Hiring

Contractor vs Employer of Record for Remote Engineers

Hiring an international engineer as a contractor can quietly put misclassification risk on you. Here's who carries it, and how to avoid it.

RE

Roberto Espinoza

CEO, Ruzora

June 15, 20268 min read

The fastest way to hire an engineer in another country is to put them on a contractor agreement. It's also the way that quietly loads legal risk onto your company. Before you sign a contractor on another continent, understand who carries the misclassification risk, because it's probably you.

Key Takeaways

  • Misclassifying a worker as a contractor when local law says employee triggers back taxes, benefits, and fines (Justworks).
  • With a direct contractor, your company bears the misclassification risk.
  • An Employer of Record (EOR) becomes the legal employer in-country and assumes that liability.
  • Staff augmentation through a partner that carries the in-country entity removes the problem entirely.

The Risk Hiding in a Contractor Agreement

Worker misclassification happens when you treat someone as a contractor but local labor law would consider them an employee, usually because you direct their daily work and they're effectively full-time. Getting it wrong can trigger retroactive employment taxes, statutory benefits, civil fines, and in some countries personal liability for directors (Justworks). The rules vary by country, which makes a global contractor roster a compliance minefield.

Who Actually Carries the Risk

This is the part founders miss. Under a direct contractor arrangement, your company bears the full misclassification risk. Under an EOR, a legal intermediary becomes the worker's employer in-country and assumes that liability, while you still direct the day-to-day work.

ModelWho employs the engineerWho carries misclassification risk
Direct contractorNo one (self-employed)You
Employer of RecordThe EOR, in-countryThe EOR
Staff augmentation (entity-backed)The providerThe provider

Why This Matters for Staffing

Staff augmentation done right sidesteps the whole problem: the provider carries the in-country entity, payroll, and compliance, so the engineer is properly employed and the misclassification risk isn't yours. You get the working relationship of a teammate without the legal exposure of a DIY contractor setup. We touch on this in what to check in a staff augmentation contract, and it's part of why the model fits regulated work too.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can't I just hire an overseas engineer as a contractor?

You can, but if local law would classify them as an employee, your company bears the risk: back taxes, benefits, and fines. The convenience can get expensive.

What does an Employer of Record do?

An EOR becomes the engineer's legal employer in their country, handling payroll, tax, and compliance, and assumes the misclassification liability while you direct the work.

How does staff augmentation avoid this?

A provider that carries the in-country entity employs the engineer properly, so payroll, tax, and classification are handled and the legal risk sits with the provider, not you.

The Bottom Line

A contractor agreement is the cheap option that can become the expensive one. If you're hiring engineers abroad for ongoing work, use a model where someone else legally employs them, an EOR or an entity-backed staff-aug partner, so the misclassification risk isn't sitting on your balance sheet.

Roberto Espinoza is CEO of Ruzora, which helps US startups hire pre-vetted senior LATAM engineers in 72 hours. See available engineers.

RE

Roberto Espinoza

CEO, Ruzora

Roberto is the founder and CEO of Ruzora. He works directly with US startup founders and CTOs on staff-augmentation and software-factory engagements, and personally reviews senior engineer placements.

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