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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Cross-Border Employment: Challenges & Solutions

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Supervisado por Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Escribano Administrativo Autorizado, JapónTodo el contenido de MmowW está supervisado por un experto en cumplimiento normativo con licencia nacional.
Hiring internationally? MmowW Scrib🐮 explains work permits, employment contracts, and compliance challenges across UK, France, Sweden, Australia, NZ, Canada, and USA. Cross-border employment is a rapidly growing feature of the modern business landscape, accelerated by remote work. It is also one of the most compliance-dense areas a growing business will encounter. Unlike domestic hiring, international employment simultaneously implicates immigration law, employment law, tax law, and corporate law — often in multiple jurisdictions at once.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Employing people in another country triggers visa and work permit requirements, mandatory local employment law protections, payroll registration, and potential permanent establishment risks — all of which must be addressed before the employee starts work.

What You Need to Know

Cross-border employment is a rapidly growing feature of the modern business landscape, accelerated by remote work. It is also one of the most compliance-dense areas a growing business will encounter. Unlike domestic hiring, international employment simultaneously implicates immigration law, employment law, tax law, and corporate law — often in multiple jurisdictions at once.

The core challenge is that employment law is territorial. The country where the employee physically works sets the floor for their rights — minimum wage, holiday entitlement, notice periods, anti-discrimination protections — regardless of what the employment contract says. Layered on top of this are immigration requirements, which determine whether the employee has the legal right to work in that country in the first place.

MmowW Scrib🐮 helps businesses prepare the documentation required at each step of the cross-border hiring process. For immigration advice and employment contract drafting, always consult a qualified attorney licensed in the relevant jurisdiction.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

The Four Core Challenges

Challenge 1: Work Authorization

Before an employee can legally work in a foreign country, they need the right to do so. For EU/EEA citizens working within the Schengen area (pre-Brexit), this was automatic. Post-Brexit, UK citizens need work authorization in EU countries and vice versa. Non-citizens almost universally need a visa or work permit.

Common work authorization pathways:

Sponsoring a foreign national for a work visa typically requires the employer to be registered as a sponsor with the immigration authority. In the UK, this means a Sponsor Licence from the Home Office (gov.uk/uk-visa-sponsorship-employers). In the USA, employer sponsorship for H-1B visas requires filing with USCIS (uscis.gov).

Challenge 2: Employment Contract Compliance

Employment contracts must comply with local law, which typically includes:

Challenge 3: Permanent Establishment Risk

If an employee works from a foreign country on an ongoing basis, their activities may constitute a "permanent establishment" (PE) of your company in that country for tax purposes. A PE triggers an obligation to file tax returns and pay corporate tax in that country on profits attributable to the PE. A single remote employee can inadvertently create PE exposure. This risk should be assessed by a tax advisor before hiring remotely across borders.

Challenge 4: Social Security and Benefits

Which country's social security system applies to a cross-border worker? Generally, the country where the employee works. Bilateral social security agreements (totalization agreements) can modify this for temporary postings — an employee posted from the USA to Australia for two years might remain covered by US Social Security rather than Australian superannuation. The specifics are determined by the applicable treaty.

The Employer of Record Solution

For businesses that want to hire internationally without establishing a legal entity, an Employer of Record (EOR) service engages the employee on your behalf under their local entity while you retain operational control. The EOR handles payroll, benefits administration, and local compliance. This is typically faster and cheaper than entity setup for small headcounts (1–5 employees) but carries ongoing per-employee fees.

Use our free tool: Cost Calculator

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Skilled Worker Visa Minimum Annual Leave Notice Period (statutory minimum) Unfair Dismissal Protection Starts
🇬🇧 UK Skilled Worker Visa; sponsor licence required (gov.uk/skilled-worker-visa) 28 days (incl. bank holidays) 1 week (after 1 month), up to 12 weeks After 2 years employment
🇫🇷 France Work permit via OFII (ofii.fr) 25 working days Varies by collective agreement From day one (probationary rules apply)
🇸🇪 Sweden Work permit via Migrationsverket (migrationsverket.se) 25 days 1–6 months depending on seniority After 6 months employment
🇦🇺 Australia Employer-sponsored visa (TSS 482) via Home Affairs (homeaffairs.gov.au) 20 days + public holidays 1–5 weeks depending on service After 6 months (small business: 12 months)
🇳🇿 New Zealand Accredited Employer Work Visa via Immigration NZ (immigration.govt.nz) 20 days + public holidays No statutory minimum notice After 90 days (trial period)
🇨🇦 Canada LMIA or LMIA-exempt work permit via IRCC (canada.ca/en/immigration) 2 weeks (federal) Reasonable notice (common law) Varies by province
🇺🇸 USA H-1B or O-1 via USCIS (uscis.gov); employer sponsorship required No federal minimum (state law varies) At-will employment (most states) Varies; at-will states have few protections

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Allowing an employee to start work before visa approval. Working without proper authorization is an immigration violation that can result in the employee's deportation and the employer facing fines or losing their sponsor licence. Always confirm authorization before the start date.
  2. Using a home-country employment contract for overseas workers. Home-country contracts routinely violate local law in the target jurisdiction — particularly around notice periods, holiday entitlement, and termination procedures. This does not make the contract void; it means the illegal clauses are replaced by statutory minimums, often to the employer's disadvantage.
  3. Misclassifying a remote employee as a contractor to avoid compliance. This is among the most litigated employment law issues globally. If the worker has the characteristics of an employee (fixed hours, direction and control, economic dependence), they will likely be reclassified as one, with backdated obligations. Consult a qualified attorney before making this classification.
  4. Not checking collective bargaining agreement (CBA) coverage. In France and Sweden in particular, sector-wide collective agreements (conventions collectives) automatically apply to employers in that sector. These set minimum pay, benefits, and working conditions that override individual contracts. Check which CBA applies to your industry.
  5. Ignoring data protection in employee records. Cross-border transfer of employee personal data (payroll data, performance reviews, contact details) is regulated. Transferring EU employee data to non-EU servers requires a GDPR-compliant transfer mechanism (adequacy decision, Standard Contractual Clauses, or similar).

Next Steps: Get Started Today

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. Always consult a qualified attorney licensed in the relevant jurisdiction for immigration and employment matters.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can my employee work remotely from another country without any immigration or tax complications?

A: Rarely. Working remotely from another country almost always implicates that country's immigration law (the employee needs work authorization) and tax law (their income is typically taxable where they work). It may also trigger corporate tax obligations for you as the employer. The only common exceptions are very short-term visits (a few days of business meetings) and countries with specific digital nomad visas. Consult a qualified attorney before approving extended remote work from another country.

Q: What is an intra-company transfer visa and when does it apply?

A: An intra-company transfer (ICT) visa allows multinational companies to move employees between affiliated entities in different countries. The employee must typically have been employed by the group for a minimum period (often 1–12 months) and must be in a qualifying role (managerial, specialist). ICT visas generally have duration limits and may not lead to permanent residency. Check the specific rules with the immigration authority in the destination country.

Q: How do I terminate a foreign employee legally?

A: Termination law varies dramatically. In at-will states in the USA, employment can generally be terminated without cause and without notice (unless the contract says otherwise). In France and Sweden, dismissal requires a substantive reason, a specific procedural process, and often significant notice or severance pay. In Australia, unfair dismissal protection kicks in after 6 months. Always consult a qualified employment attorney in the employee's jurisdiction before initiating termination.

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