Atlas Pricing

Kristoffer Hjerrild OvesenReviewed April 2026
Last reviewed: April 2026 · Based on Atlas pricing page, third-party pricing analyses, G2/Capterra review data, and provider documentation

Atlas quotes from $599/employee/month for EOR. That is the number you will hear in the first sales call, and it is the least informative figure in the entire conversation.

Your actual cost per employee includes the $599 platform fee plus employer taxes (15-45% of salary depending on country), a currency-conversion margin on every payroll run, and a refundable deposit (Atlas does not publish the figure; confirm at quote).

Your treasury team will need to fund that deposit before the first employee starts.

The $599 is roughly 7% of what Finance will actually reconcile each month for a German hire.

Atlas differentiates on one structural claim: it owns legal entities in every country it operates, rather than subcontracting to local partners. That model has real compliance value.

Whether it justifies a premium over providers like Deel or Remote depends on your risk tolerance and country mix. We broke down every cost component below so you can build the business case with real numbers.

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What does Atlas charge?

Atlas does not publish a fixed pricing grid. You request a quote, and the fee depends on your country mix, headcount, and contract terms.

Based on our research across multiple third-party sources, the standard EOR fee starts at approximately $599/employee/month for small teams, with volume discounts scaling down to $375-450/month at 100+ employees.

Product Estimated price Billing model
EOR (1-9 employees) $600-700/employee/month Per employee, monthly
EOR (10-24 employees) $550-650/employee/month Per employee, monthly
EOR (25-49 employees) $475-575/employee/month Per employee, monthly
EOR (50-99 employees) $425-500/employee/month Per employee, monthly
EOR (100+ employees) $375-450/employee/month Negotiable, annual commitment likely
Contractor management From $25-29/contractor/month Per contractor, monthly
Visa and global mobility Custom per visa Per case, quoted individually
Global payroll Quote-based Per entity/employee

Source: Atlas pricing page, eorHQ, employborderless, and third-party analyses. Verified April 2026. Atlas does not publish a full pricing grid; ranges are editorial estimates based on multiple sources.

Subject to change.

The volume discount structure is the most relevant detail for your procurement team. At 10+ employees, you should expect to negotiate below $599. At 50+, the per-employee cost can drop by 20-30%.

If your sales quote does not reflect these tiers, push back.

Atlas reports no setup fees and no offboarding fees for standard EOR engagements. That is a genuine differentiator.

Several competitors, including Papaya Global pricing, charge implementation fees ranging from $5,000 to $20,000.

What does the Atlas fee include?

The EOR platform fee covers legal employment through Atlas’s own entities, compliant local contracts, payroll processing and salary disbursement, statutory benefits administration, and tax withholding and filing.

It also includes onboarding, offboarding, platform access (compliance dashboards and workforce analytics), and ongoing compliance monitoring.

The direct entity model is the structural difference.

When you employ through Atlas, the contract sits between your company and Atlas’s own legal entity in that country. There is no third-party partner in the chain.

If something goes wrong with a local labour dispute, Atlas is directly accountable rather than relying on a subcontractor to resolve it.

That matters most in regulated markets.

In countries like Brazil, India, or South Korea, where labour law is complex and enforcement is active, the difference between a provider that owns the entity and one that outsources to a local partner is the difference between one phone call and a chain of three.

What the fee explicitly does not cover: employee salaries, statutory employer contributions, supplemental benefits premiums, visa and immigration services, and FX conversion costs.

These sit on top, and they are where the real cost lives.

What costs sit on top of Atlas?

This is where your business case either holds or collapses. Every cost below is real, recurring, and rarely discussed in detail during sales calls.

Employer taxes and social contributions. These are pass-through costs, not Atlas charges, but they are the single largest variable in your total cost.

In Germany, employer contributions add roughly 40% on top of gross salary.

In France, they exceed 45%. In the UK, employer NICs add approximately 13.8%. In India, closer to 12-15%.

Your first invoice will include these. If Finance has not modelled them by country, the gap between the quoted fee and the actual cost will be significant enough to trigger an uncomfortable conversation.

The deposit. Atlas may require a refundable deposit per employee, returned after offboarding. Atlas does not publish the amount, so confirm it at quote.

On a team of 10 averaging $8,000/month gross salary, a deposit on this scale can lock up a large amount of capital before the first payroll runs, so get the figure in writing.

Remote requires no deposit. Multiplier and most peers quote a deposit by country. If capital lock-up is a concern for your Finance team, this is the line item that differentiates Atlas’s cost structure most sharply.

Currency conversion. When your funding currency differs from the local payout currency, Atlas applies a conversion cost; it does not publish the margin it adds over the mid-market rate.

This is standard for enterprise EOR providers, but it is not prominently disclosed.

Over 12 months, for a 20-person international team moving around $160,000 a month, even a 1% margin is roughly $19,000 a year, and that number does not appear on any pricing page.

Visa and immigration. Atlas covers 100+ countries for visa sponsorship, but each case is custom-quoted. Budget $3,000-$10,000 per visa depending on country and complexity.

If you are hiring in markets that require work permits, get these quotes during procurement, not after contract signature.

Supplemental benefits. Statutory benefits are included.

Private health insurance, dental, or pension top-ups carry additional premiums. These are passed through at cost plus administration margin.

Cost modelling

What one German employee actually costs on Atlas

Gross salary: €70,000/year (€5,833/month). Employer contributions: ~€2,330/month (~40%).

Platform fee: $599/month (~€550), plus an undisclosed currency-conversion margin on funding. Monthly total: approximately €8,713.

The $599 platform fee represents roughly 6-7% of the actual monthly cost. The deposit locks up a further €5,833-11,666 upfront. Put the full number in front of Finance before procurement signs off.

How does Atlas compare on price?

At $599/month, Atlas sits at the premium end of the EOR market alongside Deel and Remote. The direct entity model is Atlas’s justification for the price point.

Whether that justification holds depends on whether your legal and compliance teams value entity ownership enough to pay for it.

Provider EOR price Deposit Entity model
Atlas From $599/month By quote 100% owned entities
Deel pricing $599/month By quote, by country Mixed (owned + partner)
Remote pricing $599/month None Owned entities (90+ countries)
Multiplier pricing ~$400/month By quote Partner-dependent
Oyster pricing $599-699/month By quote Partner-dependent
Velocity Global pricing $399-599/month Not published Mixed
Papaya Global pricing $650+/month By quote Partner-dependent
Remofirst $199/month By quote Partner-dependent

Source: Provider pricing pages and third-party analyses, verified April 2026. All prices exclude employer taxes, salary, and FX costs. Subject to change.

For a team of 20 employees, choosing Multiplier over Atlas saves approximately $48,000 per year on platform fees alone. Choosing Remofirst saves approximately $96,000.

Those savings come with trade-offs in entity ownership, country coverage breadth, and compliance infrastructure.

The more relevant comparison for Atlas buyers is against Remote and Deel. All three charge approximately $599/month.

Remote wins on deposits (zero required). Deel wins on platform breadth and self-service. Atlas wins on entity ownership purity and visa sponsorship coverage (100+ countries versus approximately 50-60 for Deel).

If your procurement team is building a comparison slide, the differentiator is not the platform fee. It is the deposit, the entity model, and the total cost when employer taxes and FX are included.

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Atlas charges the same headline rate as Deel and Remote. The total cost diverges on deposits and FX. We estimate the gap between published price and realistic total cost at 30-50% for most multi-country deployments.

The direct entity model is a genuine structural advantage, not marketing. But it only justifies the premium if your compliance or legal team specifically requires owned-entity certainty.

Ask that question internally before procurement begins.

Is Atlas worth the cost?

Atlas is worth the cost when your legal or compliance team has a specific requirement for direct entity ownership, and your country mix includes regulated or emerging markets where partner-dependent EOR creates unacceptable risk.

If you are hiring in Brazil, India, South Korea, or other markets where labour law enforcement is active and penalties are steep, the difference between Atlas owning the entity and another provider subcontracting it matters.

One compliance failure in a partner-dependent model creates a chain of liability that is harder to trace and harder to resolve.

Atlas’s direct model shortens that chain to one link.

Atlas is also worth the cost if visa sponsorship is a significant part of your hiring strategy.

Coverage across 100+ countries is among the broadest in the market, and consolidating EOR and visa services under one provider reduces the coordination overhead that your People Ops team currently absorbs.

Atlas is not worth the cost when your needs are straightforward.

  • If you are hiring in 2-3 well-established markets (UK, Germany, Canada)
  • do not need visa sponsorship
  • and your legal team does not require owned entities

you are paying for structural assurance you may not need.

Multiplier at ~$400/month or Remofirst at $199/month will serve those simpler requirements at significantly lower cost.

The question for your Finance team: does the compliance certainty of the direct entity model justify paying $599/month when partner-dependent alternatives cost $200-400 less? If your legal counsel says yes, Atlas earns its place.

If the answer is ambiguous, the cheaper providers are the pragmatic choice.

For the full platform assessment, see our Atlas. For alternatives, see Atlas alternatives.

Check Atlas’s current pricing and plans

View the provider's latest pricing, plans, and setup details.

Atlas

Official provider site

See current pricing, plans, and how setup works.

External link. Whichapp may earn a commission.

Atlas pricing FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the total cost of one employee in Germany on Atlas?

For a €70,000 salary: approximately €8,793-9,073 per month. That includes the ~$599 platform fee (~€550), roughly €2,330 in employer social contributions (~40% of gross), and 1-2% FX on the conversion (~€80-160).

The deposit locks up a further €5,833-11,666 (refundable). Annual platform and contribution cost: approximately €105,500-108,900 excluding salary.

Does Atlas charge setup or offboarding fees?

No. Atlas does not charge setup fees or offboarding fees for standard EOR engagements.

Complex enterprise deployments (50+ employees, multiple countries) may include implementation support fees of $5,000-$20,000, but standard onboarding is included in the platform fee.

This is a genuine advantage over providers like Papaya Global, which charges setup fees as standard.

Can you negotiate Atlas pricing?

Yes. Volume discounts are the primary lever. At 25+ employees, per-employee fees can drop to $475-575/month. At 100+, fees may reach $375-450/month. Multi-year commitments may unlock further reductions.

The main limitation is lock-in: annual or multi-year commitments reduce your flexibility to switch. Negotiate deposit terms simultaneously, as these are often more impactful than fee reductions for your working capital.

How does Atlas’s deposit compare to competitors?

Atlas may require a refundable deposit per employee, quoted by country (Atlas does not publish the amount; confirm at quote). Deel also quotes a deposit by country.

Remote requires no deposit at all. Multiplier typically requires 1 month salary.

For a 10-person team averaging $8,000/month, the difference between Atlas (up to $160,000 locked) and Remote ($0) is significant enough to change your cash flow planning.

Flag this to your treasury team during evaluation.

Why does Atlas cost the same as Deel and Remote?

All three providers charge approximately $599/month because they compete for the same enterprise segment. The differentiation is structural, not price-based. Atlas’s pitch is 100% owned entities.

Remote’s pitch is no deposits plus owned entities in 70+ countries. Deel’s pitch is platform breadth across EOR, contractors, HRIS, and IT in one system.

Your choice depends on which structural advantage your organisation values most, not which provider is cheapest.

How we verified Atlas pricing

Whichapp is an independent comparison site. We do not sell EOR, payroll, or contractor services.

We may earn a commission from provider links. This does not affect our editorial judgement. Pricing analysis is based on the same methodology whether or not we have a commercial relationship with the provider.

We assessed Atlas’s public pricing page, help centre documentation, third-party pricing analyses from eorHQ, employborderless, and remotepeople.com, and user reviews on G2 (4.5/5, 35 reviews) and Capterra (5/5, 5 reviews).

Volume discount tiers are editorial estimates compiled from multiple third-party sources, not directly confirmed by Atlas.

Atlas was not tested as a live product for this pricing analysis. Cost estimates are based on published information and may differ from negotiated pricing.

Employer tax rates are approximate and vary by employee circumstances.

Last reviewed: April 2026