOR model in those countries (even if they don’t call it that). The underlying legal structure is what matters, not the label.
Misconception: EOR means you lose control of your employees
You retain full operational control of your staff. You set their targets, manage their performance, direct their work, and decide when to end the relationship. The EOR handles the legal and administrative employment obligations.
Which Model Do You Need?
If you’re hiring in the United States and want to outsource HR administration and access pooled benefits, a PEO may be a good fit. If you’re hiring internationally in any country where you don’t have a local entity, or if you want to move quickly, or if you’re testing a market, an EOR is the right tool.
Many companies use both: a PEO for their domestic US workforce and an EOR for their international hires. The two models complement each other rather than competing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I switch from an EOR to my own entity later? Yes. A good EOR provider will support a transition process once you decide to set up your own legal presence in a country. This is a common progression for companies that start with one or two EOR hires and eventually build a larger team.
Are there countries where neither EOR nor PEO works? A very small number of countries have restrictions on the use of staffing or EOR arrangements in certain sectors. Your provider should be able to identify any such restrictions for the countries you’re considering.
To learn more about how a global EOR solution can support your expansion strategy, visit the Global Employer of Record page for country-specific guidance and a tailored consultation.
How Different Countries Treat the Employer Relationship
The way countries define and regulate the employment relationship has a direct bearing on which model works. In the United States, employment law is relatively employer-friendly and co-employment has a well-established legal basis through PEO regulation. This makes PEOs genuinely functional there. In continental Europe, the employment relationship is much more tightly defined: there is an employer (with all associated legal responsibilities) and an employee (with all associated legal protections), and there is very little room for ambiguity about which is which.
In markets like Vietnam, the Labor Code is explicit about who the employer is and what obligations that creates. A foreign company that tries to have its Vietnam-based workers employed by a domestic PEO under a co-employment arrangement will likely find that the arrangement does not hold up under Vietnamese labor law scrutiny. An EOR, with a clear Vietnamese legal entity as the employer of record, is the clean solution.
Questions to Ask an EOR Provider About Their Model
Before signing with any provider, ask these directly: Are you the legal employer of record, or do you operate through a co-employment arrangement? Do you have your own registered legal entity in the countries I am targeting? Who is responsible if a compliance error is made? Can you provide references from clients currently hiring in my target countries? The answers will tell you quickly whether you are dealing with a genuine EOR or a rebranded staffing arrangement.






