Blog

9 best countries to hire customer service workers

James Kelly

Author

James Kelly

Last Updated

1 May 2026

Read Time

13 min

A growing SaaS company outgrowing its in-house support desk typically starts by comparing a few familiar options, such as the Philippines, India, and Mexico. The initial focus is often on cost, but price differences tend to be narrower than expected. The real variation shows up in language quality, time-zone coverage, cultural fit, and how well the hiring model supports day-to-day operations.

Most decisions start to shift at this stage. The country determines access to talent, but the outcome depends on how well the choice aligns with your customers, your operating hours, and the structure you use to hire and manage the team.

A country becomes attractive for offshore customer service when several factors line up:

  • Strong communication in the support language (usually English, plus any secondary languages you serve),
  • Labour and operating costs materially lower than onshore
  • Cultural alignment with your main customer base
  • Time-zone overlap with your customer hours
  • Mature BPO or talent ecosystem that can staff and retain agents at scale.

Regulatory stability and data-protection frameworks matter more in regulated industries, like finance and healthcare.

None of these dimensions wins alone. For instance, a country with the cheapest rates but weak language quality usually costs more per resolved ticket. A country with perfect time-zone overlap but a thin talent pool can’t staff growth. The right pick is the best fit across the basket, not the extreme on any one axis.

Country

Best For

Cost Tier

Primary Time Zone Fit

Standout Strength

Philippines

High-volume English voice + non-voice

Low

US overnight / APAC day

Neutral English, deep BPO ecosystem

India

Large-scale, tech-heavy support

Lowest

US overnight / APAC day

Scale, technical depth

South Africa

Quality-led English CX

Mid

UK/EU day, US evenings

Empathetic service culture

Mexico

Bilingual US–LatAm nearshore

Mid

US business hours

English–Spanish fluency

Colombia

Bilingual nearshore at value

Mid-low

US business hours

Cost-effective bilingual

Poland

Multilingual European CX

Mid-high

UK/EU day

High English proficiency

Romania

Multilingual European CX

Mid

UK/EU day

5+ European languages

Malaysia

APAC multilingual support

Mid-low

APAC day

Asian-language coverage

Canada

Premium bilingual North American

Premium

US business hours

English–French, compliance-ready

Each country section below is scored across five lenses. The evaluation language is descriptive (strong, moderate, emerging) rather than numeric, because the underlying data varies by provider, city, and role.

1. English proficiency

  • The EF English Proficiency Index consistently ranks Poland, Romania, and the Philippines in the “high” or “very high” categories.
  • India, South Africa, and Malaysia are established English-speaking BPO hubs with large, trained workforces.
  • Mexico and Colombia are strong on bilingual English–Spanish coverage, and Canada offers native English plus French.

English proficiency within a country can vary significantly between major BPO cities and the wider labour market, so vendor location matters.

2. Time zone alignment

  • For US and Canada-based companies, Mexico, Colombia, and Canada offer real-time overlap with North American business hours.
  • South Africa fits UK and European shifts and can cover late-afternoon US hours.
  • Philippines, India, and Malaysia handle overnight US coverage or daytime APAC coverage, and most providers in these markets run 24/7.
  • Poland and Romania align with UK and Western European hours, with some extended-shift US overlap.

A practical rule: pick one or two hubs that overlap your customer base, then add a second region if you genuinely need 24/7.

3. Labour cost

Cost bands (indicative, not quotes): Philippines, India, and parts of Eastern Europe typically deliver the lowest hourly rates, often 40 to 60 percent below Western onshore.

Canada is a premium nearshore option, cheaper than US onshore when currency and cost of living are factored in, but more expensive than classic offshore destinations.

4. Cultural communication style

  • Philippines is well known for accent-neutral English and a service-oriented, empathetic style, with strong familiarity with US media and customer expectations.
  • India has decades of experience with global support, though communication styles vary by region and provider.
  • South Africa is consistently ranked as a premium offshore CX hub, with research citing up to 18 percent better customer experience metrics than other offshore markets.
  • Mexico and Colombia lean warm and relationship-driven.
  • Poland and Romania offer a neutral European style familiar to EMEA customers.
  • Malaysia brings multicultural fluency across Asian and Western norms.
  • Canada aligns closely with US service expectations.

5. Talent pool size

  • India and the Philippines lead on sheer scale, with millions employed across contact centres, back office, and CX operations.
  • South Africa has a fast-growing global business services sector, with strong momentum in the call-centre industry.
  • Mexico, Colombia, Poland, and Romania have deep pipelines for multilingual CX.
  • Malaysia and Canada have smaller populations but strong education systems and maturing BPO sectors suited to specialised queues.

1. Philippines

  • Often called the “BPO Capital of the World”, the Philippines has a long-established niche in voice-based customer support, telemarketing, and virtual assistance.
  • English proficiency is high, literacy is strong, and there’s meaningful cultural affinity with US, Canada, and other Western markets.
  • The main draw for customer-facing roles is accent-neutral English paired with a warm, empathetic communication style.
  • Costs sit materially below US and Western European rates, typically in the low-to-mid double-digit USD per hour range for outsourced teams.
  • The BPO ecosystem is deep: experienced supervisors, specialised vendors, government support through the IT-BPM sector, and strong telecoms infrastructure.

The time-zone gap for North America means most teams run night shifts, which affects retention and well-being if not managed well. Top talent is competitive to hire, and quality varies significantly between providers, so vendor selection matters more here than in smaller markets.

2. India

  • India is one of the original global outsourcing leaders, with enormous scale across IT, software, and BPO.
  • The English-speaking talent pool is concentrated in major metros (Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Delhi NCR, Mumbai, Pune, Chennai), and labour costs are among the lowest of any major outsourcing destination; some sources estimate 70 percent savings versus Western markets for comparable roles.
  • Beyond voice support, India has a strong track record in tech support, complex workflows, and multi-channel operations (chat, email, ticketing).
  • The trade-off is perception: some customers associate Indian call centres with older, script-heavy models, so brands need to vet partners who have actually modernised.
  • Regional accent variation is real, which means provider and location selection matter for customer-facing roles.
  • Best fit for large-scale, multi-channel support where cost efficiency and technical capability matter most, particularly in SaaS, IT, and telecom.

3. South Africa

  • South Africa has emerged as a premium offshore CX hub and reports 18% better CX than competing offshore markets.
  • The English-speaking workforce is well-educated, with strong empathy and a service orientation that research has linked to materially better CX metrics than other offshore markets.
  • Costs typically run at roughly half or less of US equivalents, positioning South Africa above India and the Philippines on quality while still delivering meaningful savings.
  • Cultural alignment with the UK and broader Western markets is a clear selling point, and the time-zone overlap supports UK/EU daytime and US evening shifts.

Cape Town and Johannesburg are the main hiring hubs, and competition for top talent there is rising. Works well for brands that prioritise high-quality English CX with a strong empathy factor for UK, EU, and global customers, while operating at mid-range offshore pricing.

4. Mexico

  • Mexico is a leading nearshore destination for US and Canadian firms, particularly for bilingual English–Spanish support.
  • The country has one of the largest bilingual pools in Latin America, with real-time US business-hour overlap and cultural familiarity with American customers.
  • Labour and operating costs commonly sit 50 percent below US equivalents, while providers support high-touch, omnichannel CX.
  • Mexico works particularly well for voice, chat, and sales-oriented customer interactions where real-time collaboration between the in-house team and the support team matters.
  • Hourly rates are higher than classic offshore destinations, but the combination of time-zone fit and bilingual capability often makes it the better total-cost-of-ownership choice for US-focused brands.
  • Quality varies widely across boutique, mid-market, and large BPOs, so due diligence per provider is non-negotiable.

5. Colombia

  • Colombia is a top Latin American BPO destination with strong government support, bilingual Spanish–English talent, and a growing reputation in global outsourcing indices. It has been recognised by AT Kearney and similar rankings as a leading outsourcing destination, signalling ecosystem maturity.
  • Costs are competitive, typically below Mexico on hourly rates while offering similar nearshore time-zone advantages for US and Canadian customers.
  • Bilingual agents are widely available, and the tone of service leans warm and relationship-driven. English proficiency is strong in BPO hubs (Bogotá, Medellín, Barranquilla) but not as universal as in the Philippines or Northern Europe, which makes training quality and provider selection important.

Best fit for US and Canadian brands seeking bilingual support at competitive nearshore rates, particularly for voice, collections, sales, and omnichannel CX.

6. Poland

  • Poland is increasingly positioned as a primary European BPO hub rather than just an alternative.
  • English proficiency is very high with clear, neutral accents, and the talent pool extends across English, German, French, Spanish, and Polish, making Poland a strong fit for pan-European CX.
  • Time-zone alignment works naturally for UK and Western European hours, with late shifts covering US overlap. Labour costs are higher than India and the Philippines, but often comparable to or slightly below some Western European markets for specialised roles.

Major hiring hubs include Warsaw, Krakow, and Wrocław, where talent competition can make hiring harder without a strong employer brand or the right local partners. A strong fit for European or global brands that need high-quality English and multilingual support, especially in regulated industries and complex customer journeys.

7. Romania

Romania is one of Europe’s top destinations for call-centre outsourcing and multilingual customer support. The workforce is educated and genuinely multilingual (English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, and more) which makes the country a go-to for pan-European CX programmes that need breadth.

Hourly costs run 20 to 40 percent below Western European baselines, and modern digital infrastructure in Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara, and Iași supports full-service BPO operations. The talent pool is smaller than India or the Philippines, so very large operations may require multiple locations or blended delivery across Poland and Romania.

A good option for companies that need multilingual European customer support at mid-range costs, particularly in industries where clear communication and regulatory alignment matter.

8. Malaysia

Malaysia is a rising Southeast Asian hub for customer experience BPO, combining multilingual talent, competitive costs, and government-backed digital-economy initiatives.

  • The multilingual profile is the standout (English plus Malay, Mandarin, Cantonese, and Tamil) which makes Malaysia ideal for APAC-wide support or multilingual serves spanning several Asian customer bases.
  • The customer-experience BPO market in Malaysia has been estimated at over USD 1.43 billion with 12.5 CAGR projections from 2025 to 2030.
  • Brand recognition for US-based founders is lower than the Philippines or India, so more research goes into finding the right partner.
  • Time-zone is excellent for APAC but not naturally aligned with the US unless the provider runs night shifts.
  • Best fit for regional APAC customer support and multilingual CX across Asian languages, plus English support at competitive cost.

9. Canada

Canada is a premium nearshore option for US and global brands that need high-quality, bilingual English–French customer service with strong data and compliance standards.

  • The workforce is highly educated, with native-level English and strong French, and many call centres advertise fully bilingual representatives.
  • Cultural, legal, and time-zone proximity to the US is the main draw, alongside high service standards and strong data protection frameworks such as PIPEDA, useful in regulated industries like finance, healthcare, and enterprise SaaS.
  • Labour costs are higher than offshore destinations, so Canada is typically chosen for quality, compliance, and bilingual coverage rather than cost minimisation.
  • The talent pool is also smaller than India or the Philippines, which makes Canada better suited to high-value or specialised queues than massive-volume programmes.
  • US and global brands benefit from premium support, bilingual North American coverage, and compliant CX for finance, healthcare, and SaaS.

Choosing the country is half the decision. How you engage workers matters just as much for speed, compliance, and long-term cost.

Direct employment via a local entity

Your company sets up a local entity and hires employees directly under local labour law. This gives maximum control over contracts, benefits, branding, and culture, and can be cheaper long-term once entity setup is amortised.

The trade-off is time and overhead: months of setup, local directors, ongoing statutory obligations, and in-house HR and payroll capability in every jurisdiction. Direct entity only makes sense when headcount justifies the fixed cost, typically 25 to 50+ stable employees in one country.

Hiring contractors

Engaging individuals or small agencies as independent contractors works well for short-term, pilot, or part-time roles. It’s fast, flexible, and requires no entity or EOR.

The catch is misclassification risk: if contractors work fixed hours, receive direct supervision, or depend on you economically, regulators in many countries treat them as employees. That can trigger back taxes, statutory benefit claims, and reclassification orders. For ongoing core customer service work, contractor-only engagement is risky in most jurisdictions.

Where you want to keep a worker as a genuine contractor rather than convert them to an employee, an Agent of Record can own the compliance layer (contract structure, classification review, invoicing, payments) without triggering employment.

Employer of Record (EOR)

An EOR becomes the legal employer while your team directs day-to-day work. The EOR handles contracts, payroll, tax withholding, statutory benefits, and compliance. You can hire full-time employees in a country in weeks, not months, and the compliance posture is usually stronger than DIY contracting.

Per-employee pricing makes EOR a flexible model for building teams across countries without upfront entity setup. It works well for teams ranging from a single hire to 50+ employees per country, covering most distributed customer service operations.

A practical way to think about it: if you need to hire quickly in a new market, EOR or contractors provide speed and flexibility. As teams grow and stabilise at larger scale, some companies choose to complement this with a local entity in specific markets.

What actually determines success after hiring

The best country on paper is rarely the best country once the contract is signed. Most post-launch regrets trace back to management, not geography: unclear SLAs, weak onboarding, shallow QA, and provider relationships that never mature into a partnership.

Pick the country that fits your customers, but invest the same energy in the operating model behind it. The country earns you the shortlist; the management earns you the outcome.

If you’re setting up customer support teams across countries, talk to Boundless. We help you hire and manage teams through EOR or AOR, handling contracts, payroll, and compliance in each market so your operating model works in practice, not just on paper.

FAQs

Customer service work is well-suited to remote delivery across phone, chat, and email. Many providers operate hybrid or fully remote models, though policies vary. Some still require on-site presence for security or training. Remote flexibility is often higher with EOR or contractors than traditional call centres.

No, low-cost providers can increase total cost through churn, repeat contacts, and poor CX. Many destinations compete on quality, multilingual capability, and time-zone fit. Customer satisfaction, NPS, and retention often matter as much as hourly rates.

It depends on local law and how the work is structured. Fixed hours, supervision, and long-term dependence usually indicate employment. Misclassification can trigger penalties. Contractors suit short-term work, but core support roles are typically safer as employees via entity or EOR.

Yes. EORs enable companies to hire employees across countries without local entities, handling contracts, payroll, and compliance. Boundless supports this by managing the employment setup end-to-end, making it easier to build distributed support teams and scale across markets.

The making available of information to you on this site by Boundless shall not create a legal, confidential or other relationship between you and Boundless and does not constitute the provision of legal, tax, commercial or other professional advice by Boundless. You acknowledge and agree that any information on this site has not been prepared with your specific circumstances in mind, may not be suitable for use in your business, and does not constitute advice intended for reliance. You assume all risk and liability that may result from any such reliance on the information and you should seek independent advice from a lawyer or tax professional in the relevant jurisdiction(s) before doing so.

Explore more resources

Blog

The 5 countries with the most complex employment laws

Five countries where employment law is genuinely complex, what makes each one difficult, and how companies hire compliantly despite the rules.

Blog

How labour laws differ across countries (and why it matters)

Labour laws vary dramatically from country to country, from termination rights to paid leave and working hours. Understanding these differences is essential.

Blog

Recruitment challenges 2026: why skills gaps are pushing companies to hire globally

The skills gap is not a talent problem. It is a reach problem, and the companies solving it in 2026 are hiring globally.

Blog

When should you hire an employee instead of an independent contractor?

The decision to hire an employee or an independent contractor affects compliance, cost, IP, and risk. Here's how to make the right call.

Global employment made gloriously uneventful

Talk to us and discover Boundless possibilities

Book a personalised discovery and get your questions answered by our experts.