PEO vs EOR: When Each Wins (and When You Need Both)

Quick Answer

PEO is US-only co-employment; EOR is country-by-country sole employment. Use a PEO for your US W-2 employees who you want bundled benefits, workers' comp, and HR compliance for. Use an EOR (Deel, Remote, Velocity Global) to hire in countries where you don't have a legal entity. They're not competitors — they solve different problems. Most growing companies use both: PEO domestic, EOR international.

Match Me to the Right Model
US-only
PEO geographic footprint
170+
Countries leading EORs operate in
$50K–$200K
Cost to establish a foreign legal entity (EOR avoids this)
10–20%
Typical EOR fee as percent of salary

Co-Employment vs Sole Employment

A PEO shares the employer relationship with you. Co-employment means the PEO is the legal employer for tax, benefits, and workers' comp purposes; you stay the worksite employer who hires, fires, and manages. The structure works within the US — every US state has its own labor laws, but PEOs operate across all 50.

An EOR (Employer of Record) becomes the sole legal employer in the country or state where it operates. There's no co-employment — the EOR's legal entity in France employs your French engineer; you don't have a French entity at all. The EOR handles French payroll, taxes, statutory benefits, and labor law compliance under its name; you direct the engineer's work but have no direct employer relationship.

The distinction matters operationally. Under co-employment, your company's name still shows up on most employment paperwork (W-2s show "PEO + your company"). Under sole employment via EOR, the EOR's name is on everything — your employee is technically employed by Deel or Remote or Velocity Global, not by you.

When an EOR Is the Right Answer

International hiring without a foreign entity. Establishing a legal entity in France, Germany, India, Brazil, or Mexico costs $50K–$200K in setup plus ongoing accounting, tax filings, and compliance overhead. For hiring two engineers in Poland, the math doesn't work. An EOR employs the worker in-country under its existing entity and bills you a fee — typically 10–20% of gross salary, plus actual employment costs.

Test-hiring before committing to a country. Want to see if a sales team in the UK works before establishing UK operations? EOR for the first 1–3 hires lets you trial without commitment. If it works, establish your own entity at scale (typically year 2+); if it doesn't, you exit cleanly.

Remote-first companies hiring globally. If your hiring strategy is "best talent regardless of location," an EOR is the operational backbone. Deel, Remote, Velocity Global, and Globalization Partners handle 100+ countries between them.

US states where you have no legal presence. Less common but real — if you're a California company and want to hire one person in Wyoming or Hawaii without registering as an employer in that state, an EOR can bridge the gap. Most PEOs handle US multi-state registration; an EOR is the alternative when registration friction is too high for a single hire.

Real example

A 25-person fintech client wanted to hire one senior engineer in the UK. We modeled the options: establish a UK entity ($85K setup + $35K/year ongoing) vs use an EOR ($18K/year all-in for that one hire). EOR was a clear win — until they planned to scale UK hiring to 8+ engineers, at which point the entity setup pencils out. Threshold: roughly 5–7 employees in a country before EOR economics flip.

When a PEO Is the Right Answer

You're hiring US-based employees. PEOs are deeply optimized for the US market — multi-state tax filing, IRS-certified payroll handling, group health insurance master plans negotiated with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, BCBS, and Kaiser at 50,000-life scale. EORs don't do master-plan benefits at PEO scale.

You want bundled HR services. PEOs include payroll + benefits + workers' comp + HR compliance + ACA reporting + EPLI policy under one contract. EORs deliver employment but typically don't bundle equivalent HR services — they're focused on the legal-entity substitution.

Group benefits buying power matters more than international flexibility. A 50-person US tech company gets 15–30% lower health premiums through a PEO master plan than they'd get solo. An EOR can't replicate that — EORs price benefits country-by-country, often at standalone rates.

Cost per US employee. PEOs run $80–$220 PEPM, which is $1,200–$2,600 per US employee per year. EORs run 10–20% of salary, which is $10,000–$20,000 per international employee at $100K compensation. PEOs are dramatically cheaper for US employees because they're aggregating across millions of US workers; EORs are per-country and don't pool to the same degree.

Most Growing Companies Use Both

The most common pattern we see at growth-stage companies: PEO for the US team, EOR for international hires. The two systems run in parallel without conflict.

A typical setup at 75 employees:

  • 50 US W-2 employees — on a PEO (Insperity, TriNet, Justworks, etc.)
  • 15 international employees across 4 countries — through an EOR (Deel or Remote)
  • 10 US 1099 contractors — through a contractor-payments platform (Deel Contractor, Wise Business, direct ACH)

Your finance team sees three separate vendor relationships; your HR team manages them through different portals. That's manageable up to ~500 employees. Above that, most companies start consolidating — either by establishing their own foreign entities (eliminating EOR fees) or moving to a single global HR platform with built-in EOR partnerships.

What's NOT a good idea. Trying to use a PEO's "global expansion" service to replace an EOR — most PEO global services are EOR partnerships layered on top, often at higher cost than going to the EOR directly. Go direct to the EOR.

PEO vs EOR Cost Comparison

For a single employee at $100K compensation:

  • PEO (US-based employee): $145 PEPM × 12 = $1,740/year in PEO fees. Plus actual benefits premium pass-through (you pay carrier rates) and workers' comp pass-through. Total PEO-attributable cost: ~$1,740–$2,600/year.
  • EOR (international employee): 12% of $100K salary = $12,000/year in EOR fees. Plus actual employer-side taxes (varies by country, typically 15–35% of gross), plus statutory benefits. Total EOR-attributable cost: ~$12,000–$15,000/year (excluding salary and statutory employer costs).

The cost gap is huge but the value proposition is different. PEO replaces in-house HR functions you'd otherwise build. EOR replaces a foreign legal entity you'd otherwise establish. Per-employee cost comparison misses the point.

For full PEO pricing breakdown including PEPM tiers and negotiation: see our PEO pricing guide.

How to Choose Between PEO and EOR

Three questions answer the PEO-vs-EOR decision cleanly:

1. Where is the employee located? US → PEO is in play. Outside US → EOR is the answer (PEO doesn't serve international).

2. Do you have a legal entity in the country/state where the employee will work? Yes → you can hire directly (and use a PEO or in-house HR for US, or your own foreign entity for international). No → EOR for that location, or establish an entity.

3. What's your headcount in that country/state? Under 5 employees per country → EOR usually wins. 5–10 employees → break-even with entity establishment depending on country. 10+ employees → typically time to establish your own entity.

The hybrid answer is more common than either-or. Most growing companies use a PEO for their US team and an EOR for international hires until they're ready to establish foreign entities. See our PEO comparisons hub for the full alternatives landscape.

PEO vs EOR side by side

Scenario PEO EOR
Legal relationship Co-employment (shared with you) Sole employment (EOR is the only employer)
Geographic scope US only (all 50 states) Country-by-country (170+ countries supported)
Best for US W-2 employees, bundled HR services International hiring, no foreign entity needed
Typical cost $80–$220+ PEPM ($1,200–$2,600/EE/year) 10–20% of salary ($10K–$20K/EE/year at $100K comp)
Benefits structure Master plan group buying power (15–30% off) Country-specific statutory + voluntary benefits
HR services bundled Payroll + benefits + WC + compliance + HRIS Employment + payroll only (HR usually separate)
Setup time 30–90 days (US PEO onboarding) 1–4 weeks per country (EOR pre-existing entities)
When you outgrow it ~250–500 EE (in-house HR pencils) ~5–10 EE per country (foreign entity pencils)
Data as of May 2026 · Methodology: how we collect benchmarks

What you get from each

PEO: Bundled US HR

Payroll, benefits, workers' comp, HR compliance, and HR tech platform under one contract. Optimized for US multi-state operations.

EOR: International Reach

Hire in 170+ countries without establishing a foreign legal entity. Avoid $50K–$200K entity setup cost per country.

PEO: Compliance Offload

Multi-state employment law guidance, ACA reporting, EPLI coverage, workers' comp at pool rates. Mature compliance teams.

EOR: Hiring Speed

New international hire can be operational in 1–4 weeks via the EOR's existing entity. No legal/tax/HR buildout required.

Other PEO vs alternatives guides

Each HR service model has a distinct decision profile. Compare PEO head-to-head against each alternative to find the right fit for your stage and situation.

PEO vs ASO
Co-employment vs administrative-only — keep your broker vs PEO master-plan bundle.
Learn more →
PEO vs Payroll Company
Full PEO bundle vs payroll-only — bundled benefits, workers' comp, compliance vs paycheck-only.
Learn more →
PEO vs In-House HR
The 250-employee crossover — when to stop renting HR and build your own team.
Learn more →
PEO vs HR Software Stack
Bundled PEO vs DIY HR stack (HRIS + broker + WC + compliance) — when each wins.
Learn more →
CPEO vs PEO
IRS-certified PEOs and the federal employment-tax protections of CPEO certification.
Learn more →
PEO vs HRO
How PEO fits in the broader HR outsourcing landscape — ASO, BPO, consulting + software.
Learn more →
PEO vs Staffing Agency
Placement vs co-employment — different models that often coexist, not compete.
Learn more →
PEO vs Benefits Broker
PEO master-plan bundle vs standalone broker — when 50,000-life buying power wins.
Learn more →
PEO vs Co-Employment
They're the same thing — co-employment IS the legal structure that makes PEO work.
Learn more →

Why PEO Metrics

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HR service options scored side by side
40+
PEOs benchmarked
850+
Companies matched to the right model
100%
Free, independent matching
How we calculate these numbers: see methodology

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Chris DeCarolis
Chris DeCarolis
Senior PEO Advisor

A Florida 220 General Lines licensed insurance professional (G038859), Chris DeCarolis brings 18+ years of PEO and group benefits expertise to PEO Metrics as Senior PEO Advisor. His placements span the full operational spectrum — from 10-person agencies to multi-state enterprises with 1,000+ employees. Chris is a graduate of Brown University.

FL 220 License (G038859) 18+ Years Experience Brown University

References & Sources

Government and industry sources referenced throughout this guide:

PEO vs EOR — common questions

Can I use a PEO and an EOR at the same time? +
Yes — and it's the most common pattern for growing companies with international teams. PEO handles your US W-2 employees (payroll, benefits, workers' comp, compliance). EOR handles your international hires (country-by-country employment, in-country benefits, local tax compliance). The two run in parallel without conflict. Most accounting and HR teams find the dual-vendor pattern manageable until 500+ total employees.
When does establishing my own foreign entity beat using an EOR? +
Roughly 5–10 employees per country. EOR fees are typically 10–20% of salary per employee. Setting up a foreign entity costs $50K–$200K upfront plus $20K–$50K/year in ongoing legal/accounting/HR compliance. Crossover math: if your EOR fees for a country exceed $60K–$80K/year, establishing your own entity usually wins. For a country where you have 5 employees at $100K each, EOR fees run $50K–$100K — right at the threshold.
Why is an EOR so much more expensive than a PEO per employee? +
PEOs aggregate across millions of US employees and amortize their operational costs across that scale. EORs maintain legal entities in 100+ countries — each entity is a discrete cost center with its own tax, payroll, and compliance overhead. The 10–20% of salary fee covers the country-by-country operational substructure, not just admin. PEOs are the most efficient HR model in the US specifically because of the scale-aggregation effect; EORs trade efficiency for geographic flexibility.
Does an EOR provide benefits like a PEO does? +
EORs provide whatever benefits are statutory in the country plus a basic voluntary benefits offering — but nothing like the master plan group buying power of a US PEO. In countries with mature national healthcare (UK, Canada, most of Europe), the EOR delivers what local employees expect (statutory pension, healthcare contribution, etc.). In countries without national healthcare or in the US, EOR benefits are typically thinner than PEO master plans because the EOR doesn't have the aggregate buying power.
Can a PEO help with international hiring at all? +
Some PEOs offer "global expansion services" — but most are EOR partnerships layered on top of the PEO's pricing, which typically costs more than going to an EOR directly. Recommended pattern: go direct to an EOR (Deel, Remote, Velocity Global) for international, keep your PEO for US. Avoid letting your PEO mark up an EOR partnership.
Does the EOR own my employee? +
Legally, the EOR is the employer of record in the country it operates in — so on paper, yes. Practically, you direct the employee's work, set their goals, and treat them as your team member. The EOR doesn't supervise their work or make hiring/firing decisions; that stays with you. The model has been used by major companies for years (Amazon, Google, Stripe all use EORs for international expansion). Misappropriation risk is low when contracts are clear.
What happens to my employees if I switch from an EOR to my own foreign entity? +
Standard pattern: when you're ready to establish your own entity, the employee transitions from the EOR's employment to your entity's employment. Most EORs help with this transition — they'll terminate from their entity and re-employ under yours, preserving tenure and benefits where local law allows. The mechanics vary by country; some countries (Germany, France) require formal employment transfer agreements; others (UK, India) are simpler. EORs charge a fee for the transition typically $1K–$3K per employee.
Can I use a PEO for US contractors (1099) too? +
No. PEOs are for W-2 employees. 1099 contractors don't go through PEO co-employment because they're not your employees. For contractor payments, use a contractor-payments platform (Deel Contractor, Wise Business, or direct ACH). For international contractors specifically, EORs like Deel offer combined contractor + EOR services in one platform.
Which EORs are best for which regions? +
For broad multi-region coverage: Deel and Remote are the market leaders, both supporting 100+ countries. For Europe-heavy: Velocity Global has strong European operations. For Asia-Pacific: Globalization Partners has deep Asian coverage. For Latin America: Remote and Deel both perform well. Pricing varies but typically clusters at 10–15% of salary for established markets, 15–25% for less common countries. EOR-vs-EOR is a separate comparison from PEO-vs-EOR — most companies pick one EOR for international coverage.
How do I model the cost of switching between PEO and EOR for the same employee? +
You typically don't — PEO and EOR serve different geographic pools. The decision is: where is this employee located, and do I have a legal entity there? US-based and no plans to relocate → PEO is in play. International, or US states where you have no presence and don't want to register → EOR. The framing "switch between" rarely applies; the framing "which one fits this hire" usually does.

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