Hiring employees from Poland: Employer of Record (EoR)
26 February 2026
26 February 2026

More and more international companies are building teams in Poland thanks to the country’s strong talent pool and flexible operating environment. The real challenge usually isn’t recruitment — it’s the question of how to hire someone in Poland legally and efficiently when you don’t have a Polish company or local HR and payroll infrastructure.
This is exactly where the Employer of Record (EoR) in Poland model comes in. It enables you to launch employment under an employee relationship (rather than a contractor model) without setting up a local legal entity — by transferring employer obligations to a Polish entity that handles HR administration, payroll, Social Insurance Institution (ZUS) compliance, and employment-related tax settlements in line with Polish labour law.
Below, we explain what EoR is, when it makes sense, how it compares to establishing your own company in Poland or using B2B contractors, what the process looks like step by step, and what costs and risks you should consider before choosing a model.
An Employer of Record (EoR) is a model in which a Polish entity becomes the formal employer of the person hired in Poland, while your foreign company uses that person’s work based on a service agreement signed with the EoR provider.
This approach is especially useful when you want to hire in Poland quickly and compliantly — without setting up a subsidiary or branch.
In practice, roles are clearly split:
EoR is not a separate “legal institution” defined directly in Polish law. It’s a practical business solution that often becomes the most efficient option when an international company:
The issue is rarely the employment contract itself — it’s the full set of employer obligations in Poland and ensuring the hiring process remains compliant with Polish regulations.
Employment performed in Poland typically triggers obligations including:
If these duties aren’t organised correctly, the risk of errors increases — and some administrative burdens may fall onto the employee (including PIT advance payments, and in certain setups also contribution-related settlements), which is often operationally unacceptable.
Even without a physical office in Poland, institutions expect timely handling of documents, corrections, and correspondence. In practice, you need:
As your team in Poland grows, broader tax topics become more important — especially assessing the risk of creating a permanent establishment (PE), and how an employee’s role may impact your business presence in Poland. In this context, it is also worth reading our article: Hiring remote employees from Poland by foreign companies – when does a permanent establishment arise?
That’s one of the key reasons EoR can remove the biggest operational barriers: the formal employer is based in Poland and takes over the HR/payroll compliance burden.
EoR should be considered alongside other options typically used when hiring from Poland. In practice, the decision usually comes down to three models:
Each model allocates employer obligations, formal risk, and fixed costs differently — so it should be aligned with your team size, the role, and your long-term plans in Poland.
The broader formal and organizational context is described in our article: Hiring employees from Poland – what foreign employers need to know. We describe the B2B cooperation model here: Hiring employees from Poland: B2B contracts.
The comparison below shows when EoR is a sensible transitional stage — and when it may be better to build your own structure in Poland from the start.
| Criterion | Employer of Record (EoR) | Your own company in Poland |
|---|---|---|
| Time to start | Usually short (days/weeks) | Longer (registration + setting up processes) |
| Fixed costs | Service fee + employment costs | Company admin costs + employment costs |
| HR & payroll compliance | Mostly on the EoR side | On your company side (or your outsourcing provider) |
| Formal control | Formally with the EoR | Formally with your company |
| Scaling | Convenient at the start and for smaller teams | Often more cost-efficient at larger scale |
| Market presence | Without a local company | Full local presence (contracts, tenders, branding) |
When EoR wins
When your own company wins
B2B contracting is popular in Poland — but it’s not always the right fit. The key difference is that in B2B you’re not employing an employee; you’re purchasing services from a business owner.
| Criterion | Employer of Record (EoR) | B2B contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Relationship type | employment | commercial cooperation (service) |
| Direction & working time | typical for employment | should be limited to avoid resembling employment |
| Labour law protection | full | not provided by default in B2B |
| Misclassification risk | lower | higher if cooperation mirrors employment |
| Best use case | stable role, long-term, continuity | projects, task-based work, flexibility |
EoR cost is best viewed as total employment cost in Poland + the EoR service fee, not as margin only.
Most common components include:
A standard EoR implementation can be adapted to your role, industry, and risk profile.
If the model assumes the worker is assigned to work for and under the direction of the client, it should be verified whether this falls under temporary agency work rules (including whether specific authorisations and registers apply).
Typically covers:
EoR is often transitional — once the team grows, some companies move to their own entity in Poland.
If you decide to move forward with setting up a local entity, explore our support in register company in Poland.
Remember: EoR reduces many compliance and admin risks, but it doesn’t eliminate all business risks. If the employee’s role affects your commercial presence or decision-making footprint in Poland, you should structure authorities and processes accordingly and assess tax risks.
For complex cross-border scenarios, get support through tax advisory in Poland.
EoR is particularly beneficial if:
Starting point: a Berlin-based tech company hires a specialist located in Poland (stable role, full-time, long-term). The company has no Polish entity, and the priority is speed and labour-law compliance.
Why not B2B: the role requires ongoing availability, integration into team processes, and continuity — so B2B would increase misclassification risk.
Solution: the company chooses EoR. The Polish entity:
Business outcome: a predictable HR/payroll process without setting up a company in Poland. After several months, with plans to grow the team, the company analyses moving to its own structure.
Before signing, verify:
An Employer of Record (EoR) in Poland is especially useful when you want to hire employees from Poland under an employment model, but you don’t yet plan to build a local structure. For many organisations, it’s also a transitional stage: it enables fast hiring now, while giving you time to prepare for establishing a Polish entity once headcount grows.
If you need support with setting up employment, preparing documentation, and structuring settlements, it’s worth combining HR/payroll implementation with tax advisory in Poland.
If you have any further questions or require additional information, please contact your business relationship person or use the enquiry form on the HLB Poland website.
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