TL;DR: Hiring your first employee triggers a cascade of legal obligations — from registering as an employer to obtaining insurance, setting up payroll, and providing a safe workplace. Getting these right from day one prevents costly penalties and protects your new employee. This guide covers every obligation across 7 countries.
Disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. This guide is for general informational purposes only. Employment obligations vary significantly by jurisdiction. Always consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney for advice specific to your situation.
When you make your first hire, you cross a legal threshold that creates obligations in several separate areas:
Many of these obligations arise before the employee's first day — not after. Plan at least 4–6 weeks before the proposed start date.
Why it matters: Failing to register as an employer before your first pay date can result in penalties, interest on unpaid contributions, and gap years in the employee's social security record.
What to do:
Deadlines:
Why it matters: In most jurisdictions, you are legally required to provide employees with written documentation of their terms and conditions — and in some countries, this must happen before employment begins.
| Country | Requirement | Deadline | Legislation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | Written statement of employment particulars | Day 1 | Employment Rights Act 1996 |
| 🇫🇷 France | Written contract for CDD (fixed-term); recommended for CDI | Before commencement | Code du travail |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Written information on terms | Within 1 month | Employment Protection Act (LAS) |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Fair Work Information Statement | On or before first day | Fair Work Act 2009 |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | Written employment agreement | Before work commences | Employment Relations Act 2000 |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Province-specific requirements | Varies | Provincial ESA |
| 🇺🇸 USA | No federal requirement | N/A | State law varies |
Why it matters: If your employee is injured at work or develops an illness as a result of their work, you may be legally liable. Insurance protects both you and your employee.
| Country | Insurance Required? | Type | Where to Obtain | Penalty for Non-Compliance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | Yes — mandatory | Employers' Liability Insurance (min £5m cover) | Licensed insurer | Fine up to £2,500/day uninsured |
| 🇫🇷 France | Yes — via complementary health (mutuelle) and accident at work | AT/MP (accident du travail/maladie professionnelle) contributions via URSSAF | Automatic via URSSAF contributions | Penalties for non-declaration |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Yes — occupational injury insurance typically through collective agreement | Trygghetsförsäkring (TFA) | AFA Försäkring or equivalent | Employer bears full liability if uninsured |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Yes — workers' compensation | State-based WorkCover scheme | State WorkCover authority | Significant fines; director liability |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | Yes — ACC levies | Accident Compensation (no-fault scheme) | ACC automatically via IRD | Penalties for non-payment of ACC levies |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Yes — workers' compensation | Provincial WCB/WSIB | Provincial workers' compensation board | Penalties and director liability |
| 🇺🇸 USA | Yes — workers' compensation (all states except TX) | State-based scheme | State-licensed insurer or state fund | State penalties; personal liability |
UK note: Employers' Liability insurance must be displayed at the workplace (or made available to employees electronically). The certificate must be kept for 40 years.
Why it matters: Employers have a duty of care to provide a safe working environment. Failure to meet health and safety obligations can result in criminal prosecution in serious cases.
Universal obligations (all 7 countries):
Country-specific requirements:
Why it matters: In most countries, employers are required to make contributions to employee retirement savings — not just facilitate the employee doing so themselves.
| Country | Mandatory Pension / Retirement | Employer Contribution Rate | Scheme |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | Workplace pension (auto-enrolment) for eligible workers | Min 3% of qualifying earnings | Any qualifying pension scheme |
| 🇫🇷 France | Statutory pension (AGIRC-ARRCO) via URSSAF | ~16–30% of salary (combined employer/employee) | Mandatory via payroll charges |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | ITP occupational pension (white collar); SAF-LO (blue collar) via collective agreement | ~4.5–30% depending on tier | AFA Försäkring / Collectum |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Superannuation Guarantee (SG) | 11% of ordinary time earnings (rising to 12% by 2025) | Employee's nominated super fund |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | KiwiSaver | Min 3% of gross earnings | KiwiSaver provider |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | CPP (Canada Pension Plan) / QPP (Quebec) | ~5.95% of pensionable earnings (matched) | Remitted to CRA |
| 🇺🇸 USA | Social Security | 6.2% of wages up to wage base (matched by employer) | Remitted to IRS |
When you hire an employee, you begin processing their personal data — name, address, bank details, tax ID, health information for sick leave, and so on. This triggers obligations under data protection law.
Key requirements:
| Country | Applicable Law |
|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | UK GDPR + Data Protection Act 2018 |
| 🇫🇷 France | GDPR + French data protection law (CNIL) |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | GDPR |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Privacy Act 1988 (+ employer records exemption) |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | Privacy Act 2020 |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | PIPEDA (federal) + provincial equivalents |
| 🇺🇸 USA | No single federal law; state laws vary (CCPA in California) |
Use our free tool: Employment Checker
Try it free →1. Registering as an employer late
The DPAE in France must be filed before the employee's first day, not on it. In Australia, STP must be activated before the first pay event. Late registration triggers penalties and reporting gaps.
2. Skipping employers' liability insurance
In the UK, operating without employers' liability insurance (ELI) is an offence attracting fines of up to £2,500 per day. In Australia, failing to register for workers' compensation carries significant penalties and exposes directors personally.
3. Not conducting a risk assessment
A documented risk assessment is required before a new employee starts. If an employee is injured before the risk assessment is completed, your liability exposure increases significantly.
4. Assuming the obligation checklist applies only to full-time employees
Part-time employees, casual workers, and apprentices trigger the same registration, insurance, and safety obligations. The contributions may be proportionally smaller, but the obligations exist.
5. Treating super / pension as optional
Superannuation in Australia and pension auto-enrolment in the UK are mandatory. Failure to enrol eligible employees and make contributions results in financial penalties, SGC charges, and retroactive liability.
| Timing | Action |
|---|---|
| 6 weeks before start | Register as employer with tax authority; obtain employers' liability insurance; register for workers' compensation |
| 4 weeks before start | Draft and send employment contract; collect new employee information (tax ID, bank details) |
| Before start date | Complete right-to-work verification; conduct and document risk assessment; set up payroll system |
| Day 1 | Provide required statutory documents (UK: written statement; AU: Fair Work Information Statement; NZ: confirm signed agreement); conduct health and safety induction |
| First pay date | Run first payroll; submit payroll reports; remit tax and contributions |
| Within 1 month | UK: pension auto-enrolment assessment; Sweden: provide written terms if not already done |
| Within 3 months | UK pension auto-enrolment for eligible workers; probation review meeting |
Q: At what point does hiring someone as a worker trigger all these obligations?
A: As soon as you have an employee — even one employee, even one hour per week. Some obligations (such as employers' liability insurance in the UK) arise at the point of employing anyone, regardless of hours or contract type.
Q: Do I need to register with multiple authorities when hiring my first employee?
A: Typically yes. You will usually need to register with the national tax authority (for payroll/income tax withholding), a social security authority (for pension/contributions), and a workers' compensation authority (for insurance). In the US, you may need to register at federal, state, and sometimes city level.
Q: What if my employee is working remotely in a different country?
A: This creates complex employment and tax obligations. You may need to register as an employer in the country where the employee is based, comply with that country's employment law, and navigate cross-border social security treaty provisions. This requires specialist advice from a qualified employment solicitor or attorney with international experience.
Q: Can I avoid these obligations by using a staffing agency?
A: Engaging workers through a staffing agency (employment agency or PEO — Professional Employer Organisation) transfers some employer obligations to the agency. However, you remain responsible for workplace safety, and the agency relationship has its own legal complexity. Consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney about the structure that works best for your business.
Our Employment Checker provides a country-specific checklist of employer obligations — from registration to insurance to payroll.
Track critical deadlines (DPAE filing, STP activation, pension enrolment windows) with our Filing Deadlines tool.
Estimate your total employment cost — salary, employer social contributions, insurance, and pension — with our Cost Calculator.
Remember: MmowW Scrib🐮 prepares documents — it does not provide legal advice. A qualified employment solicitor or attorney should advise you on your specific obligations before you make your first hire.
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