Global Hiring Guide

Navigate employment laws and regulations across countries and jurisdictions. Access in-depth guides on hiring, contracts, taxes and more. 

Norway

Divisa

Norwegian Krone (NOK)

Idioma

Norwegian

Oman

Divisa

Omani Rial (OMR)

Idioma

Arabic

Panama

Divisa

US Dollar (USD)

Idioma

Spanish

Peru

Divisa

Peruvian Sol (PEN)

Idioma

Spanish

Poland

Divisa

Polish Zloty (PLN)

Idioma

Polish

Portugal

Divisa

Euro

Idioma

Portuguese

Qatar

Divisa

Qatari Rial (QAR)

Idioma

Arabic

Romania

Divisa

Romanian Leu (RON)

Idioma

Romanian

Saudi Arabia

Divisa

Saudi Riyal (SAR)

Idioma

Arabic

Singapore

Divisa

Singapore Dollar (SGD)

Idioma

English, Malay, Mandarin, Tamil

South Africa

Divisa

Rand

Idioma

EN

South Korea

Divisa

South Korean Won (KRW)

Idioma

Korean

Spain

Divisa

Euro

Idioma

Spanish

Sweden

Divisa

Swedish Krona (SEK)

Idioma

Swedish

Switzerland

Divisa

Swiss Franc (CHF)

Idioma

German, French, Italian

View our

United States Hiring Guide

Navigate United States employment regulations with confidence and access expert insights on compliance requirements, labor laws, and hiring best practices.

Frequently Asked Questions

Explore answers to frequently asked questions about international employment compliance and workforce management challenges. 

How can I compliantly engage independent contractors in different countries?

Properly classifying workers as employees or independent contractors is crucial to remain compliant globally. Using an employer of record (EOR) solution helps reduce co-employment risks when working with contractors overseas. They can validate contractor classification, set up proper contracts, manage payments, and ensure contractor vs. employee tests are satisfied per country.   

Misclassification can lead to severe penalties, back-owed taxes/benefits, labor disputes, damaged reputation and more. Risks include tax agency audits, class action lawsuits from workers, sanctions for breaking labor laws, inability to engage contractors long-term, and large penalty fees per misclassified worker. 

Employment laws governing hiring, firing, paid leave, minimum wage, overtime, benefits, taxes and more can vary drastically by country. Falling out of compliance, even unintentionally, opens companies up to fines, lawsuits, damage to brand reputation, inability to renew visas/licenses, and being barred from countries.   

Tax obligations depend on the country but typically include employer tax contributions like social security taxes, healthcare taxes, pension/retirement taxes, unemployment/disability funds, and withholding income/payroll taxes from employee pay. Many countries also require paid leave funding. 

Partnering with a global employment compliance expert like People2.0 is key. We constantly monitor changing regulations across countries to adjust processes. We provide localized HR expertise, update entities/contracts appropriately, attend to evolving tax/reporting duties, and implement controls to remain audit-ready.   

Termination requirements like final pay timelines, documentation, approvals, severance, and notice periods mandate careful handling per country to avoid risks. An experienced global workforce solutions partner like People2.0 can compliantly off-board per location. 

How can I offer competitive benefits packages to retain global talent?

Understanding statutory and typical supplemental benefits per country, and tailoring packages accordingly, is critical. An employer of record (EOR) partner can design compliant, market-rate packages including healthcare, retirement, leave, and perks like learning stipends to appeal to global hires. 

Requirements differ based on the hiring country and the worker’s nationality/citizenship. Rules may mandate specific visa types, work authorization documents, minimum compensation, and other qualifications for legal employment. Global partners track evolving immigration protocols.   

Leave laws range from non-existent to very generous by global standards. The US is the only developed nation with no federal paid parental leave, whereas many European companies are required to provide 6+ months partially paid maternity leave and paid paternity time. 

Using a global payroll solution such as People2.0’s that has multi-country capabilities allows companies to unite payroll data from every country into one system. This enables centralized reporting, payments in the correct currencies/cycles, consistent processes, and integration with HCM/ERP systems. 

Companies need in-country professionals fluent in HR practices, employee relations, union relationships and more. An employer of record (EOR) provides this local workforce staff while the company maintains full operational control over the employees. This ensures HR compliance without disrupting core business.