If you are planning to hire in the Philippines, you have probably already come across two main options: set up your own legal entity or work through an Employer of Record. Both paths are used by real businesses. But they serve very different purposes, and picking the wrong one early on can slow you down in ways that are hard to recover from.
This post breaks down both options honestly so you know what you are actually getting into with each.
What Setting Up a Local Entity Actually Involves
Registering a company in the Philippines means going through multiple government agencies. You will need to register with the SEC, get a Tax Identification Number from the BIR, secure a Mayor’s Permit from your local government unit, and enroll as an employer with SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG. That process, under normal conditions, takes anywhere from 6 to 10 weeks.
Foreign-owned companies face an additional hurdle. If your business owns more than 40% of a Philippine corporation, you are typically required to put up a paid-in capital of USD 200,000. That capital sits in the Philippine entity and is not freely available for other uses.
Once you are registered, the work does not stop. You become responsible for monthly and quarterly BIR filings, government contribution remittances, payroll processing, 13th month pay, leave tracking, overtime computation, DOLE reporting, and annual audited financial statements. Most businesses spend between $5,000 and $15,000 per year just to stay compliant, not counting the time your team puts in.
How an Employer of Record Works
An Employer of Record in the Philippines is a company that employs your Philippine workers on your behalf. On paper, they are the legal employer. In practice, your team reports to you, works on your projects, and follows your direction. The EOR just handles the employment layer underneath.
That means employment contracts, payroll, tax withholding, government filings, mandatory benefits, and separation procedures are all managed by someone who does this every day for multiple clients. You are not learning Philippine labor law from scratch. You are leveraging a team that already knows it.
The setup takes days rather than months, there is no capital requirement, and you pay a monthly service fee instead of building an internal compliance function.
Why Most Companies Choose EOR First
You can start hiring within days
Waiting two to three months to register a company before making your first hire is a real cost. Good candidates do not wait. With an EOR, you can bring someone on board while your competitors are still filling out government forms.
The financial commitment is manageable
Between registration fees, legal costs, and the capital requirement, entity setup can easily run past $200,000 before you have confirmed that your Philippine operations will deliver returns. An EOR lets you test the market at a fraction of that cost, with no money locked in.
Compliance is genuinely complex here
Philippine labor law has real teeth. DOLE enforces it. Contribution rates change. Misclassifying a worker or missing a filing deadline can result in penalties and labor disputes. When you work with an EOR, that liability belongs to them. They stay current so you do not have to.
You keep full control of your team
Some people assume an EOR arrangement means sharing control of their employees. It does not work that way. Your team works for you day to day. The EOR just ensures that the employment structure is legally sound in the Philippines.
When Entity Setup Makes Sense
There are situations where setting up your own Philippine entity is the right call:
- Headcount above 50: At that scale, the monthly EOR fee starts to exceed what it would cost to run your own HR and compliance function.
- Regulated industries: Some sectors like financial services and healthcare require a registered local entity to obtain operating licenses.
- Physical, branded presence: If you are opening an office, hiring at scale, or building a long-term commercial presence in the Philippines, entity registration makes sense.
A practical approach many companies take is to use an EOR for the first year or two, then transition to a local entity once their team size and operational stability justify the investment.
So Which One Is Right for You?
For most companies entering the Philippines for the first time, an EOR is the better starting point. It removes the upfront cost, eliminates the compliance risk, and gets your team working in days rather than months.
Setting up a local entity is not the wrong answer forever. It just tends to be the wrong answer too early. Build the business first, validate that your Philippine operations are working, and then make the structural investment when you know it will pay off.
If you want a deeper breakdown, Remotify has put together a full guide on EOR vs. Setting Up a Local Entity in the Philippines that covers the practical steps, costs, and compliance requirements in detail. Worth reading before you make a final decision.”
Key Takeaway: Speed, lower cost, and built-in compliance make EOR the smarter entry point for hiring in the Philippines. Once your team grows and operations stabilize, transitioning to a local entity becomes a much easier decision to make.
