I started paying remote workers in Latin America five years ago.
Made every mistake you could imagine.
Sent payments to the wrong bank. Misclassified contractors.
Forgot about local holidays and wondered why nobody responded to my “urgent” messages.
Here’s what nobody tells you before you start.
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How Money Moves to Latin America
Forget what you know about Venmo and Zelle. Those don’t work here.
Wire transfers are still king. Every bank in Latin America accepts them. They’re reliable. They’re traceable.
They’re also slow and expensive.
Expect $25–50 per transfer from US banks. Takes 3–5 business days. Sometimes longer if there’s a compliance hold.
Lower fees. Better exchange rates. Arrives in 1–2 days usually.
Payoneer is popular with workers themselves. They can receive payments and hold USD, then withdraw to local currency when rates are favorable.
PayPal works but workers lose money on it. High fees to withdraw. Poor exchange rates. Most experienced remote workers will ask for literally anything else.
Crypto is a gray area. Some workers love it, especially in Argentina and Venezuela where local currencies are unstable. But it’s not legal tender anywhere in Latin America except El Salvador.
Local payment methods matter at scale. PIX in Brazil is instant and free. SPEI in Mexico is the same. If you’re hiring 50+ people in one country, learning the local payment rails saves you thousands monthly.
The Tax Situation Nobody Explains Clearly
You have two tax questions to answer.
Question 1: Does the worker pay taxes in their country?
Yes. Always.
They’re tax residents of their country. They owe income tax there. This is their problem to handle, not yours (if they’re contractors).
But you should know the basics so you can pay fairly.
Income tax rates in major markets:
| Country | Typical Tax Range |
|---|---|
| Mexico | 1.92% to 35% (progressive brackets) |
| Colombia | 0% to 39% (progressive, kicks in around $13k USD yearly) |
| Argentina | 5% to 35% (effective rates are higher with provincial taxes) |
| Brazil | 0% to 27.5% (progressive) |
| Chile | 0% to 40% (progressive) |
Most countries have a threshold where tax starts. Someone making $500/month might pay zero tax. Someone making $3,000/month is paying significant tax.
Question 2: Do YOU have tax obligations in their country?
This is where it gets interesting.
If they’re contractors: No. You’re buying services from a foreign business (even if that business is a person). No withholding, no employer taxes.
If they’re employees: Yes. Big yes.
You’re now operating as an employer in that country. You have:
- Employer payroll taxes (varies by country, usually 20–35% on top of salary)
- Mandatory benefits to provide
- Registration requirements with local tax authorities
- Monthly/quarterly reporting obligations
The permanent establishment problem:
Hire enough people in one country and you might trigger “permanent establishment” rules. This means your company now has tax presence there.
The threshold varies. 5 employees? 10? It depends on the country and what exactly they’re doing.
This is why Employer of Record (EOR) services exist. They become the legal employer, handle all compliance, and you pay them a fee per worker.
Worth it if you’re hiring 20+ people in one country and don’t want to set up a legal entity there.
Benefits and Holidays You Can’t Ignore
Every Latin American country has mandatory benefits for employees (not independent contractors).
The big ones:
Vacation days: 6–30 days per year depending on country and tenure. Mexico gives 6 days in year one. Brazil gives 30 days. Most countries are 10–15 days.
13th month salary (Aguinaldo): Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, and others require an extra month of salary paid in December. Budget for 13 months of payroll, not 12.
Severance pay: Fire someone without cause? You owe them. The amount varies wildly. Brazil is generous to workers. Chile less so. This isn’t optional.
Social security contributions: Healthcare, pensions, disability insurance. Employer usually pays 20–30% of salary on top of the salary itself.
Holidays are sacred.
Mexico has 7–9 mandatory paid holidays.
Colombia has 18 official holidays.
Argentina has 12–15 depending on the year.
Brazil has national holidays plus state and municipal holidays.
Currency Headaches and How to Handle Them
Some Latin American currencies are stable. Some are not.
The stable-ish ones: Mexican Peso, Chilean Peso, Peruvian Sol. They fluctuate but not dramatically.
The volatile ones: Argentine Peso, Brazilian Real (can swing), Colombian Peso (moves but manageable).
Here’s the decision you need to make:
Pay in USD or pay in local currency?
Paying in USD:
- Worker takes currency risk
- You pay the same amount every time
- Workers often prefer this in unstable economies
- Makes your budgeting simple
Paying in local currency:
- You take currency risk
- Worker gets predictable local purchasing power
- Required by law for employees in some countries
- Can save you money when USD strengthens
Most contractors prefer USD. It’s stable. They can hold it or convert it when rates are good.
Employees legally must be paid in local currency in most countries. Brazil requires it. Argentina requires it (with weird exceptions). Mexico requires it.
The exchange rate you use matters.
Don’t use your bank’s rate. They’re taking 3–5% off the top.
Use Wise, or check the mid-market rate on Google/XE.com and get as close to that as possible.
One more thing about Argentina:
There’s the official rate and the “blue dollar” rate. They can be 50–100% different.
Workers want to be paid in USD or at the blue rate. The government wants everything at the official rate. This creates interesting situations. Just know it exists.
Setting Up Your First Payment
You’re hiring a contractor in Colombia. $2,000/month. Here’s what you actually do:
- Get their full legal name (exactly as it appears on their ID)
- Get their bank account number and bank name
- Get their national ID number (Cédula)
- Get their tax ID (RUT number)
- Decide: USD or Colombian Pesos?
If USD: Set up a Wise account. Add their bank details. Send $2,000. They receive it in pesos at the current rate. Costs you about $15–20 in fees.
If COP: Calculate current exchange rate. $2,000 = roughly 8,000,000 COP (rate changes daily). Send pesos. They receive pesos.
Payment schedule matters.
Most Latin American workers expect to be paid monthly, on the same day each month. Often the last business day of the month or first day of the new month.
Paying twice monthly (like US companies often do) is fine but communicate it clearly.
Create a paper trail.
Invoices for contractors. Pay stubs for employees. Keep records of every payment.
You’ll need this for taxes. They’ll need this for taxes. Everyone needs documentation.
The Mistakes That Cost Money
Mistake 1: Treating all countries the same.
Mexico is not Colombia is not Argentina. Different laws. Different norms. Different expectations.
Mistake 2: Using the wrong classification.
That “contractor” who works 40 hours a week on your schedule? They’re an employee. Fix it before the government does.
Mistake 3: Forgetting about the 13th month.
December comes. Your payroll doubles. You didn’t budget for it. Oops.
Mistake 4: Ignoring time zones.
Colombia is EST/CST. Argentina doesn’t do daylight saving. Mexico has four time zones.
“9am Monday meeting” needs more specificity.
Mistake 5: Assuming English proficiency.
Many highly skilled workers have limited English. Especially in Brazil. This isn’t a quality issue. It’s a language issue.
Have Spanish or Portuguese speakers on your team, or use translation tools, or hire bilingual workers.
What Fair Pay Actually Looks Like
This deserves its own section.
Cost of living varies dramatically.
$1,500/month in Buenos Aires: Comfortable middle class.
$1,500/month in São Paulo: Scraping by.
$1,500/month in Mexico City: Decent living.
$1,500/month in Lima: Pretty good.
Don’t just pay “cheap rates because it’s Latin America.”
Pay fairly for the market. Pay enough that good people want to work with you long-term.
General ranges for experienced remote workers (2024):
- Customer support: $800–1,500/month
- Administrative work: $1,000–1,800/month
- Software developers: $2,500–5,000/month
- Designers: $1,500–3,000/month
- Project managers: $2,000–4,000/month
These are contractor rates. Employee rates need to factor in benefits.
Top talent costs more. Specialists cost more. People with perfect English cost more.
You get what you pay for here too.
The Bottom Line
Paying remote workers in Latin America isn’t complicated once you understand the rules.
Contractors are straightforward. Employees require more setup.
The workers are talented. The rates are fair. The time zones align with US hours.
You just need to pay them correctly.
That’s it. Now you know.
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