Hiring Employees in the UK

A Guide To Employing Staff in the UK

Understanding your employer responsibilities UK side and getting your UK onboarding and compliance set up correctly.
If your business is expanding into the UK and plans to hire local talent, you will need a clear understanding of how to employ staff in the UK, what is involved in the UK employee onboarding process and what your employer responsibilities UK wise look like.
For overseas based companies, this includes additional layers of compliance, so choosing the right partner matters. At Paul Beare, we specialise in helping international companies hire staff in the UK from abroad and set up their UK employment operations smoothly.

Why Hiring Employees in the UK Requires Careful Setup

When you hire people in the UK, you’re entering an employment law framework that combines rights for the worker and obligations for the employer. For example:

You must check that the employee has the right to work in the UK.
As their employer you must operate PAYE tax and National Insurance for UK based employees.
You’ll need to provide a written statement of employment particulars on or before the first day of work.
You must consider UK employment rights (minimum wage, working time, leave) which apply regardless of being overseas owned.

For overseas companies, additional dimensions may apply employing staff through a UK entity or branch, dealing with remote/seconded employees and aligning your UK HR & legal setup with your global parent operations. The costs of not doing this properly include penalties, reputational risk and operational inefficiencies.

Key Employer Responsibilities in the UK

Below are some of the core employer responsibilities UK companies must address when hiring staff in the UK:
Right to work checks: Before someone starts, you must verify their legal entitlement to work in the UK and keep records.

Register as an employer & operate payroll: You must register with HMRC as an employer, keep payroll records, deduct tax/NICs, and report via PAYE.

Provide employment contract or written statement: A written statement of employment particulars must be given to the employee.

Workplace rights: These include paying at least the National Minimum Wage, entitlement to paid leave, rest breaks, and protections against unfair treatment.

Health & safety, workplace insurance: Employers must ensure safe working conditions and hold Employers’ Liability insurance for staff working in the UK.

Immigration/sponsorship: If you’re employing non UK nationals under sponsored routes then you must hold a valid sponsor licence and meet additional duties.

Global mobility and cross border issues: If you employ someone coming from abroad or seconded to the UK the rules on tax, national insurance, payroll and employment status may be more complex.

The Onboarding Process When You Hire Staff in the UK

When your UK entity is ready to employ someone, the process typically goes as follows:
Define role & contract terms – Decide job title, salary, benefits, probation period, working hours.
Right to work check – Validate documents and retain evidence in your records.
Prepare written statement of employment particulars – Must cover main terms such as pay, job title, start date, hours, holiday entitlement.
Register employee on payroll / set up PAYE – Add them to your payroll system, deduct tax and NICs, send details to HMRC before or on first payday.
Provide statutory workplace rights – Holiday, rest breaks, entitlement to minimum wage, any pensions auto enrolment obligations.
Onboard the employee – Introduce them to company policies, UK specific statutory rights, health & safety, data protection and any internal procedures.
Monitor ongoing compliance – Keep employment records, update HMRC if details change, monitor remote working, secondments or global mobility issues.

What Overseas Companies Must Especially Note

When employing staff in the UK from abroad or setting up a UK employment operation as a non UK company, you should pay attention to:
Global mobility rules: If an employee is seconded to the UK, you need to understand how UK tax/NICs apply and what impact this has on your payroll and contract setup.
Remote working risk: If your overseas business allows a UK employee to work from abroad (or vice versa), this could create unexpected tax, social security or permanent establishment risks.
Contract type and status: Ensure you classify employees correctly (employee vs worker vs self employed) as UK rights differ.
Compliance burden: As a foreign owned business you must ensure your UK employment operations mirror UK requirements - failing to do so can delay bank account opening, harm credibility and increase risk.
Coordination with global parent: You’ll want your UK employment setup to align with your global HR, payroll, and tax systems rather than be a standalone silo.
Why choose Paul Beare Ltd

How Paul Beare Can Assist You with Hiring Employees in the UK

When your overseas business is ready to employ staff in the UK, we provide tailored support including:

Guidance on employer setup in the UK – align your UK entity structure, PAYE registration, UK employment contract templates and global parent coordination.

Assistance in designing a compliant UK employee onboarding process for overseas‑owned companies, ensuring your contracts, policies and rights reflect UK law and your global standards.

Advice on employment law for overseas companies UK‑side including right to work checks, tax/NICs obligations for seconded employees, remote working risks and more.

Ongoing HR & payroll support through our in‑house teams or partner network, so that once you’ve hired, your UK staff are paid, managed and supported in line with UK employer responsibilities.

A single integrated partner across UK formation, tax, payroll, banking and employment so you’re not managing multiple advisers.

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