EOR & PEO in Colombia: hire without a local entity
Colombia • July 1, 2026 • Written by: Ongresso - Business Beyond Borders
Colombia continues to be an attractive market for international companies looking to expand into Latin America, access qualified talent, and build regional operations. For many foreign businesses, the first question is not only where to hire, but how to hire employees in Colombia without creating a local company too early.
An EOR in Colombia or a PEO in Colombia can help companies enter the market more efficiently while managing employment, payroll, HR administration, and compliance through a local structure. This model is especially useful when a company wants to test the market, hire a first employee, support a commercial team, or build a local presence before incorporating an entity.
What are EOR and PEO in Colombia?
An employer of record in Colombia is a local partner that legally employs workers on behalf of a foreign company. The employee performs work for the international company, while the EOR manages local employment administration, payroll, benefits, statutory registrations, employment documentation, and related compliance matters.
A PEO in Colombia usually supports HR, payroll, and employment administration, often when the company already has or plans to have a local entity. The exact structure can vary depending on the provider, the employment model, and the country-specific requirements.
In practical terms, both models help foreign companies manage local employment obligations with professional support. The right choice depends on whether the company wants to hire before incorporation, already has a local company, or needs ongoing HR and payroll coordination.
Why does this matter in Latin America?
Hiring in Latin America requires more than signing an employment agreement. Each country has its own labor rules, tax requirements, payroll practices, social security systems, benefits, reporting obligations, and documentation standards.
For foreign companies, this creates several operational challenges. A model that works in one country may not apply in another. Employment terms, mandatory benefits, termination rules, payroll calendars, and employer obligations can vary significantly across the region.
In Colombia, companies must consider local employment practices, payroll administration, social security contributions, labor documentation, and the need to stay aligned with changing regulations. These matters should be reviewed with local specialists before hiring.
This is why many companies use an employer of record Colombia solution as a first step. It allows them to hire local talent while they evaluate the market, define their regional strategy, and decide whether setting up a local entity makes sense.
What should companies consider before hiring in Colombia?
Before using an EOR or PEO model, foreign companies should evaluate several practical and compliance-related factors:
- Hiring purpose: Define whether the role is temporary, strategic, commercial, operational, or part of a long-term expansion plan.
- Employment model: Confirm whether an EOR, PEO, contractor arrangement, or local entity is the most appropriate structure for the role and business objective.
- Local compliance: Review payroll, labor, tax, benefits, social security, and documentation requirements with local experts.
- Control and supervision: Clarify how the employee will report to the foreign company while remaining properly managed under the local employment structure.
- Entity planning: Decide whether the EOR model is a temporary market-entry solution or part of a broader plan to incorporate later.
- Payroll coordination: Ensure salaries, benefits, payments, reporting, and employee records are managed accurately and on time.
- Regional consistency: If the company is hiring in more than one Latin American country, align employment, payroll, HR, legal, and tax processes across markets.
How can Ongresso support companies hiring in Colombia?
Ongresso supports international companies that want to expand, hire, and operate in Latin America with a practical and coordinated approach.
For companies that need to hire employees in Colombia without immediately creating a local entity, Ongresso can help assess the right employment structure, coordinate local HR and payroll processes, and connect the operational, legal, labor, accounting, and tax aspects involved in the hiring process.
Ongresso’s regional experience is especially valuable for companies planning to operate across more than one Latin American country. Instead of treating each market as an isolated process, Ongresso helps companies build a coordinated expansion model that considers local execution and regional consistency.
This support may include employer of record coordination, payroll administration, HR support, legal and accounting alignment, local compliance guidance, and assistance with future entity setup when the company is ready to establish a more permanent presence.
Conclusion
EOR and PEO models in Colombia can give foreign companies a practical way to enter the market, hire local talent, and manage employment obligations before setting up a local entity. They can also reduce administrative complexity during the early stages of expansion, provided the structure is selected carefully and managed with local expertise.
For international companies, the key is not only to hire quickly. It is to hire with the right structure, maintain compliance, and connect local execution with a broader Latin America strategy.
Need support expanding into Latin America? Contact Ongresso to speak with a regional expansion specialist.
FAQs
What is an EOR in Colombia?
Can a foreign company hire employees in Colombia without a local entity?
Yes, a foreign company can often hire employees in Colombia through an employer of record model without incorporating a local company first. The correct structure should be reviewed based on the role, duration, and business activity.
What is the difference between EOR and PEO in Colombia?
An EOR usually becomes the legal employer for the worker, while a PEO typically supports HR, payroll, and employment administration when a company already has a local structure. The right option depends on the company’s expansion stage.
When should a company use an employer of record in Colombia?
An employer of record Colombia model can be useful when a company wants to test the market, hire a first employee, support sales activity, or operate before deciding whether to create a local entity.
Does an EOR replace the need for legal and tax advice?
Can Ongresso support hiring in other Latin American countries?