What it really costs, EOR vs contractor vs entity, and how the timezone math works out
Hiring a full-time employee in Singapore costs employers roughly 17% on top of gross
salary in mandatory employer contributions, plus an EOR platform fee of $400–$699/month
if you hire without a local entity. Singapore sits in UTC+8, giving
roughly 1 hours of workday overlap with Central Europe teams.
Employer cost
+17%
on gross salary
EOR fee
$400–699/mo
published list prices
Currency
SGD
Local payroll currency
Infrastructure
excellent internet
High cost of living
What it costs to employ someone in Singapore
Mandatory employer contributions in Singapore add roughly 17% on
top of gross salary, before the EOR platform fee. This is the statutory structure — a vendor quote
for your exact salary is always authoritative.
Employer CPF is 17% of Ordinary Wages for employees aged 55 and below, BUT applies ONLY to Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents — foreign work-pass (EP/S-Pass/Work-Permit) holders get NO CPF (0%). A remote local hire typically IS a citizen/PR. CPF is CAPPED: the Ordinary Wage ceiling is SGD 8,000/month (from 1 Jan 2026), so max employer CPF is ~SGD 1,360/month; on a developer salary above the ceiling the EFFECTIVE rate falls below 17% (e.g. ~11.3% on SGD 12,000/mo). Add the Skills Development Levy (SDL) 0.25% of wages, capped at SGD 11.25/month. FWL (foreign worker levy) excluded.
Annual employer cost via an EOR, using the sourced contribution range and published platform fees
($400–$699/mo).
Gross salary
$60,000
Statutory employer contributions (17%)
$10,200
EOR platform fee (12 months)
$4,800–$8,388
Total annual employer cost
$75,000–$78,588
Estimate your all-in cost to hire
Rough annual employer cost = gross salary + mandatory employer contributions (a range) + the EOR platform fee.
This is a structure, not a quote — a vendor quote for your exact country and salary is always authoritative.
Estimated total annual employer cost
—
Gross salary
—
Statutory employer cost
—
EOR platform fee
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We publish a sourced employer-cost range for 41 well-documented countries. For others, statutory
employer costs vary too much to estimate honestly here — request a quote from an EOR platform below, which prices
your exact country and salary in one line item.
Statutory ranges are approximate mandatory employer contributions, each verified against a fetched primary
source (PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries, government pages, or EOR provider guides — retrieved July 2026) and
excluding one-off items (13th-month pay, 14-payment structures, salary caps), which are flagged per country above.
Platform fees are list prices verified 2026-07-08. See our
methodology for how these are sourced.
Workday overlap with your team
Hours a 9–5 workday in Singapore (UTC+8) overlaps a 9–5 day in common hiring hubs. DST can shift these by an hour.
An EOR is the legal employer in Singapore on your behalf — it runs compliant payroll, benefits, and contracts while the person works for you day-to-day. Typical platform pricing is a flat monthly fee per employee. This is the standard route when you don't have an entity in Singapore and want a full employee rather than a contractor.
Best for: Full-time hires, no local entity, started in days not months
Independent contractor
Most flexible
The person invoices you as a self-employed contractor. Lighter and cheaper to set up, but misclassification — treating someone like an employee while paying them as a contractor — carries real penalties in most jurisdictions. The longer and more exclusive the engagement, the weaker the contractor argument gets.
Best for: Project work, part-time engagements, genuinely independent professionals
Local entity
Long-term scale
Incorporating in Singapore gives you full control and is usually cheapest per-employee at scale, but expect months of setup, local accounting, and ongoing filings. Rarely worth it below roughly five hires in one country.
Best for: Committed long-term presence, 5+ employees in-country
How an EOR hire in Singapore proceeds
1Pick the structureFull-time ongoing role → EOR. Genuinely independent project work → contractor. Five-plus committed hires → consider your own entity.
2Get country-specific quotesAsk two or three platforms to quote Singapore at your actual salary — statutory costs and benefits packages make per-country totals differ from list price.
3The EOR issues a compliant local contractThe platform's Singapore entity becomes the legal employer; you keep day-to-day direction of the work.
4Onboarding and payroll startBecause the local entity already exists, onboarding is measured in days rather than the months an entity setup takes. Payroll, contributions, and filings run through the platform from the first cycle.
EOR platforms covering Singapore
All three are established global platforms — compare quotes for Singapore specifically, since per-country pricing and benefits packages differ.
What to verify before your first hire in Singapore
Employment cost beyond salary — employer contributions, mandatory benefits, and 13th-month rules vary by country. Get the fully-loaded number from your EOR quote for Singapore, not a global average.
Notice periods and termination rules — many countries are far stricter than US at-will employment. Confirm the specifics in writing before extending an offer.
Contractor misclassification exposure — if the role is full-time, ongoing, and directed by you, most jurisdictions treat it as employment regardless of the invoice arrangement.
Currency and payment expectations — candidates in Singapore may expect SGD or USD; agree on the currency and who absorbs conversion costs up front.
IP assignment and confidentiality — make sure the employment or contractor agreement assigns work product under enforceable local terms.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to hire an employee in Singapore?
Mandatory employer contributions in Singapore run roughly 17% on top of gross salary. On a $60,000 salary that is about $10,200 per year in statutory costs, plus an EOR platform fee of $400–$699/month ($4,800–$8,388/year) if you hire without a local entity — an all-in total of roughly $75,000–$78,588. Employer CPF is 17% of Ordinary Wages for employees aged 55 and below, BUT applies ONLY to Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents — foreign work-pass (EP/S-Pass/Work-Permit) holders get NO CPF (0%). A remote local hire typically IS a citizen/PR. CPF is CAPPED: the Ordinary Wage ceiling is SGD 8,000/month (from 1 Jan 2026), so max employer CPF is ~SGD 1,360/month; on a developer salary above the ceiling the EFFECTIVE rate falls below 17% (e.g. ~11.3% on SGD 12,000/mo). Add the Skills Development Levy (SDL) 0.25% of wages, capped at SGD 11.25/month. FWL (foreign worker levy) excluded.
Do I need a local entity to hire in Singapore?
No. An Employer of Record (EOR) already has a legal entity in Singapore and employs the person on your behalf — running compliant payroll, benefits, and contracts — while they work for you day-to-day. Opening your own entity usually only makes sense once you commit to roughly five or more hires in the country.
Should I hire in Singapore through an EOR or as a contractor?
For an ongoing, full-time role that you direct, an EOR is the structurally safer default — most jurisdictions treat that working relationship as employment regardless of how the invoice is written, and misclassification penalties fall on you. A contractor arrangement remains reasonable for genuinely independent, project-based work.
What do EOR platforms charge to hire in Singapore?
Published list prices as of July 2026: Multiplier $400/month, Deel $599/month, Remote.com and Oyster HR $699/month per employee; Papaya Global quotes per engagement. Per-country quotes can differ from list price, so compare quotes for Singapore specifically.