A PEO is a company that specializes in taking care of all the responsibilities that come with employing people. By hiring a PEO, you are "getting out of the business of being an employer," says Bill Maness, president of Syndio Outsourcing, a PEO in Wichita, KS.
PEOs started in the 1980s and have grown quickly in the last few years as the number of state and federal regulations has increased. There are about 700 PEOs in the United States serving more than 100,000 businesses with approximately 2.5 million employees, according to the National Association of Professional Employers (NAPEO), the trade association for the PEO industry.
The primary distinction from other HR service providers is that the PEO actually becomes the legal employer of your workers and thus takes on the accompanying legal liabilities.
For a fee typically ranging from 1.5% to 8% of your payroll, the PEO "co-employs" your workers. (The fee depends on a number of factors, including the number of employees and the average salary level of your employees.) PEOs handle the whole gamut of HR responsibilities, including benefits, payroll, taxes, workers' compensation, and regulatory compliance.
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