How to Outsource HR Operations for Growing Companies With 10–50 Employees
At 12 employees, most founders are still running HR themselves. Onboarding paperwork. Benefits questions. Payroll every two weeks. Nobody taught them the compliance filings. They just figured it out.
That works until it doesn’t.
Around 20 employees, HR starts competing with revenue work for your time. At 35, compliance risk gets serious. At 50, a single payroll error or misclassification can cost more than an entire year of HR outsourcing services. That’s before penalties.
The 10-to-50 employee range is where the outsourcing math shifts from optional to obvious. 62% of companies worldwide now outsource at least one HR function. Not because it’s trendy. Because the in-house option stops penciling out.
This guide covers the full process of how to outsource HR operations: which functions to hand off first, which model fits your size, what it costs, and where companies at this headcount typically get it wrong.
What “Outsourcing HR Operations” Actually Means Here
You’re not building an HR department. You’re handing specific functions to a provider who handles them better, faster, and with less compliance risk. The tasks transfer. The decisions stay with you.
Most 10–50 person companies fall into a gap. They’ve outgrown founder-managed HR but aren’t yet large enough to justify a full-time HR director at $95,000 to $130,000 per year. Outsourcing fills that gap without the overhead, and it scales as headcount grows.
Functions that typically transfer include payroll processing, benefits enrollment and administration, onboarding documentation, I-9 and E-Verify compliance, PTO and leave tracking, employee file management, and compliance reporting.
What stays in-house: hiring decisions, performance management philosophy, company culture, and any conversation that requires your institutional knowledge of a specific person. A common mistake is treating outsourcing as all-or-nothing. You can hand off payroll and benefits on day one and keep recruiting internal for another six months. The best transitions are phased.
| HR Function | Outsource | Keep In-House |
|---|---|---|
| Payroll processing | ✓ Transfer | |
| Benefits administration | ✓ Transfer | |
| Onboarding paperwork | ✓ Transfer | |
| I-9 / E-Verify compliance | ✓ Transfer | |
| PTO and leave tracking | ✓ Transfer | |
| Compliance filings | ✓ Transfer | |
| Hiring decisions | Retain | |
| Performance management | Retain | |
| Culture and values | Retain | |
| Sensitive employee conversations | Retain |
Why 10–50 Employees Is the Inflection Point
Under 10 employees, most founders manage HR manually without much real risk. The stakes are low. The complexity is manageable.
Over 50, you probably need someone internal. The volume justifies a full-time hire, and the cultural need for a dedicated HR person becomes real.
At 10 to 50, you’re in the gap. Too much complexity for manual management. Not enough volume to justify a full-time hire. That’s exactly where outsourcing delivers its best return. Companies at this headcount that outsource HR save 40–70% compared to the cost of an equivalent in-house hire, and they get access to compliance expertise that no single internal hire could match.
Which HR Functions to Outsource First
Payroll and benefits first. They carry the highest compliance risk and are the easiest to transfer with clean results. Onboarding and compliance documentation second. Recruiting support third. Employee relations last. It’s the hardest to hand off cleanly.
73% of US businesses outsource payroll first. There’s a reason. Payroll errors trigger IRS penalties. Late filings create compliance exposure. Mistakes in tax withholding cost real money. A payroll provider removes all of that in the first month.
Benefits administration is the second priority. According to HR outsourcing research, 54% of companies outsource benefits admin as their first or second function. The complexity of benefits eligibility, open enrollment management, and carrier coordination is genuinely difficult to manage at the 10–30 employee range without a dedicated specialist.
Onboarding paperwork is third. I-9 verification, offer letter templates, state-specific documentation, employee handbook acknowledgments. These are rule-based and easy to hand off. They’re also where most growing companies accumulate compliance risk quietly, because nobody catches the gaps until an audit.
Recruiting is different. It’s judgment-heavy. The right approach at this stage is often to keep sourcing and final screening in-house, but outsource the job posting coordination, candidate communications, and interview scheduling. That’s the part that eats time without requiring your judgment.
Employee relations (performance improvement plans, termination conversations, harassment investigations) stays in-house until you have a dedicated HR manager or fractional HR director with real institutional context about your team.
| Priority | Function | Why This Order |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Payroll processing | Highest compliance risk, cleanest to transfer |
| 2 | Benefits administration | High complexity, specialist-dependent |
| 3 | Onboarding documentation | Rule-based, high volume, compliance risk |
| 4 | Compliance filings | Risk-heavy, requires specialized knowledge |
| 5 | Recruiting support (ops only) | Judgment-light tasks only: post, schedule, communicate |
| 6 | Employee relations | Last. Requires deep institutional context. |
The 3 Models for 10–50 Person Companies
Pick the wrong model and you pay for services you don’t need, or you hand off decisions that should stay with you. Three models dominate at this headcount stage. They’re not interchangeable.
PEO (Professional Employer Organization)
Co-employment model. The PEO becomes a co-employer, which means they handle payroll, benefits, compliance, and tax filings under their employer identification number. You retain control of day-to-day management and all hiring decisions.
Best for companies with multi-state employees, rapid hiring cycles, or high compliance complexity in areas like healthcare, financial services, or government contracting. Cost runs $125–$200 per employee per month. The benefits buying power a PEO brings often offsets 30–50% of that fee through lower group health insurance rates that a 20-person company can’t access independently.
To understand how PEOs compare to BPO and HRO arrangements, the RPO vs. BPO vs. HRO breakdown covers the structural differences clearly.
ASO (Administrative Services Organization)
You stay the employer of record. The ASO provides the same services as a PEO (payroll, benefits, compliance), but there’s no co-employment. Your FEIN stays on everything. More control, slightly higher administrative complexity on your side.
Best for founders who want outsourced services without a shared liability structure. Often preferred when the company has existing group insurance it doesn’t want to migrate. Cost runs $50–$100 per employee per month.
Fractional HR
You hire a part-time HR director on retainer, typically 5–20 hours per week. They handle both administrative and strategic functions. No co-employment, no vendor relationship. It feels closer to an internal team member than a provider.
Best for culture-heavy companies, startups moving through rapid organizational change, or businesses that need HR judgment, not just task execution. Cost runs $2,000–$5,000 per month depending on hours and experience level. You get a person, not a platform.
| Model | Co-Employment | Monthly Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| PEO | Yes | $125–$200/employee | Multi-state, compliance-heavy, fast growth |
| ASO | No | $50–$100/employee | Control + services, single state |
| Fractional HR | No | $2,000–$5,000 flat | Culture-sensitive, judgment-heavy, transitional |
How to Outsource HR Operations: Step by Step
Six steps: audit your HR time, decide what to hand off, choose your model, vet 2–3 providers, run a 30–60 day parallel transition, then track against 90-day KPIs. The sequence matters more than the speed.
Step 1: Audit Your Actual HR Workload
Before you can hand anything off, you need to know what you’re dealing with. Track time spent on HR tasks for two weeks. Every task, every person, every hour. Most founders who do this for the first time find they’re spending 8–15 hours a week on HR. A few find it’s more.
Assign a dollar value. If your time is worth $200 an hour and you’re spending 10 hours a week on HR admin, that’s $2,000 a week going toward a function a provider handles at a fraction of that cost. The audit makes the ROI case concrete before you’ve signed anything.
Step 2: Decide What to Hand Off First
Use the sequence from section two. Two functions maximum for the first 90 days. Payroll and benefits is the most common starting pair. Don’t try to hand off recruiting, onboarding, and compliance simultaneously, and the transition friction multiplies.
Step 3: Choose Your Model
Single state, under 25 employees, want maximum control: start with an ASO. Hiring fast or operating across multiple states: a PEO saves compliance headaches that compound quickly. Culture is central to your brand and you need HR judgment, not just task execution: fractional HR.
Step 4: Vet 2-3 Providers
Ask these five questions of every provider you evaluate. Read the full HR provider evaluation framework before your first call.
- Do you specialize in companies with 10–50 employees, or is this a secondary market for you?
- Which states are you compliant in, and do state-specific filings happen automatically?
- What’s the average response time when an employee has a payroll question?
- Can I see a sample contract and SLA before I sign anything?
- Who is my dedicated contact, and what’s the transition process if they leave?
The last question tells you more about operational maturity than any sales pitch will.
Step 5: Transition in Phases: 30 to 60 Days of Overlap
Don’t do a hard cutover. Run your current payroll process in parallel with the new provider for one full pay period. This catches errors before they reach employees’ bank accounts. One bad payroll run creates more internal trust damage than six months of strong performance repairs.
For benefits, time the transition around your renewal date when possible. It reduces paperwork and avoids mid-year disruptions that frustrate employees who are already skeptical of the change.
Step 6: Set 90-Day KPIs
Track four things in the first quarter: payroll accuracy rate (target: 100%), time to resolve employee HR questions (target: under 24 hours), compliance filings completed on time (target: 100%), and hours saved per week on HR admin against your baseline audit. According to HR outsourcing research, 88% of clients who track outcomes in the first 90 days renew annually and expand scope over time. The ones who don’t track tend to drift into “is this actually working?” conversations by month six.
See What HR Outsourcing Looks Like at Your Headcount
Kore BPO works with US companies from 10 to 250 employees. We’ll map the right model to your size, state, and growth stage.
What It Actually Costs to Outsource HR at This Stage
Expect $30–$150 per employee per month for PEO or full-service outsourcing. Fractional HR runs $2,000–$5,000 per month. Both beat a full-time HR manager whose fully-loaded cost runs $153,875 per year in salary, benefits, payroll taxes, and employer overhead.
For a 20-person company, a PEO typically costs $2,500 to $4,000 per month total. An ASO for the same company lands at $1,000 to $2,000. Fractional HR at 10 hours per week runs $2,000 to $3,500.
PEOs often open the door to large-group benefits rates through their co-employment structure. The premium savings on health insurance alone can offset 30–50% of the PEO fee for companies that were previously buying individual small-group plans. Several Kore BPO clients that have compared their pre-PEO and post-PEO benefits costs found the net monthly difference was closer to $20–$30 per employee once those savings were factored in. See the full numbers in the HR outsourcing cost guide for small businesses.
| Model | Monthly Cost (20-person co.) | What’s Included |
|---|---|---|
| Founder-managed (status quo) | $3,000–$6,000 in time cost | Nothing formal. Just your hours. |
| PEO | $2,500–$4,000 | Payroll, benefits, compliance, HR admin |
| ASO | $1,000–$2,000 | Payroll, benefits, admin (you stay employer of record) |
| Fractional HR | $2,000–$5,000 | Part-time HR director plus admin support |
| Full-time HR manager | $12,000–$13,000 | Full internal coverage, one person’s capacity |
3 Mistakes Companies at This Stage Make
Three mistakes show up repeatedly in 10–50 person companies making their first HR outsourcing transition. All three are avoidable.
Outsourcing everything at once. A full handoff on day one creates friction. Employees get used to a new system, a new phone number for questions, a new portal for benefits, all simultaneously. When that all lands at once, confusion follows. Some employees feel like they’ve been handed to a vendor instead of supported by their employer.
The fix: transition payroll first. Let that settle for 30 days. Then benefits. Then onboarding. Give people time to trust the new system before you layer more on top.
Choosing on price alone. A cheaper PEO that doesn’t track your state’s specific wage and hour laws costs more than a compliant one. California, New York, and Texas all have employment law quirks that generic national providers regularly miss. One missed filing can cost $5,000–$50,000 in penalties depending on the violation. Ask every provider about state-specific compliance explicitly. Get it in writing. Vague answers are a flag.
No internal owner of the relationship. HR outsourcing still needs someone internal managing the vendor relationship, fielding employee questions, and reviewing reports monthly. Without that person, vendor performance drifts and nobody notices until something goes wrong.
At this headcount, it’s usually an operations manager or COO. Not a dedicated HR role. Just someone who treats this like a critical vendor relationship. Because it is. We’ve seen clients run a full handoff with no internal owner assigned on day one. The provider had solid systems. But when response times lagged, employees had nobody internal to escalate to. Appointing that person before day one is non-negotiable. See what this structure looks like in practice in the HR outsourcing for SMEs guide.
When Outsourcing HR Isn’t the Right Move
If you’re hiring exclusively at the senior level with heavy cultural judgment required in every role, building a regulated-industry brand with specific compliance requirements, or approaching 50 employees fast with a plan to scale past 100 quickly, you may be closer to an in-house HR hire than an outsourced model.
The signs you’re ready to outsource HR are different from the signs you need in-house help. Knowing the difference saves you from a decision you’ll unwind in 12 months.
A hybrid model often wins. Keep culture, strategy, and sensitive decisions internal. Outsource the operational layer: payroll, benefits admin, onboarding paperwork, compliance filings. That’s not a compromise. It’s the actual design. Most companies that eventually hire a full-time HR director still outsource payroll and benefits through a PEO because the economics make sense even with an internal hire.
Bias disclosed: we benefit when companies outsource. But the honest answer is that if you’re running a 10-person law firm where every hire is a senior attorney who needs to be personally onboarded by a partner, a fractional HR consultant is a better fit than a platform-based PEO.
Three things that matter most from this guide:
Start with payroll and benefits. Highest risk, cleanest to transfer. Everything else can wait.
Match the model to your situation, not to what’s cheapest. A PEO at $150 per employee is often cheaper in net terms than an ASO at $60 once compliance savings and benefits rates are factored in.
Build a 30–60 day parallel transition into your plan. Don’t flip the switch. The companies that get this right run both systems simultaneously for at least one full payroll cycle before they cut over.
When you’re ready to see what this looks like for a company your size, explore Kore BPO’s HR outsourcing services and get a breakdown of what fits your headcount and state.
At what company size should you outsource HR operations?
10–15 employees is the typical trigger. That’s when payroll complexity increases, benefits administration gets time-consuming, and compliance risk becomes real. Some companies wait until 25 or 30, usually after their first compliance scare. You don’t have to wait for a scare to make the math work. Run the time audit from Step 1 of this guide. The numbers usually make the case on their own.
Can you outsource just payroll and leave everything else in-house?
Yes. A la carte payroll outsourcing through providers like Gusto, Rippling, or ADP Run starts at $50–$80 per month for a 10-person company. It’s the most common entry point. Most companies that start payroll-only end up adding benefits admin in the next 6–12 months once they see how cleanly the first transfer worked.
PEO vs. fractional HR: which one gives more control?
Fractional HR, without question. The fractional HR director works for you under a direct retainer. No co-employment, you stay the employer of record. The tradeoff is that they’re one person with part-time hours, not an infrastructure. A PEO gives you a system and a compliance team. The fractional HR director gives you a person who knows your company. Different tools for different problems.
Realistically, how long does the full transition take?
30 to 90 days, depending on how many functions you’re moving. Payroll alone: 2 to 4 weeks. Benefits: 30 to 60 days, ideally timed around your renewal date. Full-service: 60 to 90 days if you’re running a proper parallel transition. Rushing it is the single most common reason the first vendor relationship fails. Not the provider. The timeline.
What happens to the person currently handling HR internally?
Depends entirely on what they do. If the role is purely administrative (data entry, filing, payroll processing), those tasks transfer to the provider. The internal person often shifts to employee-facing work, office management, or a broader operations role. In some cases the position is eliminated over 3–6 months. Be honest about this with your team before you start. Employees find out anyway, and finding out late creates more resentment than the news itself.
How do you verify that a provider keeps employee data secure?
SOC 2 Type II certification is the baseline. That’s the audit standard that verifies a provider’s security controls are operating effectively over time, not just at a point in time. Also confirm data is stored in the US, the provider has a documented breach notification process with a specific timeline, and your contract explicitly states that you own the data, not the vendor. If the contract is vague on data ownership, push back before you sign.
Disclosure: Kore BPO provides HR outsourcing and offshore staffing services. This guide reflects our experience working with US companies across this headcount range. Provider cost ranges cited reflect published market data and are subject to change.
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