PEO vs EOR vs Direct Entity Decision Tool: Find Your Best Remote China Entry Model

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PEO vs EOR vs Direct Entity Decision Tool: Find Your Best Remote China Entry Model


PEO vs EOR vs Direct Entity Decision Tool: Find Your Best Remote China Entry Model

The PEO (Professional Employer Organization) vs EOR (Employer of Record) vs Direct Entity decision tool compares 3 remote China entry models across 8 critical dimensions to help you select the right structure in under 15 minutes. Each model carries different cost profiles, timelines, and compliance exposures. Choosing wrong can cost your business $15,000–30,000 in rework and 4–6 months of lost market time.

What This Tool Does

This tool scores and ranks PEO, EOR, and Direct Entity (WFOE/Representative Office) against your specific situation. You assess 8 dimensions — headcount, control needs, timeline, budget, compliance appetite, industry restrictions, local revenue plans, and scalability — and the tool surfaces your best-fit model.

A PEO co-employs your staff through a local partner. An EOR acts as the legal employer and handles all compliance. A Direct Entity (Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise 外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè or Representative Office 代表处, dàibiǎo chù) gives you full control but requires the heaviest setup.

Cost Categories

1. Setup costs. PEO and EOR charge $3,000–8,000 in one-time setup fees. A WFOE costs $15,000–30,000 in legal, notarization, and registration fees. That is a 4–5x difference before you hire your first employee.

2. Ongoing costs. PEO and EOR charge a 12–18% payroll markup. On a $100,000 annual payroll, expect $12,000–18,000 in fees. Direct entity costs run lower per head — around $2,000–5,000 for compliance overhead — but you pay fixed office rent and accounting regardless of headcount.

3. Time to operational. PEO and EOR get your first employee working in 2–4 weeks. A WFOE takes 10–16 weeks. For a company needing to hire in Q3, that means Q4 versus Q1 of next year.

4. Compliance risk. PEO and EOR intermediaries assume most employment liability. With a direct entity, you own every compliance obligation — social insurance, housing provident fund, tax filings, and labour law. Non-compliance penalties in China can reach RMB 10,000–50,000 per infraction.

Sample Calculation Table

Scenario Best Fit Model Setup Cost Annual Operating Cost Time to First Hire
Early-stage startup (3 staff, no China revenue) EOR $5,000 $14,400 (15% on $96k payroll) 3 weeks
Mid-market manufacturer (15 staff, plans to bill locally) Direct Entity (WFOE) $22,000 $45,000 (office + compliance) 14 weeks
Established distributor (8 staff, trial market) PEO $4,000 $10,800 (12% on $90k payroll) 2 weeks

How to Use This Tool

  1. Assess your headcount. If you plan 1–5 employees in year one, EOR or PEO is usually cheaper. Above 10 headcount, a WFOE becomes cost-competitive within 18 months.
  2. Evaluate control needs. Do you need a China bank account, VAT invoicing capability, or direct client contracts? Both require a Direct Entity. PEO and EOR cannot issue Chinese fapiao (发票) invoices or sign local revenue contracts.
  3. Consider your timeline. If you need staff in China within 30 days, eliminate Direct Entity. Only PEO and EOR can get you operational that fast. If you have 4+ months, all models remain viable.
  4. Compare total cost over 24 months. Run the all-in numbers: setup + 2 years of operating fees + any termination costs. For 5 employees, an EOR at 15% markup costs ~$36,000 over 2 years. A WFOE costs ~$52,000. But the WFOE lets you sign local contracts and capture China revenue.
  5. Decide and execute. Once your model is selected, engage a China-focused corporate service provider. Ask for a fixed-price quote that includes all government fees. Avoid providers who quote only “estimated” costs.

Key Assumptions

  • Industry restrictions apply. Check the Foreign Investment Negative List before choosing any model. Some sectors (education, media, telecom) limit foreign ownership and may require a joint venture structure regardless.
  • PEO and EOR services vary by province. Shanghai and Beijing have the most providers. Tier 2 cities have fewer options and sometimes higher markups.
  • Tax implications differ by model. Direct entities can expense costs in China and reduce double taxation. PEO and EOR fees are usually expensed in your home country. Consult a cross-border tax advisor.
  • Termination clauses matter. Some EOR contracts lock you into 12-month minimums with 60-day notice periods. Read the exit terms carefully before signing.
  • Your bank’s correspondent banking relationship with China may affect fund transfers. Confirm your home bank can send RMB to PEO/EOR accounts before committing.

Where to Go From Here

Based on what you just read:

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.


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