Hiring in Canada often looks deceptively simple for U.S. companies. We share a language, a border, and a similar business "vibe." But assuming Canadian employment law works like a 51st state is the fastest way to land in a legal or tax quagmire.
From provincial payroll nuances to the total absence of "at-will" employment, Canada has its own rulebook.
If you want to hire a full-time Canadian employee without the headache of opening a foreign entity, an Employer of Record (EOR) is the most compliant shortcut. This guide breaks down how it works, what it costs, and the "gotchas" to watch out for.
Think of an EOR as your "legal bridge." An EOR is a Canadian company that officially employs your worker on paper, while they work for you day-to-day.
They handle the "boring but critical" back-office tasks, while you focus on the work. Specifically, a Canada EOR manages:
The Golden Rule: You manage the person and their output; the EOR manages the compliance and the liability.
The biggest mistake U.S. employers make is "copy-pasting" their American HR handbook into Canada. Here is where the two countries diverge:
This is the big one. In the U.S., you can generally part ways with an employee at any time. In Canada, at-will employment does not exist. Terminations require either "reasonable notice" or "pay in lieu of notice." If you don’t get the contract language right, a termination can become incredibly expensive.
Canada doesn't have one set of labor laws. Rules for overtime, vacation pay, and statutory holidays vary by province (Ontario vs. BC vs. Quebec). An EOR ensures you aren't accidentally breaking a law in Alberta because you were following a rule from Nova Scotia.
Starting in 2026, provinces like Ontario now require salary transparency in job postings and mandatory disclosure if AI is used in the hiring process. A local EOR can help ensure your job descriptions don't violate these new transparency standards before you even interview a candidate.
While "Unlimited PTO" is a trendy U.S. perk, Canada has strict minimums for paid vacation (usually 2-3 weeks depending on tenure) and specific "Stat" holidays that require holiday pay.
Yes, Canada has public healthcare (the "Green Card"), but it doesn't cover everything. Most Canadian professionals expect an Extended Health Care (EHC) plan that covers dental, vision, and prescription drugs. If you don't offer this, you'll struggle to attract top-tier talent.
Transparency is rare in the EOR world, but at HQ Simple, we believe it's essential. Most providers use a "Service Fee + Pass-Through" model.
A flat monthly fee per employee. If a price looks "too good to be true" (under $200/mo), check the fine print for hidden "onboarding fees" or markups, payroll costs, insurance, etc.
Just like FICA in the U.S., Canadian employers must pay:
Depending on the coverage level, expect to budget roughly $150–$300 CAD per month per employee for a competitive benefits package.
Many big-name global EORs don't actually own a company in Canada. They "subcontract" your employee to a local partner. This adds a layer of middle-man costs and slows down support.
Ask this: "Do you own your Canadian entity, or are you using a third-party partner?" Direct providers (like HQ Simple) offer faster answers and tighter compliance.
An EOR is the perfect "Scale" tool.
Canada is one of the best talent markets in the world for U.S. companies—as long as you don't trip over the paperwork. At HQ Simple, we specialize in making North American hiring seamless.
Want to see how the numbers look for your next hire?