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Hire Remote Workers in Greece

EOR vs contractor vs entity โ€” and how the timezone math works out

To hire in Greece without a local entity, most companies use an Employer of Record (EOR), which employs the person locally on your behalf and handles payroll and compliance, or engage them as an independent contractor for project-based work. Greece sits in UTC+2, giving roughly 7 hours of workday overlap with Central Europe teams.

Timezone

UTC+2

Europe/Athens

Currency

EUR

Local payroll currency

Languages

Greek, English

Infrastructure

good internet

Moderate cost of living

Workday overlap with your team

Hours a 9โ€“5 workday in Greece (UTC+2) overlaps a 9โ€“5 day in common hiring hubs. DST can shift these by an hour.

US East
1h ยท async-friendly
US West
0h ยท async-friendly
UK
6h ยท full-day overlap
CET
7h ยท full-day overlap

Three ways to hire in Greece

The right structure depends on how permanent the role is โ€” full framework in our EOR vs contractor vs employee guide.

Employer of Record (EOR)

Fastest to start

An EOR is the legal employer in Greece on your behalf โ€” it runs compliant payroll, benefits, and contracts while the person works for you day-to-day. Typical platform pricing is a flat monthly fee per employee. This is the standard route when you don't have an entity in Greece and want a full employee rather than a contractor.

Best for: Full-time hires, no local entity, started in days not months

Independent contractor

Most flexible

The person invoices you as a self-employed contractor. Lighter and cheaper to set up, but misclassification โ€” treating someone like an employee while paying them as a contractor โ€” carries real penalties in most jurisdictions. The longer and more exclusive the engagement, the weaker the contractor argument gets.

Best for: Project work, part-time engagements, genuinely independent professionals

Local entity

Long-term scale

Incorporating in Greece gives you full control and is usually cheapest per-employee at scale, but expect months of setup, local accounting, and ongoing filings. Rarely worth it below roughly five hires in one country.

Best for: Committed long-term presence, 5+ employees in-country

EOR platforms covering Greece

All three are established global platforms โ€” compare quotes for Greece specifically, since per-country pricing and benefits packages differ.

Independent picks. If a partner link is active we may earn a commission at no cost to you.

What to verify before your first hire in Greece

  • Employment cost beyond salary โ€” employer contributions, mandatory benefits, and 13th-month rules vary by country. Get the fully-loaded number from your EOR quote for Greece, not a global average.
  • Notice periods and termination rules โ€” many countries are far stricter than US at-will employment. Confirm the specifics in writing before extending an offer.
  • Contractor misclassification exposure โ€” if the role is full-time, ongoing, and directed by you, most jurisdictions treat it as employment regardless of the invoice arrangement.
  • Currency and payment expectations โ€” candidates in Greece may expect EUR or USD; agree on the currency and who absorbs conversion costs up front.
  • IP assignment and confidentiality โ€” make sure the employment or contractor agreement assigns work product under enforceable local terms.

For your candidates

Working remotely from Greece โ†’

Visas, tax residency, and best cities โ€” share it with people you're hiring there.

Job seekers

Remote jobs you can do from Greece โ†’

Boards, timezone fit, and live openings for Greece-based candidates.

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