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You are at:Home»HR & Recruitment»UK companies increasingly hiring overseas, experts warn of key risk

UK companies increasingly hiring overseas, experts warn of key risk

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Posted By sme-admin on June 9, 2026 HR & Recruitment, Legal

81% of UK based employers who already have employees overseas are intending to increase their workforce abroad according to fresh statistics. However, as businesses prepare for the annual surge in summer leave requests, managing annual leave across international teams is becoming increasingly complex.

For companies employing people in multiple countries, holiday policies are no longer just an internal HR issue. Different legal frameworks, employee protections, and cultural expectations can create significant compliance risks if businesses apply the same approach globally.

For example, while UK employers have broad discretion over when leave can be taken, rejecting a similar request in Germany could potentially lead to a labour court dispute if employees believe their statutory rights are being restricted unfairly.

The experts at Teamed say many growing businesses underestimate how quickly international workforce management becomes operationally challenging, particularly when hiring overseas without a local entity or Employer of Record structure.

Tom Price-Daniel, Co-founder of Teamed, explains:

“Companies can now hire across borders in a matter of weeks. The problem is most of them are doing it with a rulebook written for one country.

A UK business can have people in five European markets before the quarter is out. A US firm can build a UK workforce almost overnight. What nobody warns them about is how wildly the rules change the second you cross a border.

What feels like a routine HR call in the UK can blow up somewhere else entirely. Turn down annual leave, get working time wrong, apply the wrong policy in the wrong market, and you are suddenly looking at employee disputes, financial penalties, and a reputation problem that costs far more than the hire ever did.

International hiring is one of the best moves a growing company can make. But going into new countries without local expertise and the right foundations does not save money. It just pushes the bill to the end, where it is always bigger and a lot harder to fix, right?”

Why UK holiday rules can become a legal headache overseas

1. The ‘one-size-fits-all’ HR mistake that could land employers in trouble abroad

Applying the same holiday policy across every country might seem efficient, but for international employers it can quickly become a compliance disaster waiting to happen.

Annual leave laws vary dramatically between countries, from mandatory holiday allowances and public holidays to sick leave protections, carry-over rules, and the circumstances in which employers are legally allowed to reject time off requests.

What feels like standard practice in the UK or US can trigger serious legal and reputational consequences elsewhere. In countries such as Germany, the Netherlands, and France, employee protections are often far stricter, with businesses facing far less flexibility around leave management and worker rights.

For fast-growing international businesses, a ‘one-size-fits-all’ HR policy can quickly become a legal and operational minefield. Companies need locally compliant policies that protect the business without creating confusion, inconsistency, or employee backlash across global teams.

2. The global workforce admin nightmare growing businesses cannot afford to ignore

Managing leave manually across multiple countries quickly becomes unmanageable as international teams scale.

Centralised systems give businesses real-time visibility over leave allowances, local public holidays, overlapping absences, and country-specific employment obligations, helping prevent compliance gaps before they become costly problems.

For companies hiring internationally without local HR infrastructure, this level of oversight is becoming essential rather than optional.

These systems can also act as an early warning sign for growth. If headcount in countries such as the Netherlands or Germany starts rapidly increasing, it may signal that continuing without a local entity is no longer sustainable operationally, financially, or legally.

3. When hiring abroad starts to reshape your legal risk

Many companies first hire overseas talent simply because they’ve found the strongest candidate for the role, regardless of where they are based.

However, as organisations begin to build teams in the same country, their legal and operational obligations can shift quite significantly.

For instance, a UK-headquartered company employing six or more people in the Netherlands may need to consider whether setting up a local legal entity becomes more practical and cost effective in the long run.

Likewise, US companies with staff in the UK are increasingly required to stay on top of evolving UK employment regulations and assess how these changes impact their overseas workforce.

Tom Price-Daniel Co-founder of Teamed adds:

“Hiring internationally gives you access to brilliant people anywhere in the world. It can also turn into a compliance nightmare quicker than most leaders expect.

A lot of companies treat it as a recruitment problem. Find the person, send the offer, done. But every new country is a completely different set of employment laws, worker protections, and tax obligations. What works perfectly in the UK can land you in serious trouble in Germany or Brazil.

We see businesses caught out all the time. Not because they did anything reckless, but because their growth got ahead of their processes. One overseas hire becomes a team of thirty across six countries, and the leadership team only works out how much compliance risk they are carrying when something has already gone wrong.

The companies winning globally are not the ones hiring the fastest. They are the ones who put the local expertise and the proper processes in place before the cracks start showing.”

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