Guide
How to Hire International Employees at Scale: A Guide for Large Organizations
Employer of record
Global hiring

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Hiring international employees compliantly — at scale, across multiple regions — is one of the most complex challenges large organizations face. Whether you're testing a new market, integrating talent after an acquisition, or trying to standardize payroll processes across locations, the stakes are high and the admin overhead can be enormous.
Partnering with an Employer of Record (EOR) can simplify all of it. An EOR lets you hire fast, stay compliant with local labor laws in every country you operate in, and avoid the cost and complexity of setting up your own entities.
This guide walks through the key business scenarios where an EOR like Deel can help large organizations achieve operational efficiency, reduce hiring costs, and access global talent — employed compliantly, no matter where they're based.
What this guide covers
Wondering what's inside? Here's what you'll find:
- How hiring through an Employer of Record addresses the specific compliance and scale needs of large organizations
- What to look for when evaluating EOR options — including the critical difference between wholly-owned and aggregator models
- How Deel's holistic approach to global workforce management makes it the right fit for enterprise hiring
Who will benefit
This guide is for you if you're a decision-maker at a large organization dealing with any of the following:
- People and HR leaders navigating compliance across multiple jurisdictions and trying to deliver a consistent employee experience worldwide
- Finance and operations teams looking to consolidate HR tech spend and reduce payroll admin overhead
- Legal and compliance teams managing permanent establishment risk, local labor law obligations, and cross-border data security
- Business leaders looking to enter new markets quickly or retain talent acquired through a merger or acquisition
FAQs
What is an Employer of Record, and how does it work?
An Employer of Record is a third-party organization that legally employs workers on your behalf in countries where you don't have a registered entity. The EOR handles payroll, taxes, statutory benefits, and compliance with local labor laws — while you retain full control over your team's day-to-day work and responsibilities.
How do large companies hire international employees without setting up a local entity?
Partnering with an EOR is the most common approach for large organizations that want to hire in new markets without the time and cost of entity establishment. The EOR already holds legal entities in the relevant countries, so it can onboard employees quickly — often within days — while ensuring full compliance with local employment laws and tax regulations.
How does Deel's EOR help large companies manage global hiring at scale?
Deel's EOR provides owned legal entities in 100+ countries and in-house payroll, compliance, and immigration expertise. Large organizations can manage their entire global workforce — direct employees, EOR employees, and international contractors — from a single platform, with localized onboarding workflows, automated payroll, and dedicated customer success support.
Should a large company use an EOR or establish its own entities internationally?
For organizations testing new markets, integrating acquired talent, or hiring across several countries simultaneously, an EOR is typically faster and more cost-effective than entity establishment. Once headcount in a specific country grows significantly and long-term commitment is certain, establishing a local entity may make sense — but an EOR remains the lower-risk starting point and an effective bridge while that process runs.
Can an EOR help with post-merger talent integration?
Yes. One of the most common enterprise use cases for EOR services is retaining employees from countries where the acquiring company has no registered entity. An EOR allows organizations to keep those team members employed compliantly while they work through the longer process of entity consolidation or restructuring.
What compliance risks does an EOR protect against for international hires?
An EOR protects organizations from several key risks: worker misclassification (which can trigger back-pay liability and tax penalties), permanent establishment exposure, and non-compliance with local statutory benefits and termination rules. Deel's in-house legal and compliance teams monitor regulatory changes across every country, so your organization doesn't have to.