Článek o zdroji
Hiring your first European employee: a step-by-step employer guide
A practical playbook for non-European founders and HR teams hiring their first employee in an EU or EEA country: choosing the right entity model, registering with the tax and social security authorities, drafting a compliant employment contract and avoiding the most common rookie mistakes.
Co se naučíte
- Decide how you will employ: own entity, EOR or contractor
- Registrations with tax and social security authorities
- Drafting a compliant employment contract
- Common mistakes new European employers make
Decide how you will employ: own entity, EOR or contractor
Before hiring anyone in Europe, decide on the legal employment model. The three main options are setting up your own legal entity in the country, working with an Employer of Record (EOR) that hires the employee on your behalf, or engaging the worker as an independent contractor. Each has different cost, control and risk profiles.
Setting up your own entity (typically a GmbH in Germany, SARL in France, BV in the Netherlands, SL in Spain) gives you the most control and the lowest per-employee cost at scale, but the upfront and ongoing administrative burden is significant. Expect three to six months of preparation, several thousand euros of initial registration costs and an ongoing requirement for local accounting, payroll and legal support. The threshold below which an EOR is more economical is typically around five to ten full-time employees in the country.
An Employer of Record charges a monthly fee per employee (typically four to six hundred euros) and handles all the local employment paperwork, payroll filing and compliance. The trade-off is reduced control over the employment relationship and a higher per-head cost. EORs are the right choice for the first one to five employees in a new country, particularly while you assess whether the market justifies a permanent investment.
Engaging a worker as an independent contractor is the simplest option administratively but carries significant misclassification risk. Most European jurisdictions apply a multi-factor test that looks at exclusivity, integration into the team, supervision and control. A worker who functions as an employee in practice but is paid as a contractor can trigger retroactive social security and income tax liability for the company, often with multi-year back pay.
Registrations with tax and social security authorities
Once you have chosen an entity model, you need to register the entity (or the EOR needs to confirm your account) with the relevant tax authority for income tax withholding (PAYE in Ireland and the UK, Lohnsteuer in Germany, prélèvement à la source in France) and with the social security authority for employer and employee contributions. Each country has its own portal and timeline; allow two to six weeks for the full set of registrations to complete.
Many countries also require registration with a workplace accident insurance carrier (BG in Germany, CARSAT in France, INAIL in Italy), which is a separate administrative step from the social security registration. Some countries require registration with an occupational medical service before the first employee starts (médecine du travail in France, Arbeitsmedizinischer Dienst in Germany).
If your entity does not yet have a local bank account, open one before the first payroll cycle. SEPA payments from a bank account outside the country are technically possible but produce administrative friction and occasional failed payments at month-end, particularly if the receiving bank applies stricter validation rules.
Drafting a compliant employment contract
European employment contracts must contain the mandatory information set out in the EU Transparent and Predictable Working Conditions Directive: identity of the parties, place of work, job description, start date, duration (if fixed-term), notice periods, paid leave entitlement, working hours, salary and frequency of payment, and reference to the applicable collective agreement. National implementations add country-specific requirements such as trial period limits, non-compete clauses and remote work provisions.
Use a template from a local employment lawyer or from your EOR rather than starting from a US or UK template. Anglo-Saxon at-will employment concepts do not translate to European labour law, and a contract that omits mandatory clauses or misstates the applicable collective agreement creates risk for both parties. Many countries provide an official template through the labour ministry that can be a useful starting point.
Pay particular attention to the trial period (período de prueba in Spain, période d'essai in France, Probezeit in Germany), which is the most flexible window of the relationship. Trial period maximum durations vary widely (typically one to six months depending on country and seniority), and once the trial period ends, the protective rules of national employment law fully apply.
Common mistakes new European employers make
The most common rookie mistake is underestimating the gap between gross salary and full employer cost. As a working approximation across most EU countries, full employer cost runs at 1.20 to 1.45 times the gross salary depending on the country, the salary level and the applicable collective agreement. Budgeting on gross alone produces a systematic twenty to thirty percent underestimate.
The second common mistake is treating notice periods as a US-style at-will arrangement. European notice periods are statutory minimums that increase with seniority and tenure, and they are typically combined with a formal dismissal procedure that requires written justification, employee consultation and sometimes administrative authorisation. A separation that ignores the procedure can produce significant compensation liability even if the substantive grounds were valid.
The third common mistake is failing to register with the works council or staff representative body where applicable. Some countries require staff representation above small workforce thresholds (Betriebsrat in Germany above five employees, comité social et économique in France above eleven), and certain HR decisions require formal consultation before they can be implemented.
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