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    Virtual Assistant vs Full-Time Employee: What's Right for Your Business?

    Hiring full-time feels safe. But the real cost of a full-time employee is 1.35–1.57x their salary before year one ends. Here's the honest comparison — including when a VA wins and when it doesn't.

    April 3, 2026
    5 min read

    You need more support. The question is whether to hire a full-time employee or bring on a virtual assistant. The wrong answer will cost you months and thousands of dollars. Here's how to get it right.

    The Real Cost of a Full-Time Hire

    Most business owners dramatically underestimate what a full-time employee actually costs. The salary is just the start.

    For a $50,000/year hire, the true employer cost typically looks like this:

    Cost Component Annual Estimate
    Base salary$50,000
    Payroll taxes (FICA ~7.65%)$3,825
    Health insurance (employer share)$6,000–$9,000
    Paid time off (15 days = ~5.8%)$2,900
    Equipment, software, workspace$2,000–$5,000
    Recruiting and onboarding (one-time)$3,000–$8,000
    Total Year 1 Cost$67,725–$78,725

    That's 35–57% above the stated salary. And that's before factoring in the management time you'll spend supervising, training, and developing a new team member — which research estimates at 4–8 hours per week in the first 90 days.

    The Real Cost of a Virtual Assistant

    VAs are typically priced by the hour or on a monthly retainer. The cost varies significantly by region:

    VA Type Hourly Rate 40 hrs/month Annual Cost
    US-based VA$30–$60/hr$1,200–$2,400/mo$14,400–$28,800
    Philippines VA$8–$15/hr$320–$600/mo$3,840–$7,200
    LATAM VA (WiseVAs)$15–$25/hr$600–$1,000/mo$7,200–$12,000

    No payroll taxes. No benefits. No equipment costs. No severance if things don't work out. And no recruiting marathon — a good VA agency handles vetting and matching in days, not months.

    When a Full-Time Employee Wins

    We're not here to oversell VAs. There are genuine scenarios where a full-time hire is the right answer:

    • The role requires deep institutional knowledge — If success depends on someone absorbing months of context, relationships, and company culture, an employee has more time to build that.
    • You need someone physically present — Warehouse management, in-person client services, and hands-on operations require a body in the room.
    • The role is a core function, not a support function — Your lead developer, head of sales, or creative director likely needs to be a full team member, not a contractor.
    • You need full-time availability around the clock — Some roles genuinely require a dedicated human who's reachable 24/7 on your schedule.
    • You're building a team culture — If cohesion and shared identity are part of your growth strategy, employees invest in that more deeply than contractors.

    When a Virtual Assistant Wins

    VAs are the right move in more situations than most founders realize:

    • The work is task-based and process-driven — Email management, scheduling, social media, research, data entry, customer support. These are VA-native tasks.
    • You need flexibility — Scale up during busy seasons, scale down when things are quiet. No HR headaches either way.
    • Speed matters — A vetted VA can be operational in a week. A full-time hire can take 2–3 months from posting to productive.
    • You're testing a function before committing — Not sure if you need a full-time marketing coordinator? Start with a VA. If the work grows, you'll know exactly what the role requires.
    • You want to protect your energy — Administrative and operational tasks are the fastest way to drain a founder. A VA takes those off your plate so you can stay in your zone of genius.

    The Hybrid Approach: Best of Both Worlds

    The most common setup for scaling businesses isn't a binary choice — it's a hybrid model:

    • A small core team of full-time employees for your highest-leverage, culture-critical roles
    • A layer of VAs handling operational, administrative, and support functions
    • Contractors or specialists for project-based needs (design, development, copywriting)

    This structure keeps your headcount lean, your overhead low, and your team focused on the work that only they can do.

    Decision Framework: VA or FTE?

    Answer these four questions to find your answer:

    1. Is the work task-based or role-based? Task = VA. Role = consider FTE.
    2. Does the work require physical presence or in-person collaboration? Yes = FTE. No = VA is viable.
    3. Are you testing a function or committing to it long-term? Testing = VA. Committed = FTE may make sense.
    4. What does your cash flow support? VA costs are variable and predictable. FTE costs are fixed and compounding.

    If you answered Task / No / Testing / Variable — start with a VA.

    🏆 WiseVAs
    The VA Partner Built for US Business Owners

    WiseVAs handles the hiring, vetting, and matching — so you get a qualified LATAM VA in your timezone, ready to work, without the recruiting grind or employer overhead.

    ✅ No payroll taxes, no benefits, no equipment costs
    ✅ US timezone coverage (EST/CST/PST)
    ✅ AI-augmented VAs — 3x more productive than traditional
    ✅ Replacement guarantee within 30 days if the fit isn't right

    Best for: Founders who want to move fast without the overhead of a traditional hire.

    © 2026 WiseVAs | Costs and estimates are approximate and vary by role, location, and industry. Consult your HR or legal advisor for specifics.

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    About the author

    MG

    Marcio Gonçalves

    Founder, WiseVAs

    WiseVAs

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