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A Professional Employment Organization (PEO) is a service provider that handles various HR tasks on behalf of employers through a co-employment relationship. PEOs and EORs offer HR outsourcing solutions tailored to different business needs and growth plans, providing flexibility and support in managing employees and compliance obligations.
Here's an overview of PEOs, including what they offer, how they work, their costs, advantages, and disadvantages, as well as a comparison with Employers of Record (EOR) services:
PEOs provide HR outsourcing services, including payroll processing, tax administration, regulatory compliance, recruiting, onboarding, employee benefits administration, workers' compensation coverage, candidate screening, policy templates, and more.
When a company engages with a PEO, they enter into a co-employment arrangement, where both the PEO and the client company share employer responsibilities and liabilities. The client company retains control over day-to-day operations, while the PEO assumes responsibility for administrative tasks and compliance-related matters.
PEOs typically charge an administrative fee, which can be a fixed monthly fee per employee or a percentage of the overall payroll.
PEOs complement existing HR departments by outsourcing routine tasks, freeing up HR teams to focus on strategic matters.
PEOs do not manage staffing or provide employee leasing services; recruitment responsibilities remain with the client company's HR department.
Relieves businesses of HR-related tasks.
Provides domestic compliance support.
Bolsters domestic HR functions.
Can save money in the long run.
Does not support international expansion.
Limited legal responsibility in case of international compliance issues.
Does not assist with creating employment contracts.
PEOs in the US can be certified under the CPEO program by the IRS or accredited by ESAC. Many PEOs in the US are members of NAPEO.
PEOs are co-employers, while Employers of Record (EORs) take on full legal responsibility as employers.
EORs handle legal employment and labor compliance for workers, facilitate payroll and HR tasks, and can support international hiring.
Consider a PEO if you have a local workforce and want to bolster HR functions domestically.
Consider an EOR if you plan to hire internationally and need comprehensive global payroll and compliance support.