Labour Hire vs Direct Employment in Queensland: Which Model Costs Less and Risks Less?

In this blog, we compare a labour hire vs direct employment model for a business in Queensland and share the case scenarios where each option might work best.

You’ve probably already got a quote from a labour hire company sitting in your inbox. It looks higher than a direct wage, and you’re wondering if it’s worth it.

Here’s the catch: direct employment carries hidden costs too. Workers’ comp claims, bad hires, and unfair dismissal risk can all quietly outweigh a higher hourly rate.

This article breaks down what each model really costs and when each one wins, with a checklist to help you decide. By the end, you’ll know exactly which option protects your business and your bottom line.

What’s the real difference between a labour hire company and direct employment?

With direct employment, you hire the worker yourself. You pay their wages, super, and workers’ comp. You manage their performance and, if things go wrong, their exit.

With labour hire, the labour hire company is the legal employer. You direct the worker’s day-to-day tasks. The agency pays their wages, super, and workers’ comp, and carries the IR risk.

Direct EmploymentLabour Hire
Employer of recordYour businessLabour hire company
Pays super and workers compYour businessLabour hire agency
Manages IR riskYour businessLabour hire agency
Typical lengthOngoing or permanentShort-term, seasonal, or project-based

This split is why the two models carry different costs and risks. Everything below comes back to who is legally on the hook for the worker.

What does direct employment actually cost in Queensland?

Job candidate filling out an application form during an interview with a recruitment consultant

Direct employment looks cheaper on a payslip. That rarely stays true once you add on-costs, compliance, and the risk of a bad hire.

Base wages and on-costs

Wages are just the start. Every Australian employer must also pay the super guarantee, which rose to 12% of ordinary earnings from 1 July 2025. On top of that, you may owe payroll tax once your wages cross the state threshold, and leave loading applies under the relevant award.

Workers compensation premiums

Every Queensland employer must hold a WorkCover Queensland accident insurance policy. Your premium depends on your wages, your industry, and your claims history. The average net premium rate for 2025 to 2026 is $1.343 per $100 of wages, after discounts.

A single serious injury claim can push your premium above the industry average for years. That’s a cost direct employers carry alone.

Recruitment and onboarding costs

Advertising a role, screening applicants, and running interviews all take staff time. A recruitment agency can identify the specific skills you need and handle the placement, including contracts and onboarding. If you run this in-house and the hire doesn’t work out, you repeat the whole process.

Unfair dismissal exposure

Once an employee passes the minimum employment period, they can apply for unfair dismissal. Staff become eligible after 6 months of service, or 12 months at a small business with fewer than 15 staff. Get the process wrong, and you’re facing a Fair Work Commission claim and lost management time.

Cost itemEstimated costWho bears it
Super guarantee12% of ordinary earningsEmployer
WorkCover premiumFrom $1.343 per $100 of wagesEmployer
Recruitment and onboardingDays to weeks of staff timeEmployer
Unfair dismissal claimLegal fees plus management timeEmployer

What does a labour hire company actually cost?

Recruiter handing a document to a job seeker during a recruitment consultation

A labour hire charge rate looks higher than a direct wage. That’s because it isn’t just a wage. It bundles the worker’s pay with everything else the agency manages for you.

Charge rate breakdown

The rate a labour hire company quotes covers wages, super, and workers’ comp, plus the agency’s margin. That margin funds the agency’s own compliance, payroll, and recruitment work. It isn’t pure profit.

Thorough screening and what direct hire doesn’t cover

A reputable labour hire company puts candidates through thorough screening first. This includes interviews and background checks before anyone starts on site. You don’t carry the IR risk of managing that employment relationship yourself.

If a placement isn’t the right fit, the agency finds a replacement. You avoid starting a termination process on your own.

When the margin is worth it

The margin is worth paying when a role is short-term or demand is unpredictable. It’s also worth it when a bad direct hire would cost more than the agency fee. It’s harder to justify for a role you’ll need permanently for years, with no real risk to offset.

When does direct employment win?

Direct employment tends to make sense when:

  • The role is ongoing and stable, not tied to a project or season
  • You need deep and specific skills and want to build capability in-house
  • You have strong retention, so recruitment costs spread over years
  • Your in-house HR team can manage performance issues and terminations
  • Hiring volume is small enough that admin stays manageable

When does labour hire win?

Labour hire tends to make sense when:

  • Demand is seasonal, project-based, or fluctuates through the year
  • You want to reduce IR and compliance exposure
  • You need workers fast and can’t afford weeks of lead time
  • You want to trial a worker’s performance before offering a permanent role
  • You’re short-staffed due to unplanned leave and need cover fast

Labour hire gives you a flexible alternative to traditional hiring. You can scale your workforce up or down as demand shifts, without a long-term commitment.

Use-case matrix: which model fits your situation?

ScenarioRecommended modelWhy
6-month construction projectLabour hireFixed timeframe, no ongoing role after completion
Permanent skilled roleDirect employmentLong-term investment justifies onboarding cost
Seasonal peak (retail, warehousing)Labour hireDemand spikes and drops; no case for permanent headcount
Covering unplanned leaveLabour hireNeeds fast turnaround, often within 24 to 48 hours
High-turnover entry-level roleLabour hireAgency absorbs repeat recruitment and screening costs
Leadership or management roleDirect employmentNeeds deep organisational knowledge and buy-in
Trial-to-hireLabour hire, converting to directLets you assess fit before committing to permanent employment

Not sure which column fits your business needs? Talk to our recruitment experts about your role. We’ll help you match the right model to the need.

What do Queensland employers actually choose, and why?

FINDMEA works with 449 active clients across Queensland, with 609 successful placements to date. This spans industrial, professional, pharmacy, government, administration, retail, trades, and contact centre roles.

Employers with fluctuating demand or short-term projects usually lean on labour hire. It keeps them staffed without a long-term commitment.

Employers filling permanent, skill-specific roles tend to use direct recruitment services instead. They still ask a recruitment agency to find and screen the right candidates.

The pattern holds across various industries. Construction, logistics, warehousing, transport, and manufacturing often need workers on short notice. This favours labour hire.

Businesses building a stable office or professional team more often go direct. They use an agency to search for the right staff.

Decision checklist: labour hire, direct hire, or a recruitment agency?

Work through these questions before choosing a staffing model:

  1. Is this role likely to last longer than 12 months?
  2. Do you have in-house HR support to manage terminations?
  3. Is demand for this role seasonal, project-based, or steady?
  4. How much would a bad hire cost you in lost productivity?
  5. Do you need someone within days, or can you run a full search?
  6. Would you like to trial the worker before offering permanency?
  7. Does your industry need specific safety licensing for on-hired staff?

If you’re still unsure, it’s absolutely worth a chat with a recruitment agency that knows your industry. Get in touch with FINDMEA to discuss a tailored comparison for your workforce.

Frequently asked questions

Is labour hire more expensive than direct employment?

Not always: the charge rate looks higher because it bundles wages, super, workers’ comp, and agency margin into one number. Once you add on-costs and termination risk to a direct hire, the gap narrows. For short-term roles, labour hire is often cheaper overall.

Who is liable if a labour hire worker is injured on site?

The labour hire agency is the legal employer and holds the workers’ comp policy. The host business still carries work health and safety duties for on-hired workers. Both parties share responsibility for a safe workplace.

Can labour hire staff be converted to direct employees in Queensland?

Yes. Many labour hire companies, including FINDMEA, support this kind of conversion. It’s a common way to trial a worker’s fit before offering a permanent role.

Which industries, including the construction industry, use labour hire most?

The construction industry is one of the biggest users of labour hire in Queensland. Logistics, warehousing, manufacturing, and hospitality follow close behind. Demand in these industries shifts with projects and seasons, which favours on-hire staff over permanent headcount.

Do labour hire agencies handle payroll tax and super?

Yes. As the legal employer, the labour hire company handles payroll tax, super, and workers comp for the workers it places. This is one of the core admin burdens it takes off your business.

How do recruitment experts find the right candidates?

Recruitment experts start by identifying the specific skills a role needs. They then screen candidates against those skills, checking references, qualifications, and any required licences. This is how a recruitment agency narrows a pool of applicants down to the right candidates.

Over time, they build a track record of matching top talent to the same clients.

Is labour hire a good option for job seekers?

Often, yes: temporary assignments give job seekers a way into a business. It’s a chance to show what they can do before a permanent role opens up. It also gives access to work across multiple industries, which suits people seeking variety.

Do labour hire companies need a licence to operate in Queensland?

Yes: the Labour Hire Licensing Act 2017 requires a mandatory licence for all providers operating in Queensland. Businesses can only use a licensed labour hire provider. Always check a provider’s licence before engaging them.

Final thoughts

There’s no universal winner between labour hire and direct employment. The right choice shifts with role duration, hiring volume, and how much IR risk your business can carry.

Short-term, seasonal, or high-turnover roles usually favour labour hire. Long-term, specialist, or leadership roles usually favour direct employment. Whilst this article focuses on Queensland, the same trade-offs apply for employers in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth.

FINDMEA has helped employers and hiring managers work through this exact decision. We specialise in matching quality staff to real business needs. Our recruitment expertise spans the following services: temporary staffing, permanent recruitment, and labour hire.

We can craft a workforce that fits your business. Maybe you need to fill a handful of jobs, or develop a full career pathway for a new hire. We partner with you and assist at any stage of the process.

If you’re weighing up which model fits your next hire, submit your enquiry, or call us on 07 3899 2580 to discuss your needs. Our team will work hard to help your business succeed and excel.