Thousands of global businesses can't be wrong.
Sign up for free and explore global hiring with Playroll.
In Slovenia, a "local entity" refers to a recognized employing presence, typically a subsidiary or branch, that can act as the employer. This setup allows you to be recognized locally and fulfill payroll and employment obligations.
Without a local entity, you typically can't register as an employer, manage mandatory social security processes, run compliant payroll, or issue local employment terms. Slovenia's Financial Administration outlines employer responsibilities for paying social security contributions, which is essential for compliance.
What is Required to Employ Someone in Slovenia?
- Local employing entity required to directly employ? Yes (required for direct employment and payroll management)
- Payroll registration required? Yes (must register with the Financial Administration)
- Withholding/tax remittance required? Yes (mandatory payroll tax withholdings apply)
- Social contributions required? Yes (employers must pay social security contributions)
- Local employment agreement required? Yes (written agreements are standard practice)
- Mandatory benefits to budget? Yes (includes statutory leave and social security coverage)
- Works council/collective agreements considerations? Often (many sectors have applicable collective agreements)
Best Options If You're Hiring in Slovenia
Can I Hire Contractors Instead of Setting Up an Entity?
Yes, but it can be risky if the relationship resembles employment.
While you can hire contractors without a local entity, Slovenia has strong worker protections, and misclassification can lead to significant legal exposure. Authorities assess the nature of the relationship, focusing on whether the contractor operates independently or is integrated into your business.
- Misclassification risk is higher if the work is exclusive or closely monitored.
- Control over hours, tools, or methods can indicate an employment relationship.
- Core roles that resemble employee functions increase misclassification exposure.
How Long Does Entity Setup Take And What Does It Cost?
Typical entity setup timeline: It often takes 4–8 weeks to set up an entity in Slovenia, depending on required registrations.
Ongoing cost categories (entity route):
- Accounting, bookkeeping, and statutory filings: Estimated €300–€600 per month ($330–$660)
- Payroll provider: Estimated €20–€60 per employee per month ($22–$66)
- Employer registrations and recurring compliance: Varies by complexity
- Corporate tax filings and annual reporting: Estimated €1,500–€4,000 per year ($1,650–$4,400)
EOR cost components (no-entity route):
- A per-employee EOR service fee (from $399 p/month with Playroll)
- Pass-through statutory costs (e.g., employer social security contributions)
- Any optional benefits you choose to provide beyond statutory minimums
How an Employer of Record Can Help You Hire in Slovenia
Hiring in Slovenia can be complex, but it doesn’t have to require setting up a local entity or taking on long-term overhead. With an Employer of Record like Playroll, you get a simple, predictable way to hire compliantly while keeping costs transparent and under control. We help you:
- Hire employees in Slovenia quickly without establishing a local entity, eliminating incorporation costs and ongoing administration.
- Stay fully compliant with local payroll, tax, and employment regulations with Playroll’s managed payroll services.
- Control your total employment costs, with a clear monthly EOR service fee (from $399 per employee).
- Focus on growing your business, while we manage contracts, payroll, compliance, and labor law obligations end to end.
- Scale up or exit the market easily, without the financial or legal burden of closing a local entity.

Hire Globally Without Setting Up a Local Entity
01
Reach out to playroll
We’ll confirm the best hiring option for your target country and role.
02
Hire Compliantly (No Entity Needed)
Playroll acts as the legal employer, so you can onboard fast while staying compliant.
03
Run Payroll, Tax & Benefits
We manage local payroll, statutory contributions & benefits.
04
Stay Current With Regulations
We keep you aligned with in-country employment law updates as you scale.





