EOR, AOR, and PEO differences
Choosing the right hiring model depends on who becomes the legal employer, where compliance responsibility sits, and whether you already have a local entity.
EOR
Employer of Record
Best for
Hiring employees in countries where you don't have a local entity.
An Employer of Record becomes the worker's legal employer on paper. The EOR handles local employment compliance—such as payroll, taxes, statutory benefits, and locally required employment terms—while you manage the person's day-to-day work.
Key Points
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EOR is the legal employer
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Enables hiring without opening a local entity
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Manages local payroll, tax filings, and statutory benefits
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You retain work direction and performance
AOR
Agent of Record
Best for
When you need an authorized agent to manage a specific compliance or administrative scope.
An Agent of Record acts as an authorized representative for defined functions (for example, managing process and documentation, coordinating compliance steps, or administering payroll as an agent). In most structures, the AOR is not the legal employer—the legal employer may remain you or another party depending on how engagement is set up.
Key Points
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Typically not the legal employer
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Operates under a defined scope (acts as your agent)
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Often used for contractor/staffing administration
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Compliance responsibility depends on the structure
PEO
Professional Employer Organization
Best for
Companies with an existing local entity that want to outsource HR operations.
A Professional Employer Organization supports employment through a co-employment model (most commonly in the US). You keep your entity and maintain control of business operations and employment decisions, while the PEO helps administer payroll, HR processes, and often benefits.
Key Points
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You have (or need) a local entity
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Uses a co-employment model (jurisdiction-dependent)
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PEO typically supports payroll, HR administration, and benefits
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You remain responsible for day-to-day management
EOR
Employer of Record
Best for
Hiring employees in countries where you don't have a local entity.
An Employer of Record becomes the worker's legal employer on paper. The EOR handles local employment compliance—such as payroll, taxes, statutory benefits, and locally required employment terms—while you manage the person's day-to-day work.
Key Points
-
EOR is the legal employer
-
Enables hiring without opening a local entity
-
Manages local payroll, tax filings, and statutory benefits
-
You retain work direction and performance
AOR
Agent of Record
Best for
When you need an authorized agent to manage a specific compliance or administrative scope.
An Agent of Record acts as an authorized representative for defined functions (for example, managing process and documentation, coordinating compliance steps, or administering payroll as an agent). In most structures, the AOR is not the legal employer—the legal employer may remain you or another party depending on how engagement is set up.
Key Points
-
Typically not the legal employer
-
Operates under a defined scope (acts as your agent)
-
Often used for contractor/staffing administration
-
Compliance responsibility depends on the structure
PEO
Professional Employer Organization
Best for
Companies with an existing local entity that want to outsource HR operations.
A Professional Employer Organization supports employment through a co-employment model (most commonly in the US). You keep your entity and maintain control of business operations and employment decisions, while the PEO helps administer payroll, HR processes, and often benefits.
Key Points
-
You have (or need) a local entity
-
Uses a co-employment model (jurisdiction-dependent)
-
PEO typically supports payroll, HR administration, and benefits
-
You remain responsible for day-to-day management
Which one should you choose?
- Choose EOR if you want to hire internationally without setting up a local entity.
- Choose AOR if you need an authorized agent to manage a defined compliance or administrative scope.
- Choose PEO if you already have a local entity and want HR/payroll/benefits support.
Quick Comparison
Service Type
EOR
Employer of Record
AOR
Agent of Record
PEO
Professional Employer Organization
Legal & Entity
Best For
Hire with the right model
Whether you need an EOR, AOR, or PEO, we’ll help you choose the right setup for your team, your business, and risk tolerance.
FAQ
The biggest difference is who is the legal employer and how responsibilities are allocated.
- EOR: the provider is the legal employer (commonly used when you don’t have a local entity).
- PEO: co-employment support (commonly used when you do have a local entity).
- AOR: an authorized agent for a defined scope; the legal employer depends on the engagement structure.
Use an EOR when you want to hire employees in a country where you don’t have a local entity, and you want the provider to manage local employment compliance (payroll, taxes, statutory benefits, employment documentation).
Use a PEO when you already have a local entity and want help managing HR administration, payroll processes, and often benefits—typically through a co-employment model (jurisdiction-dependent).
Use an AOR when you need an authorized agent to manage a specific administrative/compliance scope (for example, documentation workflows, coordination with local partners, or program administration). AOR responsibilities vary based on the contract and jurisdiction.
EOR: typically no.
PEO: typically yes.
AOR: depends on how your engagement is structured and what the AOR covers.
EOR: usually managed by the EOR as the legal employer
PEO: typically administered by the PEO, with responsibilities shared
AOR: may administer payroll as an agent depending on scope; the legal employer remains accountable for statutory obligations unless contractually transferred where permitted
Responsibility depends on the model and what each party controls.
- EOR: provider holds employer-of-record obligations; you retain day-to-day management responsibilities
- PEO: shared responsibilities; you remain responsible for business operations and employment decisions
- AOR: limited to the defined agency scope; core employer liability usually remains with the legal employer
Timelines vary by country and worker type. In general, EOR and AOR setups can start quickly once worker details and required documentation are available; PEO timing often depends on entity readiness and benefits enrollment.
Usually: countries, employee vs contractor, start date, headcount, whether you have a local entity, and any needs around benefits, equity, or data/security requirements.