Payroll in Colombia: 2026 Guide for Employers

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Need payroll in Colombia? Learn salary rules, PILA, social security, employee benefits, DIAN reporting and compliance for employers.

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Running payroll in Colombia is more than paying salaries. 

Every month, employers must calculate wages, social security, payroll taxes, benefits, overtime, send electronic payroll, and legal provisions correctly. If one piece is missing, your company may face problems with employees, DIAN, UGPP, or the Ministry of Labor.

In this 2026 guide, we explain how payroll works in Colombia, what employers must pay, what changed with the labor reform, and why outsourcing payroll can help your business stay compliant.

If your company is hiring in Colombia, Nexo Legal can help you manage payroll, social security, employee benefits, and monthly compliance through our Payroll Management in Colombia service.

What is included in payroll in Colombia?

Payroll in Colombia includes all payments, deductions, contributions, and reports connected to an employment relationship.

This usually includes:

  • Base salary
  • Transportation allowance, when the employee earns up to 2 monthly minimum wages.
  • Overtime
  • Night work surcharges
  • Sunday and holiday work
  • Commissions and bonuses
  • Employee deductions
  • Health and pension contributions
  • Labor risk contributions
  • Payroll taxes and parafiscal contributions
  • Prestaciones sociales
  • Vacation accruals
  • Electronic payroll reporting to DIAN
  • PILA payments

For employers, payroll is not just an internal HR task. It is a legal, tax, and social security obligation.

It is also important to understand the role of the UGPP. If DIAN is the authority that oversees tax compliance in Colombia, the UGPP is the authority that monitors social security and parafiscal contributions. In simple terms, UGPP can review whether employers are correctly reporting and paying payroll-related contributions.

Minimum wage and transportation allowance in 2026

For 2026, Colombia’s monthly minimum wage is COP $1,750,905, and the transportation allowance is COP $249,095, for a total monthly amount of COP $2,000,000 for workers entitled to the allowance. The Ministry of Labor confirmed these 2026 values through official communications related to Decrees 1469 and 1470.

The transportation allowance generally applies to employees earning up to two monthly minimum wages. The Ministry of Labor’s official labor calculator reminds employers that workers earning more than two minimum wages are not entitled to transportation allowance.

This is important because the transportation allowance may affect the calculation of certain social benefits, such as prima and severance.

Step 1: Define the employment contract correctly

Before running payroll, the company must define the type of employment contract.

In Colombia, common employment contracts include:

  • Indefinite-term contract
  • Fixed-term contract
  • Contract for a specific work or project
  • Part-time or special arrangements, when legally applicable

After the 2025 labor reform, indefinite-term contracts became the general rule, and fixed-term contracts are limited to a maximum of four years. The Ministry of Labor summarized that fixed-term contracts now have a four-year limit and that indefinite-term contracts are the general rule.

This matters for payroll because the contract type affects termination, benefits, severance, renewals, and legal risk.

A contractor should not be treated like an employee without reviewing the real relationship. If there is subordination, fixed schedule, continuous service, and direct control, the company may face labor misclassification risks.

Step 2: Calculate the employee’s monthly salary

The base salary is the starting point of payroll.

In Colombia, there is no such thing as an “all-inclusive salary” that allows the employer to bundle every labor cost into one monthly payment. In other words, an employer cannot simply agree on a monthly amount and assume that it already includes all legal obligations.

Every employer must assume a series of mandatory labor, social security, payroll, and benefit obligations calculated on top of, or based on, the employee’s monthly salary.

From there, the company must add or calculate:

  • Transportation allowance, if applicable
  • Overtime
  • Night surcharges
  • Sunday or holiday surcharges
  • Commissions
  • Bonuses
  • Other salary payments
  • Non-salary payments, if validly structured

Not everything paid to the employee is treated the same way. Some payments may be salary, while others may be agreed as non-salary payments under Colombian labor rules.

This classification matters because salary payments usually affect social security, benefits, severance, vacations, and payroll provisions.

Step 3: Apply the legal working hours

Working time is one of the most important payroll issues in Colombia.

Law 2101 of 2021 established the gradual reduction of the maximum weekly working hours until reaching 42 hours per week. The official legal text states that the maximum ordinary working day is 42 hours per week, which may be distributed by agreement between employer and worker over five or six days, always guaranteeing the mandatory rest day.

The Ministry of Labor also explains that the reduction schedule moved from 46 hours in 2024 to 44 hours in 2025 and then toward 42 hours in 2026.

For payroll, this means companies must review schedules, overtime, shift structures, and internal policies.

If an employee works beyond the legal working hours, overtime or surcharges may apply.

In Colombia, the main overtime and surcharge rates are:

concepto

Payroll surcharge

Night work

35% over the ordinary daytime hourly value

Daytime overtime

25% over the ordinary daytime hourly value

Night overtime

75% over the ordinary daytime hourly value

Work on mandatory rest days or holidays

80% from July 1, 2025; 90% from July 1, 2026; 100% from July 1, 2027

The Labor Code states that night work is paid with a 35% surcharge, daytime overtime with a 25% surcharge, and night overtime with a 75% surcharge.

For work on mandatory rest days or holidays, Law 2466 of 2025 introduced a gradual increase: 80% from July 1, 2025, 90% from July 1, 2026, and full application of the 100% surcharge from July 1, 2027.

Step 4: Review night work, Sundays, holidays, and overtime

Payroll in Colombia must account for special work conditions.

This may include:

  • Night work
  • Extra daytime hours
  • Extra night hours
  • Sunday work
  • Holiday work
  • Compensatory rest days
  • Shift-based work

Law 2466 of 2025 also modified the definition of daytime and nighttime work. As of December 25, 2025, daytime work runs from 6:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., and nighttime work runs from 7:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. This means that, in 2026, work performed after 7:00 p.m. may generate night surcharges when applicable. 

Because several changes have gradual implementation dates, employers should review payroll rules regularly and update their internal labor regulations, schedules, and payroll formulas.

This is especially important for companies with restaurants, hospitality, security, logistics, healthcare, retail, customer support, or operations outside regular office hours.

Step 5: Calculate social security contributions

Employers in Colombia must contribute to the social security system.

The Colombian social security system includes health, pension, labor risks, and compensation fund contributions. Payment of these categories is mandatory and is distributed between the employer and the employee according to the law.

It is not valid to agree that the employee will assume all of these costs from their salary. Even if both parties agree on a monthly compensation amount, the employer must still calculate, assume, withhold, and pay the corresponding contributions correctly.

The percentages below are generally applied to the employee’s base salary. This means that the transportation allowance is excluded, as well as certain additional payments that may be validly agreed as non-salary payments under Colombian labor rules.

For individual employers without a business and non-profit entities, the main contributions are generally distributed as follows:

Table 1. Legal entity or individual employer with business activity and 2 or more employees

concepto

Employer rate

Employer amount

Employee rate

Employee amount

Salario mínimo

COP $1,750,905

Subsidio de transporte

COP $249,095

Total salary + allowance

COP $2,000,000

Social security and parafiscal contributions

    

Salud

0%

COP $0

4%

COP $70,036

Pensión

12%

COP $210,109

4%

COP $70,036

ARL, highest risk rate

6.96%

COP $121,863

Caja de compensación

4%

COP $70,036

ICBF

0%

COP $0

SENA

0%

COP $0

Total social security and parafiscal contributions

COP $402,008

COP $140,072

Prestaciones sociales

    

Severance

8.33%

COP $166,600

Intereses sobre cesantías

1%

COP $20,000

Service bonus

8.33%

COP $166,600

Vacaciones

4.17%

COP $73,013

Total social benefits

COP $426,213

Estimated total monthly cost for the employer

COP $2,828,221

Work clothing and footwear

Based on actual cost

Clarification: the general rule indicates that the company pays the 8.5% employer health contribution; however, as a tax benefit, the 0% exemption may apply when the legal requirements are met.

Table 2. Individual employer or non-profit entity

concepto

Employer rate

Employer amount

Employee rate

Employee amount

Salario mínimo

COP $1,750,905

Subsidio de transporte

COP $249,095

Total salary + allowance

COP $2,000,000

Social security and parafiscal contributions

    

Salud

8.5%

COP $148,827

4%

COP $70,036

Pensión

12%

COP $210,109

4%

COP $70,036

ARL, highest risk rate

6.96%

COP $121,863

Caja de compensación

4%

COP $70,036

ICBF

3%

COP $52,527

SENA

2%

COP $35,018

Total social security and parafiscal contributions

COP $638,380

COP $140,072

Prestaciones sociales

    

Severance

8.33%

COP $166,600

Intereses sobre cesantías

1%

COP $20,000

Service bonus

8.33%

COP $166,600

Vacaciones

4.17%

COP $73,013

Total social benefits

COP $426,213

Estimated total monthly cost for the employer

COP $3,064,593

Work clothing and footwear

Based on actual cost

For legal entities y individual employers with a business and 2 or more employees, such as a SAS, the contribution structure may change for employees earning up to 10 monthly minimum wages.

In these cases, the employer may be exempt from certain employer contributions, while the employee contribution remains the same.

Labor risk contributions depend on the employee’s risk class. Government materials list risk rates from 0.522% for Risk Class I up to 6.960% for Risk Class V.

This is why payroll must be calculated carefully every month. A salary payment is not complete unless the corresponding employer contributions, employee deductions, PILA payment, and payroll support documents are also handled correctly.

Important note about dotación: employers must provide work clothing and footwear, known as dotación, three times per year when the employee meets the legal requirements. Dotación does not have a fixed legal value. The cost depends on what the required clothing and footwear actually cost for the role and activity.

Step 6: Pay contributions through PILA

Social security and parafiscal contributions are paid through PILA, the Integrated Contribution Payment Form.

PILA is an online service used through different authorized operators, and the employer may freely choose which operator to use. This form must be submitted every month.

Not making this payment can prevent the employee from accessing health coverage, labor risk coverage, compensation fund services, and other social security benefits. It can also lead to penalties or reviews for the employer.

UGPP explains that PILA is the system used to make contributions to the General Social Security System and that authorized operators facilitate payments for health, pension, labor risks, compensation funds, SENA, and ICBF when applicable.

Every month, the employer must report payroll information and pay contributions correctly. In addition to reporting the employee’s salary, the employer must also report certain payroll events.

Esto incluye:

  • New employees
  • Terminations
  • Salary changes
  • Leaves
  • Incapacities
  • Vacation periods
  • Maternity or paternity leave
  • Unpaid leave
  • Labor risk classification
  • Contribution base

UGPP may review omissions or inaccuracies in social security contributions. Its employer guidance refers to cases of omission or inaccuracy and the need to correct and pay through PILA when required.

Step 7: Accrue and pay social benefits

Employees in Colombia receive mandatory social benefits in addition to salary.

Entre ellos se encuentran:

Prima de servicios

The service bonus, or prima de servicios, equals 30 days of salary per year and is paid in two installments: one in June and one in December. The Ministry of Labor has explained that the benefit corresponds to 30 days of salary per year or proportional time worked, paid in June and December.

The December installment is due by December 20.

Cesantías

Severance, or cesantías, is a mandatory annual benefit designed as a type of unemployment savings for the employee.

In simple terms, the employer must save this amount in a severance fund so the employee can withdraw it when they become unemployed, or in other cases specifically authorized by law.

This payment generally cannot be made directly to the employee, except in certain legally permitted situations.

Employers must deposit the severance amount into the employee’s severance fund by February 14 of the following year. The Ministry of Labor explains that severance is liquidated annually and corresponds to the period between January 1 and December 31, or the proportional time worked.

Intereses sobre cesantías

Employers must also pay 12% annual interest on severance, or the proportional amount for partial periods.

Unlike severance, this payment is made directly to the employee. It must be paid no later than January 31 of the following year.

Ministry of Labor concepts confirm the 12% annual interest rule.

Vacations

Employees who complete one year of service are entitled to 15 business days of paid vacation. Ministry of Labor guidance confirms that workers who have provided services for one year have the right to 15 consecutive business days of paid vacation.

Step 8: Consider dotación when applicable

Some employees are entitled to dotación, meaning work clothing and footwear provided by the employer.

This generally applies to workers who earn up to two minimum wages and have completed more than three months of service.

The Ministry of Labor has referred to the legal delivery dates for dotación as April 30, August 31, and December 20.

This is not a cash payment. It is a benefit in kind, and companies should keep delivery records.

Step 9: Transmit electronic payroll to DIAN

Electronic payroll is a tax support document.

DIAN explains that the electronic payroll support document supports labor costs and deductions that employers may deduct for income tax purposes. It must be generated and transmitted to DIAN independently for each employee, reporting the monthly payroll values.

DIAN’s regulation also states that electronic payroll support documents and adjustment notes must be transmitted within the first 10 business days of the following month.

This step is essential because failing to transmit electronic payroll correctly may affect the deductibility of payroll expenses.

In practical terms, if the employer does not submit electronic payroll, DIAN may disregard the payroll expense for income tax purposes. That means the company may lose the ability to treat those payroll payments as deductible costs, even if the salary was actually paid.

Step 10: Keep payroll records organized

Payroll compliance is also about evidence.

Each month, companies should save:

  • Employment contracts
  • Payroll receipts
  • PILA payment confirmations
  • Electronic payroll files
  • DIAN validation receipts
  • Social security reports
  • Vacation records
  • Overtime authorizations
  • Leave certificates
  • Incapacity documents
  • Bonus and commission support
  • Termination calculations
  • Proof of benefit payments

This documentation protects the company in case of labor claims, DIAN reviews, or UGPP audits.

Monthly payroll checklist for employers in Colombia

Payroll area

What to review every month

Employee data

New hires, terminations, salary changes, leaves

Salario

Base salary, commissions, bonuses, non-salary payments

Allowance

Transportation allowance when applicable

Working time

Ordinary hours, overtime, night work, Sundays, holidays

Social security

Health, pension, ARL, compensation fund

PILA

Correct contribution base and monthly payment

Beneficios:

Prima, cesantías, interest, vacation provisions

Dotación

Check if delivery date applies

Nómina electrónica

Transmit to DIAN within the first 10 business days

Records

Save payroll receipts, contracts, payments, and reports

Common payroll mistakes in Colombia

Companies often run into payroll problems because they underestimate how detailed the system is.

Errores comunes incluyen:

  • Treating employees as contractors
  • Not paying social security correctly
  • Forgetting transportation allowance
  • Miscalculating overtime or night work
  • Not accruing prima, cesantías, interest, and vacations monthly
  • Missing electronic payroll transmission
  • Using the wrong labor risk classification
  • Not keeping evidence of payments
  • Forgetting dotación dates
  • Not reporting payroll changes through PILA, including employee termination or withdrawal
  • Paying salaries or benefits in cash without proper traceability

These mistakes can create penalties, tax issues, employee disputes, and cash flow surprises.

Should your company outsource payroll in Colombia?

Payroll in Colombia is manageable, but it requires discipline.

If your company has employees, foreign founders, remote management, variable salaries, commissions, overtime, or plans to grow, outsourcing payroll can reduce risk.

Nexo Legal’s Payroll Management in Colombia service helps companies handle payroll calculations, monthly payments, social security contributions, and employee benefits so everything stays legally compliant.

This is especially useful if you want to:

  • Hire employees in Colombia
  • Avoid payroll mistakes
  • Keep PILA and DIAN reporting organized
  • Calculate benefits correctly
  • Manage monthly payroll deadlines
  • Reduce legal and tax exposure
  • Have visibility over labor costs
  • Build a compliant operation from the start
  • Properly support payroll payments so they can be treated as deductible expenses for tax purposes

Payroll in Colombia has several moving parts: salary, social security, PILA, benefits, electronic payroll, and monthly reporting. If you want to make sure your payroll process is correctly structured and up to date, Nexo Legal can help you review the key points and keep your company aligned with Colombian requirements.

A clear payroll system from the beginning can help you avoid mistakes, delays, and unnecessary risks.

FAQs about payroll in Colombia

How does payroll work in Colombia?

Payroll in Colombia includes salary payments, social security contributions, payroll deductions, legal benefits, electronic payroll reporting, and monthly payments through PILA.

What is the minimum wage in Colombia in 2026?

For 2026, the monthly minimum wage is COP $1,750,905, and the transportation allowance is COP $249,095, for a total of COP $2,000,000 for eligible workers.

What social security contributions must employers pay?

Employers generally contribute to health, pension, labor risks, and compensation funds. Some employers may also have parafiscal obligations depending on their structure and situation.

What is electronic payroll in Colombia?

Electronic payroll is a DIAN support document that reports monthly payroll payments and deductions. It supports payroll costs and deductions for income tax purposes.

When must electronic payroll be transmitted?

Electronic payroll must generally be transmitted to DIAN within the first 10 business days of the month following the payroll period.

What benefits must Colombian employees receive?

Colombian employees generally receive transportation allowance, when applicable, prima de servicios, cesantías, interest on cesantías, paid vacationsy dotación when the legal requirements are met.

Other benefits or payments may also apply depending on the employee’s salary, role, working schedule, and working conditions.

Can Nexo Legal manage payroll for my company?

Yes. Nexo Legal offers payroll management services in Colombia, including payroll calculations, social security coordination, electronic payroll support, and employee benefit management.

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