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

Recruitment Agency vs Direct Hiring: Pros and Cons

TS行政書士
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.
Compare recruitment agency vs direct hiring for small businesses across UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and USA. Costs, speed, quality, and legal considerations explained. When you need to hire, you have two main approaches:
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works
  3. Cost Comparison
  4. Country-Specific Considerations
  5. Comparison Framework: When to Use Each
  6. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  7. Next Steps
  8. Frequently Asked Questions
  9. Useful Resources
  10. How MmowW Scrib🐮 Can Help

TL;DR: Recruitment agencies can get you to a hire faster and with less internal effort — but they cost more. Direct hiring gives you greater control and lower cost per hire, but requires more time and HR capability. This guide compares both approaches across 7 countries, including cost structures, legal obligations, and when each makes sense for a small business.

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 law obligations relating to agency-supplied workers vary by jurisdiction. Always consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney for advice specific to your situation.

What You Need to Know

When you need to hire, you have two main approaches:

Direct Hiring: You manage the entire recruitment process internally — writing the job description, advertising, screening, interviewing, making the offer, and onboarding.

Recruitment Agency: You engage a specialist firm to manage part or all of the recruitment process — they source candidates, conduct initial screening, and present a shortlist to you.

Recruitment agencies come in two main types:

There is also a third model increasingly used by small businesses:

How It Works

Direct Hiring: Step-by-Step

Phase 1: Preparation (1–2 weeks)

Phase 2: Advertising (2–4 weeks)

Phase 3: Interviewing (1–3 weeks)

Phase 4: Offer and Onboarding (1–2 weeks)

Total time to hire (direct): Typically 6–12 weeks

Recruitment Agency: How the Process Works

  1. Brief the agency — provide a detailed brief on the role, required skills, salary, and company culture
  2. Agency sources candidates — from their database, job boards, LinkedIn, and headhunting
  3. Agency screens candidates — typically a phone or video interview plus CV review
  4. Agency presents shortlist — usually 3–5 candidates with profiles
  5. You interview — typically 1–2 rounds directly with you
  6. Offer — agency may manage negotiation
  7. Agency invoice — typically on the candidate's first day or within 30 days of start

Total time to hire (via agency): Often 3–6 weeks (faster because the agency can work in parallel with your day-to-day)

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Cost Comparison

Direct Hiring Costs

Cost Item Typical Range
Job board advertising (Indeed, LinkedIn, seek, etc.) £100–£500 per posting
Background check services £20–£100 per candidate
Management time (10–40 hours at your day rate) Internal cost
Skills testing platforms £50–£500 per hire
Total (excluding management time) £200–£1,000

Agency Fees

Agency Type Typical Fee
Contingency placement (junior/mid roles) 15–20% of first-year salary
Contingency placement (specialist/technical) 20–25% of first-year salary
Retained search (senior/executive) 25–33% of first-year package (paid in instalments)

Example: Hiring a marketing coordinator at £35,000 annual salary via a contingency agency at 18%: £6,300 agency fee

Most contingency agencies offer a replacement guarantee (typically 3–6 months) — if the candidate leaves within that period, they will find a replacement for free or at reduced cost.

Country-Specific Considerations

Country Agency Regulation Worker Rights via Agency Key Rules Gov URL
🇬🇧 UK Employment Agencies Act 1973; Conduct Regulations 2003 Agency workers get equal treatment after 12 weeks (Agency Workers Regulations 2010) AWR 12-week rule; umbrella company issues gov.uk/agency-workers-your-rights
🇫🇷 France Regulated under Code du travail Temporary workers (intérimaires) have extensive rights; equal pay from day 1 Temporary work through Agences de Travail Temporaire (ATT); strict rules on when temps can be used service-public.fr/professionnels-entreprises/vosdroits/F23574
🇸🇪 Sweden Regulated; union involvement significant Agency workers covered by collective agreements Uthyrningslagen; bemanningsföretag av.se/en
🇦🇺 Australia No specific agency regulation; Fair Work Act applies Agency (labour hire) workers have full award entitlements from day 1; Labour Hire Licensing required in QLD, VIC, SA, ACT Labour hire licensing laws; lead employer model fairwork.gov.au/employment-conditions/labour-hire
🇳🇿 New Zealand Fair Work Act equivalent; no specific agency licensing Employees of the agency; entitled to full entitlements Employment Relations Act 2000 applies employment.govt.nz
🇨🇦 Canada Provincial regulation varies; Ontario: Temporary Help Agencies Act THA workers: entitled to minimum employment standards THA licensing in Ontario ontario.ca/page/temporary-help-agencies
🇺🇸 USA Regulated at state level; some states require agency licensing Co-employer arrangements common; workers entitled to federal/state minimums Joint employer doctrine; staffing agency liability dol.gov/agencies/whd/flsa/temp-workers

The UK Agency Workers Regulations (AWR) — What You Need to Know

If you use a recruitment agency to supply temporary workers in the UK, after 12 calendar weeks in the same role, the agency worker is entitled to:

"Day 1" rights also apply from the first day — access to collective facilities (canteen, car parking, childcare) and information about job vacancies.

This makes long-term agency temps more expensive over time. Plan ahead if you intend to use agency staff for extended periods.

Comparison Framework: When to Use Each

Factor Direct Hiring Recruitment Agency
Speed Slower (6–12 weeks) Faster (3–6 weeks)
Cost Lower Higher (15–25% of salary)
Quality of candidates Depends on your reach and process Agency has wider reach and pre-screened
HR capability required Higher Lower
For specialist / niche roles Can be slow and hard Agency often has specific databases
For high volume hiring Can work with a good ATS Agency can scale faster
Replacement if hire doesn't work Full cost again Agency guarantee typically applies
Control over process High Shared with agency
Understanding of your culture You assess it Depends on briefing quality
For temporary / project work Complex Agency typically handles employer obligations

Common Mistakes to Avoid

1. Briefing the agency inadequately

A vague brief produces vague candidates. Invest time in briefing the agency thoroughly — role, team, culture, growth expectations, and what "good" looks like. The better the brief, the better the shortlist.

2. Instructing multiple agencies on the same role simultaneously

Using multiple contingency agencies creates competition between them that can result in:

If using multiple agencies, agree upfront how you will handle duplicate submissions.

3. Assuming the agency has done full due diligence

Agencies screen candidates, but you remain responsible for right-to-work verification, reference checks, and your own assessment. Do not assume the agency has checked everything.

4. Not understanding the AWR clock (UK)

In the UK, the 12-week AWR clock starts from the first day the agency worker does a qualifying assignment. If you use the same agency worker repeatedly, track the cumulative weeks to understand when AWR entitlements kick in.

5. Not reading the agency's terms of business

Agency terms of business set out the fee, the replacement guarantee conditions, and what happens if you hire someone the agency introduced outside the agreed process. Read them carefully before signing.

6. Treating agency temps as permanent employees prematurely

If you want to convert an agency worker to a direct hire, follow the process set out in the agency's terms — there is typically a temp-to-perm fee or a notice period. Converting without following the agency's process may result in a disputed fee.

Next Steps

  1. Assess the role — how urgent is the hire? How specialist is the role? Do you have the internal capacity to manage direct hiring?
  2. Set the budget — is a 15–25% agency fee within budget, or does it make direct hiring more appropriate?
  3. If using an agency, research specialists in your sector, check their client references, and provide a detailed brief
  4. If direct hiring, build your job description, identify the right job boards for your sector and country, and plan your interview process
  5. Whichever route you choose, ensure right-to-work checks are completed before the first day

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I avoid paying agency fees by hiring someone they introduced directly?

A: No — most agency terms of business include a "rebate clause" or "direct introduction fee" covering candidates the agency has introduced, even if you later hire them through a different route. This protection typically lasts 6–12 months. Attempting to circumvent agency fees by going directly to a candidate they introduced can result in legal claims.

Q: What is the difference between a contingency agency and a retained search firm?

A: Contingency agencies are paid only on a successful placement. Retained search firms charge a fee regardless of outcome — typically paid in stages (upfront, on shortlist presentation, on placement). Retained search is used for senior roles where a thorough, discreet search is needed. For most small business roles, contingency is more appropriate.

Q: Who is the legal employer of an agency temp?

A: Typically the agency, not you. The agency is responsible for payroll, tax withholding, employer social contributions, and providing statutory entitlements. You are the "hirer" who controls the day-to-day work. However, you share health and safety obligations — you remain responsible for the working environment and for treating agency temps consistently with the AWR (UK) and equivalent legislation.

Q: Can I negotiate agency fees?

A: Yes — many agencies are willing to negotiate, particularly for businesses offering volume of vacancies, exclusivity, or premium job categories. It is reasonable to ask about the fee structure, the replacement guarantee period, and whether they offer a reduced "temp-to-perm" fee structure.

Useful Resources

How MmowW Scrib🐮 Can Help

Our Employment Checker gives you a clear overview of employer obligations when using agency workers, including AWR and equivalent rights by country.

Track key hiring milestones, interview scheduling, and agency replacement guarantee windows with our Filing Deadlines tool.

Compare the true cost of agency hiring versus direct hiring (including management time, advertising, and agency fees) with our Cost Calculator.

Remember: MmowW Scrib🐮 prepares documents — it does not provide legal advice. A qualified employment solicitor or attorney should advise on your obligations when using agency workers.

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