A PEO (Professional Employer Organization) handles payroll, workers compensation, employee benefits, and HR compliance for small and mid-sized businesses through a co-employment arrangement. This page explains what PEOs actually do, what they don't, and how to figure out whether one fits your business — without the sales pressure.
Written + reviewed by Clicks Geek PEO Editorial Team·Last updated May 15, 2026
4 services
Payroll + workers comp + benefits + HR compliance
10–150
Employee sweet spot for PEO economics
CPEO
IRS-certified providers transfer federal tax liability
50+
PEO providers in our matching pool
What a PEO does
A PEO becomes the co-employer of record for your W-2 employees, which lets them deliver four core services that most small businesses can't economically build alone:
Payroll and payroll tax administration — running payroll on schedule, calculating withholdings, filing 941s and state employment tax returns, issuing W-2s, handling multi-state payroll, and remitting taxes to the right agencies on time.
Workers compensation coverage — placing your business on the PEO's master workers comp policy, which often unlocks lower rates, pooled-risk pricing, and full claims-management infrastructure your business couldn't access at your size alone.
Employee benefits — access to large-group health, dental, vision, life, disability, retirement (typically a Multiple Employer Plan 401k), FSA/HSA, and ancillary coverage at pricing closer to what a 500+ employee company would pay.
HR compliance and employee administration — handbook, FLSA classification review, multi-state employment law guidance, onboarding paperwork, COBRA and ACA administration, EEO-1 reporting, and access to HR advisors for the day-to-day questions.
The mechanism is co-employment: you still own the business, you still direct the work, you still hire and fire. The PEO becomes the "employer of record" for tax filing, insurance, and benefits-administration purposes only.
What a PEO does not do
Plenty of confusion in this market comes from selling promises that a PEO can't actually deliver. Here's what's outside the scope of every legitimate PEO:
They don't take over your business
You still own and operate the company. Hiring, firing, pay, management decisions stay with you.
They don't guarantee comp savings
Master-policy pricing usually beats small-business standalone, but only when class codes are honest and claims history is clean.
They don't replace your CPA or attorney
PEO handles employment tax filings; CPA handles business taxes; complex employment disputes go to your employment attorney.
They don't fix dysfunctional HR overnight
Documentation gaps, FLSA misclassification, wrongful-termination exposure — the PEO inherits the situation; help comes going forward.
They don't manage performance
Coaching, reviews, day-to-day supervision stay with you. The PEO provides templates and process, not management.
They're not an EOR for international
PEOs handle US co-employment only. International hires go through an EOR (Deel, Remote, Velocity Global) or your own foreign entity.
What we typically see
The most successful PEO engagements start with realistic expectations on both sides — the buyer understands the PEO won't fix existing risk overnight, and the PEO understands the buyer isn't looking for a magic-bullet sales pitch. Our matching methodology is built around surfacing that honest fit, not pushing buyers toward the provider that pays us most.
Payroll and tax administration
Payroll is the foundation of every PEO relationship. The PEO becomes the legal employer of record for tax purposes, which means:
They process payroll on your schedule (weekly, biweekly, semimonthly) including direct deposit, paper checks, or paycards.
They withhold and remit federal income tax, FICA (Social Security and Medicare), federal unemployment (FUTA), state income tax, state unemployment (SUTA), and any local taxes.
They file your federal Form 941 quarterly, Form 940 annually, state employment-tax returns by state, and they issue W-2s to your employees in January.
If they're an IRS Certified PEO (CPEO), federal employment tax liability legally transfers to them under the 2014 Small Business Efficiency Act — meaning the IRS pursues the PEO, not you, if there's a tax issue. IRS CPEO program details.
Multi-state payroll is handled centrally, including SUTA-rate reciprocity, multi-state tax withholding, and state-specific paid-leave compliance.
For most service businesses, this alone is worth the engagement — payroll-tax penalties from late or incorrect filings routinely run thousands of dollars per quarter for a small business handling it in-house.
Employee benefits
Small businesses face a structural problem with benefits: insurance carriers price by group size, and a 10-employee business pays much higher per-employee rates than a 500-employee business. A PEO solves this by aggregating its entire client base — often tens of thousands of employees — into a single master pool. Your team is priced at that scale.
Typical benefits offerings inside a PEO:
Group health insurance — usually multiple plan tiers across major carriers (UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, BCBS, Kaiser regional), with PPO/HMO/HDHP options.
Dental and vision — voluntary or employer-contributed, separate elections.
Life and AD&D, short-term and long-term disability — group rates substantially below standalone coverage.
Retirement (401k) — usually a Multiple Employer Plan (MEP) or Pooled Employer Plan (PEP) where the PEO handles fiduciary duties, plan administration, and 5500 filings. Some PEOs include 3(38) fiduciary coverage at no extra cost.
FSA, HSA, dependent-care FSA, commuter benefits — administered by the PEO or via a benefits-admin platform integration.
Whether benefits actually save you money depends heavily on your current carrier rates, group health rating in your state, and how much your existing premium would change at renewal. Run the numbers on every PEO quote.
Workers compensation and risk support
For service businesses — especially trades — workers comp is often the deciding factor in PEO economics. A PEO can place you on its master policy with three handling models:
Carry your existing mod rate — your experience modifier moves with you. Your premium reflects your actual claims history.
Blend your mod with the PEO's pool — partial credit for the PEO's pool, partial reflection of your own history. Common for mid-mod accounts.
Replace with pool-rate pricing — your mod is set aside and you pay the PEO's pool rate. Beneficial if your mod is above 1.0; problematic if your mod is below 1.0 (you'd pay more in the pool).
This is where industry specialization matters most. A PEO that doesn't routinely write your trade's class codes — NCCI 5403 (carpentry), 5474 (painting), 5188 (plumbing), 5190 (electrical), 5057 (iron/steel erection), and so on — may quote you at unfavorable terms or miss compliance nuances. Read more on workers comp in a PEO relationship.
Beyond pricing, most PEOs include claims-management support, OSHA log assistance, safety program templates, and (for larger accounts) on-site safety consulting. For trades where a single claim can spike your mod for three years, the claims-management infrastructure is often more valuable than the rate itself.
HR compliance and employee administration
HR compliance for a small business owner is the proverbial iceberg: visible operational items above the waterline, regulatory exposure below it. A PEO handles both layers:
Employee handbook — drafted to your state(s) and industry, updated as laws change, version-controlled.
Onboarding — I-9 verification, W-4 collection, state withholding forms, direct deposit setup, benefits enrollment, handbook acknowledgment.
Multi-state employment law — paid leave, final pay rules, meal/rest breaks, employee privacy, and state-mandated training (sexual harassment training in CA, NY, IL; pay-transparency laws in WA, CA, NY, CO).
Federal reporting — EEO-1 for employers above thresholds, ACA 1094/1095 filings, ERISA Form 5500 for benefits plans, OSHA 300/300A logs.
The HR support layer typically includes an assigned HR advisor (or pool of advisors) you can call with questions. Service-level commitments vary widely — ask for a specific response-time SLA before signing.
PEO vs. payroll company
The most common confusion at the small-business stage: "Do I need a PEO, or is payroll software enough?"
Payroll software (Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, ADP RUN, Paychex Flex) handles paychecks, payroll tax remittance, and basic onboarding paperwork. It's cheap (often $30–$80/month plus per-employee fees) and runs itself. For a business under 5 W-2 employees with no benefits, no workers comp complexity, and no multi-state exposure — payroll software is almost always the right answer.
A PEO becomes meaningful when one or more of these conditions exists:
You want group health benefits at large-group pricing.
Your workers comp class is high-mod or high-rate and you want pool pricing.
You operate in 2+ states and don't want to manage multi-state compliance yourself.
You want HR support without hiring an in-house HR person.
You're paying more than $2,000–$3,000/month in combined payroll, benefits, and HR admin fragmentation costs.
Businesses with 10–150 W-2 employees — the sweet spot where PEO admin scales economically and benefits arbitrage is meaningful.
Service-industry businesses — especially Home Services trades (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing, restoration, landscaping) where workers comp exposure is material.
Multi-state employers — where compliance complexity exceeds in-house bandwidth.
Growing businesses that don't yet have an HR or controller hire — and don't want to make one yet.
Owners spending 10+ hours/week on payroll, benefits, and HR paperwork — the time recovery alone often justifies the fee.
If your business sits outside these ranges (very small, very large, or no benefits/comp pain), the calculation tilts the other way. Our quote-match form asks the questions that surface this honestly. Compare your situation.
How to compare PEO providers
Once you've decided a PEO might fit, comparison takes seven dimensions:
Total all-in cost per employee per year — admin fee plus benefits pass-through plus workers comp. Apples-to-apples.
Workers comp handling — class code accuracy, mod treatment, claims management.
Benefits depth and renewal history — what carriers, what plans, what 3-year renewal trend.
HRIS technology — daily usability for owners, managers, and employees.
HR support model — dedicated advisor vs. pool, response-time SLA.
Industry expertise — do they understand your class codes, licensure, and field-service patterns?
Contract terms — cancellation, auto-renewal, rate-lock, data portability.
This is exactly the framework our matching methodology uses. The differences between providers on these dimensions are often larger than the differences in headline price.
Industry-specific takes
The PEO service mix is industry-agnostic in core, but the deciding services vary. How this overview applies by vertical:
Our team has helped 500+ businesses across SaaS, service trades, professional services, and healthcare evaluate PEO options and place them with the right provider. We are paid only by PEO partners after a fit, never marked up to you.
Tell us about your business in about 90 seconds and we'll match you to PEO providers that fit your headcount, state mix, industry, and current setup — or recommend a non-PEO option if that's the better fit. Free, no obligation.