Should a startup use EOR or hire directly in Myanmar?
Use EOR for the first 1-5 Myanmar hires and any pre-DICA period — fees of USD 200-500 per employee per month avoid local-entity overhead and 6-month registration timelines. Switch to direct hire once you cross 5-10 employees and 12 months of operation, when local entity overhead is cheaper than EOR markups. Mixed model is fine while migrating.
What this looks like in practice
A Myanmar startup faces a common early-stage choice: incorporate locally and hire directly, or use an EOR (Employer of Record) for early hires. Direct hire requires DICA registration (typically 4–8 weeks for a foreign-owned entity) plus the overhead of running compliance — accounting, payroll, IRD/SSB filings, township labour register. EOR via providers like Multiplier, Deel, Rippling or local firms costs USD 200–500 per employee per month and sidesteps the registration timeline.
Decision framework
- Use EOR if: not yet incorporated; testing the market; hiring 1–5 staff for under 12 months; foreign-only founder team without local accounting capacity.
- Use direct hire if: already DICA-registered; passed 5–10 Myanmar employees; planning a 12+ month commitment; have local HR/finance capacity.
- Mixed model: EOR for 1–3 senior hires while DICA registration completes; transition to direct as the local entity comes online.
- Cost benchmark: EOR break-even is roughly 1 local HR/payroll FTE plus 1 accountant — about USD 12,000–24,000/year combined. Past 5–10 EOR seats, the EOR fee dominates.
- IP and equity: direct-hire is cleaner for IP assignment and any future equity/ESOP plans; EOR uses a tri-partite IP agreement.
Tools, templates and costs
- EOR fee: USD 200–500 per employee per month plus pass-through.
- Direct-hire overhead: cloud HRMS MMK 200,000–700,000/month + part-time bookkeeper MMK 200,000–400,000/month + annual CA MMK 200,000–500,000.
- DICA registration: timeline 4–8 weeks, fees variable by structure (private limited typical).
- Templates: EOR MSA, tri-partite IP, ESDL appointment letter, DICA registration checklist, transition plan template.
Transition planning
When transitioning from EOR to direct hire, plan for: ESDL re-issuance (the new entity issues fresh appointment letters), SSB transfer (deregister with EOR, register with new entity), PIT continuity (year-to-date carry-over for the annual reconciliation), severance treatment (EOR may credit prior service or treat the move as a fresh start — agree explicitly), and equipment transfer.
Employer takeaway
Use EOR for the first 1–5 hires and pre-DICA period. Transition to direct hire by employee 5–10 and Year 2 when local-entity overhead becomes cheaper than the EOR markup. Plan the transition explicitly — ESDL re-issuance, SSB transfer, PIT YTD carry-over and severance treatment. The single most-failed move is staying on EOR past break-even out of inertia.
Pitfalls to avoid
- Staying on EOR past 10 employees — fee dominates total cost.
- Sloppy transition — SSB lapses or PIT YTD breaks at handover.
- No tri-partite IP on EOR — deliverables ambiguity.
- EOR for short-term contractors when they should be invoiced contractors anyway — over-paying for unnecessary structure.
- Direct hire pre-DICA — you have no legal employer entity yet; either wait for registration or use EOR.
Related: what is an EOR, PEO in Myanmar, and minimum HR setup for a Myanmar startup.
- ESDL 2013 — employment agreement requirements
- Social Security Law 2012 — registration via legal employer
- Income Tax Law / Union Tax Law 2025-2026 — PAYE
- Myanmar Companies Law / DICA Notifications — incorporation timelines
Related questions
Stop calculating PIT manually.
QHRM's payroll engine applies the latest Union Tax Law brackets, basic relief, and dependant allowances automatically.