Contractors and Employees Worldwide
Hiring offshore workers as contractors or employees can be a lawful and effective way to build your team. It depends on the nature of the work, the level of independence, and the legal framework in each country.
But you’re at greater risk when you skip essential compliance steps. Engaging someone without understanding local business registration rules, tax reporting requirements, or independent contractor tests can result in serious issues down the track.
When a local authority investigates or a dispute arises, it’s not the label on the contract that matters. It’s the reality of the working relationship and whether you’ve complied with local law.
Paying someone overseas without understanding your employment obligations risks your business and the worker. And if you don’t have a local employing entity, you’re potentially exposed in both the worker’s country and your own.
The Hidden Costs of Getting It Wrong
Many businesses assume that international hiring ‘shields’ them from the employment laws of their own country. But if the worker is later found to be an employee – especially in a dispute scenario – they may be entitled to:
- Severance and other entitlements under local law
- Back pay for leave, overtime, or pension contributions
- Protections under your own country’s employment laws if jurisdiction applies
You may also face fines and penalties for breaching local labour or contractor classification laws.
This is where using a local employing entity, typically through an Employer of Record (EoR), reduces business risk and provides knowledgeable, local advice to ensure you comply with relevant legislation.
A Real-World Example: When Labels Aren't Enough
In 2025, a Filipino woman working for an Australian law firm from Manila challenged her dismissal in Australia’s Fair Work Commission—and won. Despite being based offshore, the Commission found she was effectively treated as an employee under Australian law and was, therefore, entitled to protection from unfair dismissal.
This case sent a strong message to businesses: it doesn’t matter where your worker sits; if the working relationship looks and feels like employment, regulators will treat it as such.
What an Employer of Record Actually Does
An Employer of Record is a local, legally registered entity that hires a worker on your behalf, assuming the legal responsibilities of employment while you retain control over day-to-day work and outcomes.
Whether the worker is a contractor or employee, the EoR ensures all local obligations are met:
- Payroll and tax withholdings
- Benefits, insurance, and superannuation contributions
- Compliance with local labor laws and policies
- Legally appropriate contracting terms based on classification
This model removes legal and financial exposure from your business while giving workers the protections and legitimacy they deserve.
And in modern EoR arrangements, there’s more: a smart technology platform that ties it all together.
The Role of Technology in International Compliance
At EPG, we don’t just provide legal infrastructure: we provide the technology that makes global employment work at scale.
Our platform helps businesses:
- Track compliance across jurisdictions – Know who’s correctly classified, who has work rights in their country, and who’s missing documentation.
- Monitor activity – Track milestones, document submissions, leave, and compliance triggers across regions.
- Gain real-time visibility – Understand employment costs, tax obligations, and status updates across your global workforce.
- Automate workflows – Receive alerts for contract renewals, mandatory training, or legal changes—before they become a problem.
With the right technology, you can hire and manage global teams confidently with fewer manual processes and much lower risk.
What to Look for in a Good EoR Partner
- Legal entities in every country you operate
- Accurate contractor vs. employee classification
- A platform to track status, documentation, and compliance
- Automated payroll, tax, and benefits processing
- Local HR guidance for onboarding, performance, and terminations
- Transparent invoicing with no surprise costs
The Future of Work is Global - But It Needs to Be Legal
Today’s businesses are borderless. But your responsibilities to your team, regulators, and brand are still rooted in the laws of each country you operate in.
You don’t need to incorporate in every market. But you do need local infrastructure, which is where a trusted Employer of Record comes in.
With entities across Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, the Philippines, the US, Canada, Ireland, France, the Netherlands, the UK, Germany, Spain, Malaysia, and Hong Kong, EPG helps businesses like yours stay compliant while growing globally.
Ready to Hire Internationally Without the Risk?
Reianna Vercoe
Senior Product Manager at Xemplo
About our author: Reianna Vercoe
Senior Product Manager at Xemplo
Reianna Vercoe is a Senior Product Manager at Xemplo, where she leads the design and delivery of solutions that help businesses hire and manage global workforces compliantly. With a deep understanding of employment law, technology, and the realities of cross-border engagement, Reianna is passionate about simplifying complex workforce challenges through smart, scalable tools.